Audubon Insurance v. Cunningham

132 So. 2d 657, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1320
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1961
DocketNo. 5370
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 So. 2d 657 (Audubon Insurance v. Cunningham) 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
Audubon Insurance v. Cunningham, 132 So. 2d 657, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1320 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

Shortly after 1 a. m. on December 21, 1957, Albert J. Cunningham, with his wife as a guest passenger, was travelling west toward Houma, Louisiana, on Highway 90, when he encountered smog produced by the burning of trash at the City of Houma’s dump located on the south side of the highway. Visibility was limited to not more than 10 feet and he slowed down to approximately four to five miles per hour. [658]*658A car being driven by Edward Barker, Jr. with Dale Rogers as a guest passenger, was proceeding in an easterly direction from Houma towards Raceland when it encountered this smog and entered same at a speed of approximately 50 miles per hour and in a “split second” or an estimated distance of 50 to 75 feet after entering the smog it collided with the Cunningham vehicle, which resulted in the latter being knocked backwards approximately 10 feet and coming to rest with its rear end off of the south side of the highway on the shoulder and sitting at an angle with its front end closer toward the west or the city of Houma but still upon the paved portion of the eastbound traffic lane. The Barker automobile proceeded in an easterly direction after the collision a distance estimated at 75 to 100 feet and came to rest with its front end pointing north and its right rear wheel at approximately the center line of the highway, thus leaving it crosswise of the westbound lane of travel with its rear end protruding slightly over into the eastbound lane of travel. A very short time after the Cunningham and Barker vehicles had come to rest,'one Pellegrin, travelling east toward Raceland, which was the same direction from which the Barker automobile had entered the smog, encountered the dense smog, applied his brakes, which took effect at about the right front wheel or end of the bumper of the Cunningham automobile, allegedly struck the Cunningham vehicle, skidded down the right or eastbound lane of travel and allegedly knocked the tail light off the right-hand rear side of the Barker automobile and came to rest at a total breaking distance of 135 feet from the Cunningham vehicle in its eastbound or proper lane of travel. Very shortly thereafter an automobile proceeding in a westerly direction on the wrong side of the highway or in the eastbound lane of travel, referred to as the Authement vehicle, collided head on with the Pellegrin automobile. We are concerned on this appeal with the two suits, which were filed as subrogation claims by collision insurers for damages to the insured vehicles arising out of this accident. Audubon Insurance Company was the collision insurer of the automobile owned by Edward W. Barker, Sr., and operated by Edward W. Barker, Jr., while the Resolute Insurance Company was the collision insurer of the automobile owned and operated by Donald P. Pellegrin. The defendant, Albert J. Cunningham, was insured against liability by his co-defendant, Grain Dealers Mutual Insurance Company.

The cases were consolidated for the purpose of trial and separate judgments rendered in each. After trial the District Court rendered judgment in favor of the respective insurers of Barker and Pellegrin for the property damage to their automobiles and it is from these two judgments that the defendants have appealed.

Although Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham both testified that they were travelling four or five miles per hour in their proper westbound lame of travel when they were struck by the Barker automobile, the preponderance of the evidence consisting of oral testimony and physical facts, is to the contrary and is conclusive proof that the Cunningham car was being driven in its wrong lane of travel- — the eastbound or south lane, which was the proper lane of travel for the Barker and Pellegrin automobiles. The testimony of Barker and his guest passenger to the effect that immediately after entering the blanket of smog, within a “split second”, before Barker could apply the brakes, although his reaction time had set in for doing so, the collision occurred in their lane of travel. Barker reasoned that although he could not see that it happened so quickly that he could not have gotten out of his lane of travel. Barker’s guest passenger testified that just before the wreck he saw the lights of the Cunningham car and that it was directly in their eastbound lane of travel with its left wheels off the south edge of the pavement and the right front wheels still on the pavement, and that the right front of the two automobiles collided. The picture of the Cunningham automobile reveals that it was struck on the right side [659]*659so as to bend the bumper back on the right, strip the fender and lights away from the main body of the car on the right and strike the right door. There is no picture of the Barker car in evidence, however, the testimony shows that it was struck approximately on the right side beginning somewhere around the middle of the grill and continuing down the right side. The contact was something in the nature of a sideswipe. In addition, the testimony of the trooper was that the debris showed that the impact between the cars occurred about the center of the right or eastbound lane of travel going towards Raceland, Louisiana, which was the proper lane for the Barker vehicle. He further testified that the dirt and debris came from the Cunningham vehicle as the Barker vehicle was somewhat new and clean, whereas the Cunningham vehicle had evidence of dirt or dried mud having been under the fenders. The trooper also testified that from the dirt and debris, which he considered the point of impact, he could trace the marks of the tires of the Cunningham car as it was knocked backward approximately 10 feet to its final resting place. The District Court accepted the testimony of the trooper, the guest passenger, and the physical facts as establishing the point of impact as being approximately at the center of the eastbound lane of travel. In this he was correct.

Cunningham was negligent upon entering this dense smog with visibility limited to 10 feet and not parking on the wide shell shoulders and, secondly, in operating his vehicle on the wrong side of the highway in the eastbound lane. We have no doubt that Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham were attempting to do all in their power to remain on their side of the road but evidently became confused in the lines designating the edge of the hard surface of the north and south lines which bounded the highway and the center line and actually thought that they were to the right or north of the center line when as a matter of fact they were ■to the south or left of the center line. The defendants have plead contributory negligence on the part of Barker, in that he had passed through several puffs or small clouds of smog and had continued at 55 miles an hour into the smog. Counsel for defendants relies upon McLelland v. Harper, La. App., 38 So.2d 425; Dominick v. Haynes Brothers, 13 La.App. 434, 127 So. 31; Employers’ Fire Insurance Co. v. Rodgers, La. App., 47 So.2d 404; F. Strauss & Sons v. Childers, La.App., 147 So. 536; Lapeze v. O’Keefe, La.App., 158 So. 36.

The facts on this point show that Barker and his guest passenger testified that prior to confronting the dense smog they had encountered several patches of fog, which hung somewhat above the highway and in no manner interfered with their visibility and that they were small patches so that they no more than entered them than they were out of them. That their lights picked up evidence of what they thought was another patch of fog approximately two to three hundred feet away, at which time Barker was travelling 55 miles per hour.

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Related

Lewis v. Brogdon
208 So. 2d 761 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1968)
Romero v. General Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corp.
199 So. 2d 607 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)
Resolute Insurance Co. v. Cunningham
132 So. 2d 244 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 2d 657, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/audubon-insurance-v-cunningham-lactapp-1961.