Austin v. Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc.

188 So. 416
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 5740.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 188 So. 416 (Austin v. Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc.) 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
Austin v. Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc., 188 So. 416 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

A delivery truck owned by Baker-Law-' hon & Ford, Inc., and driven by its employee, James Marshall, collided with a Plymouth sedan belonging to the Standard Gin & Manufacturing Company, Inc., and operated by its president, Joseph T. Austin, at the intersection of Jackson and Dixie streets in the City of Monroe, Louisiana. The collision occurred at about 3:30 o’clock of the afternoon of April 26, 1937, and produced serious injuries to Mr. Austin. Immediately following the accident one Oscar Lee Dunn was picked up at the scene in an unconscious and injured condition. Previous thereto he had been sitting on a bench in front of a store located on the southeast corner of the intersection. The sedan was damaged to the extent of $562, while the truck sustained damages in the amount of $87.73.

The Employers Casualty. Company was the insurer of the Plymouth sedan. In view of its having issued a collision policy thereon, containing a $50 deductible clause, it paid to said Standard Gin & Manufacturing Company, Inc., the amount .of the sedan’s damage, less said $50, or the sum of $512, and was subrogated to the insured’s claim.

Mr. Austin instituted this suit against the truck’s driver, its owner, and its insurer, the latter being the Trinity Universal Insurance Company, to recover damages for the personal injuries which he received.

The Standard Gin & Manufacturing Company, Inc., brought suit against the same defendants, Standard Gin & Mfg. Co., Inc., v. Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc., et al., La.App., 188 So. 420, seeking to be *418 compensated for the $50 damage claim that its collision policy excluded.

Employers Casualty Company v. Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc., et al., La.App., 188 So. 421, is a proceeding instituted by the Employers Casualty Company against the same defendants to recover the $512 paid to its insured as above shown.

In another suit, Dunn v. Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc., et al., La.App., 188 So. 415, Oscar Lee Dunn claims damages, for his asserted injuries, from the aforenamed defendants and also from Joseph T. Austin and the Employers Casualty Company.

Appropriate allegations of negligence are made in the various pleadings of the parties litigant in the several causes, and the issues respecting the cause of and responsibility for the accident with its consequences are squarely presented. We deem it unnecessary to detail the various allegations of negligence.

A reconventional demand is urged by Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc. It asks judgment thereunder against Austin, the Standard Gin & Manufacturing Company, Inc., and the Employers Casualty Company for $87.73, the amount expended in repairing its truck.

The four cases were consolidated in the district court and tried together. They have been argued and submitted in this court in like form.

Each of the plaintiffs was awarded a solidary judgment against defendants James Marshall, Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc., and the Trinity Universal Insurance Company. Oscar Lee Dunn’s was for $378, Joseph T. Austin’s for $3711, and the other plaintiffs, the Standard Gin & Manufacturing Company, Inc., and the Employers Casualty Company, for the respective amounts prayed for by them. Dunn’s demands against Austin and the Employers Casualty Company were rejected. Also rejected was the claim in reconvention of the Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc.

Suspensive appeals were prosecuted by James Marshall, Baker-Lawhon & Ford, Inc., and the Trinity Universal Insurance Company. Answers to the appeals have been filed in this court by Dunn and Austin, in which increases in the awards in their favor are asked.

As before stated, the vehicles collided in the intersection of Jackson and Dixie streets in the City of Monroe, Louisiana, on the afternoon of April 26, 1937. The weather was clear and the streets dry. Jackson runs north and south, while Dixie intersects it at right angles and extends east and west. The former is a paved thoroughfare, having a width of 40 feet in the intersection and 36 feet from curb to curb. The latter is a graveled passageway with an average surface width of 19 feet.

An ordinance, of the City of Monroe, in force and effect at the time, grants to vehicles traveling on Jackson the right of way over those from intersecting streets, and states that:

“ * * * any person driving a vehicle from any intersecting street across or into any street above enumerated (including Jackson) shall bring the vehicle to a full stop at a point not more than fifteen feet from the right of way street and not proceed until he has ascertained that no vehicle is traveling the right of way street sufficiently near to the intersecting street to render collision or accident probable; * *

James Marshall, while admittedly in the course of his employment, drove his truck along Dixie in an easterly direction, and brought it to a stop at a point a few feet off the western edge of the pavement of Jackson. While so stopped an automobile traveling in a northerly direction on Jackson, and driven by one L. J. Smith, turned left into Dixie street in front of Marshall and proceeded thereon toward the west.

It is the testimony and contention of Marshall that after the passage of the Smith vehicle he placed his car in low gear, caused it to “drift down” into the intersection, and stopped it with the front wheels on the pavement and the remainder thereof still over and on the gravel of Dixie; and that while thus completely stopped Mr. Austin, who was traveling south on Jackson street at a fast rate of speed, drove his Plymouth sedan into the truck.

The preponderance of the evidence and the physical facts of the case, however, do not, in our opinion, favor the version of the accident as given by said truck driver. Our findings of fact, which practically agree with those of the trial judge, are that Marshall proceeded slowly into the intersection in low gear, after the Smith car .had turned into Dixie street, and caused his truck to strike the Austin machine. Mr. Austin, who was driving south on Jackson, observed the truck stopped on *419 Dixie, while he was some distance away, and had approached to within approximately 50 feet from the intersection when it proceeded onto and across Jackson and into his path of travel. The speed of the sedan at the time was not excessive, it being about 25 miles per hour. Either Marshall did not look to the left before going onto the pavement or did not heed the oncoming car after observing it in close proximity to him. While at the edge of the pavement his view of Jackson street for a considerable distance north of the intersection was unobstructed. Mr. Austin attempted to avoid the collision by steering to the left, but as he reached the center of the intersection the truck’s front end plowed into the right side of his sedan. Thereupon the latter vehicle caromed to the southeast corner where it struck a post and a bench, and came to a stop on the east side of Jackson a short distance south of Dixie street. Its rear wheels rested near the curb, while its front was facing toward the west. The truck, after .the crash, fronted in a southeasterly direction with its front wheels about the center line of Jackson and several feet south of the exact center of the intersection.

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188 So. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-baker-lawhon-ford-inc-lactapp-1939.