Allen v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. of New York

190 So. 163, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 316
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1939
DocketNo. 5965.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 190 So. 163 (Allen v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. of New York, 190 So. 163, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 316 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.'

The City Park of Alexandria, Louisiana, located within the corporate limits of that •municipality, comprises a tract about 35 acres. Numerous trees, shrubs and flowers beautify the grounds. It is bisected by U. S. Highway 165, which, for the sake of convenience, we shall hereinafter refer to as highway and consider as running north and south. Several scenic thoroughfares course through the park and connect with the highway therein. None crosses it. One of these lies east of said highway, passes in front of the City Auditorium, and is herein known as the Auditorium Drive.

At about 5:45 o’clock of the afternoon of February 14, 1938, before darkness had commenced, plaintiff, while driving a 1931 Chevrolet sedan, negotiated a left turn from the Auditorium Drive onto the highway with the view and purpose of traveling south. Shortly thereafter his car was. struck by another machine proceeding on the highway toward the north. The latter vehicle, a Nash sedan of 1938 model, was owned by Everett W. Neyland and was operated at the time by Miss Dorothy Manuel with the permission of said owner. A public liability policy issued by the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York insured the Nash..

Plaintiff, who was severely injured, asks damages in this cause. Only the insurer of the Nash car is impleaded as defendant. He charges that,—

“ * * * said collision was caused solely and only by the gross carelessness, recklessness and negligence of the said Miss Manuel in the following particulars:
“(a) Driving along said concrete highway and through said Park at a fast and reckless rate of speed, several times in excess of the speed limit permitted.
“(b) Failing to keep a proper lookout for traffic on said highway and through said Park, both automobile and pedestrian.
“(c) In not having her car under control so that the same could be brought to a stop in a short distance.
“(d) In not applying her brakes and bringing her car to a stop.
“(e) In leaving her side of the highway and crossing to plaintiff’s side thereof and running into him.
“(f) In driving said automobile while under the influence of intoxicating liquor.”

Defendant denies that the driver of the insured car was guilty of negligent or faulty driving. Alternatively, it pleads that, “in the event Miss Manuel should be held to have been guilty of negligence which contributed to the collision, which is not admitted, but which is denied, then defendant shows that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, proximately *165 causing the collision, sufficient to bar recover}-.”

Under the judgment of the trial court, for which written reasons were assigned, plaintiff was permitted recovery in the sum of $5755.05. The appeal therefrom, prosecuted by defendant, has been answered. Plaintiff asks that the damage award be increased to $10,000.

As before shown, the collision occurred on the highway within the confines of the City Park of Alexandria, and in the vicinity of its junction with Auditorium Drive. This junction will hereinafter be referred to as the intersection. A city ordinance, being No. 255, restricts the speed of motor vehicles using the highway in that locality to 18 miles per hour, and notices stationed at appropriate places on the outskirts of the park recite, “Speed Limit, City Park, 15 miles an hour.” However, motorists properly employing the highway are accorded, under the traffic regulations, the right of way over those entering it from Auditorium Drive and the other mentioned scenic thoroughfares.

Auditorium Drive is of macadam or “black top” construction, with a surface 20 feet in width, and is frequently used. It joins the highway, an 18-foot concrete slab with 5-foot shoulders, at an angle and on the latter’s eastern side. A stop sign is located on said drive at a point 22 feet from the concrete. West of the highway, and almost directly opposite the mouth of Auditorium Drive, is a small structure used and known as a bus waiting station. This is 36 feet in width and its front is separated from the concrete slab by 36 feet of gravel.

Also west of the highway, a few feet from the concrete’s edge, are two' objects important in the consideration of this case and often referred to by counsel and the witnesses during the trial. Both are located south of the intersection. One is a sign attached to a piece of bent railroad iron which states, “Warning, Children at Play, Drive Carefully”, the purpose of it being to assist in affording protection to the many children who use the circle playground situated behind and in close proximity to the bus waiting station. From the center of said intersection south to a point opposite this sign is a distance of approximately 45 feet. About 30 feet farther south is a power pole, the other above mentioned object.

At the time of the accident, Hynson Bayou marked the south boundary of the park and also the corporate limits of the City of Alexandria. This stream is spanned by a concrete bridge that is a part of the highway. Its center is 300 feet south of the middle of the intersection. South of the bridge, a distance of about 600 feet, is a roadhouse and saloon known as the Parkway Inn.

Plaintiff, during the afternoon in question, drove his 1931 Chevrolet sedan slowly in a westerly direction along Auditorium Drive and brought it to a complete stop before entering onto the highway. Considerable dispute exists as to the exact location on the black top that this stop was effected. If it was opposite the sign located 22 feet from the concrete, as defendant contends, then plaintiff was not in position to observe traffic on the highway approaching the intersection, because of dense shrubbery that occupied both corners. We are satisfied, however, that he halted his machine when its front end was 2 or 3 feet east of the slab, as he states. In this he is corroborated by one A. R. Reed, the only eye witness testifying other than the participants in the accident, who was standing just off the eastern edge of the concrete and approximately 30 feet south of the intersection. This found position permitted plaintiff a clear view of the highway in both directions.

After stopping, he shifted the mechanism of his machine into low or first gear and looked for approaching vehicles. None was to his right. On his left he observed the Nash car, driven by Miss Manuel, at or about the concrete bridge 300 feet away. It was traveling, according to the witness Reed, at about 55 miles an hour. This speed estimate is supported by the physical facts, particularly the distance that it knocked the Chevrolet backward. Plaintiff says, however, “I couldn’t very well tell how fast the car was going coming toward me.” Believing that a left turn could be safely negotiated, plaintiff attempted it. He steered his machine on a curve to the left and traversed the intersection. His car was proceeding toward the south, in second gear and at a speed of about 10 miles an hour, when the Manual vehicle departed from the east side, angled northwesterly, and crashed into the left front portion of it. Each automobile, following the impact, maneuvered an al *166 •most complete about-face.

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 163, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-metropolitan-casualty-ins-co-of-new-york-lactapp-1939.