Barry v. Billac
This text of 250 So. 2d 516 (Barry v. Billac) 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.
Opinion
Dennis A. BARRY
v.
Gerald B. BILLAC and the Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, Limited.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*517 John J. Cummings, III, Robert G. Heller, Sidney F. Rothschild, Edwin A. Stoutz, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Wicker, Wiedemann & Fransen, A. Remy, Fransen, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.
Before REDMANN, GULOTTA and BOUTALL, JJ.
GULOTTA, Judge.
This is an appeal by plaintiff from an adverse jury verdict dismissing his suit in damages for injuries received as a result of an automobile accident.
The facts are that Dennis Barry, plaintiff, was driving a 1964 Oldsmobile automobile on Midway Street in the direction of the river in Jefferson Parish on November 5, 1967, at approximately 9:30 p. m. Dennis Barry, II, plaintiff's thirteen-year-old son, was seated in the front passenger seat with his father at the time.
After having stopped for a stop sign on Midway Street at its intersection with Jefferson Highway, plaintiff proceeded across the Kenner-bound traffic lane of Jefferson Highway and into the neutral ground area which divides traffic on Jefferson Highway traveling in the direction of New Orleans from that traveling in the direction of Kenner.
After plaintiff had negotiated a left turn onto Jefferson Highway and while traveling thereon in the direction of New Orleans, his car was struck in the right rear by another automobile driven by the defendant, Gerald Billac, traveling in the same direction on Jefferson Highway. The location of the vehicles, the speed of the defendant's automobile, as well as the distance traveled by both vehicles after impact are questions of fact in issue in determining whether the jury committed manifest error in dismissing plaintiff's suit.
It is apparent from the evidence and from the inquiry by the jury seeking clarification of that portion of the general charge of the judge relating to contributory negligence that the jury found that the acts of defendant constituted negligence and that the act of plaintiff constituted contributory negligence. The issue before us therefore is whether or not the jury committed manifest error in finding that plaintiff was contributorily negligent and that his contributory negligence constituted a proximate cause of the accident.
Plaintiff's version of the accident is that while in the neutral ground area dividing the traffic lanes of Jefferson Highway, he observed no traffic traveling on the New Orleans-bound lane between Sauve Road, a distance of approximately four blocks on the Kenner side of the intersection, and his automobile, whereupon he negotiated a left turn into Jefferson Highway, entered the right traffic lane, and proceeded toward New Orleans. At a point approximately one hundred fifty feet on the New Orleans side of the intersection plaintiff's car was struck in the rear by the Billac automobile while the latter vehicle was skidding sideways out of control, after which the Billac car came to a stop upon striking a mailbox post adjacent and to the right of the highway, a few feet from the point of impact.
Defendant's version of the events is that he was proceeding on Jefferson Highway, admittedly at a speed in excess of the speed limit,[1] after having entered the highway from Sauve Road and that the Barry automobile came unexpectedly in front of Billac into the highway. As a result, Billac found himself immediately upon the Barry vehicle, whereupon Billac applied his brakes in an effort to avoid a collision.
*518 He contends that the accident occurred approximately twenty-one or twenty-eight feet or one to three car lengths from the intersection of Midway Street and Jefferson Highway and that after the impact his automobile continued down the highway until it came to a stop at the mailbox approximately one hundred fifty feet from the intersection. Billac's account would place the position of the Barry car at the point where Barry was either negotiating the turn or had completed the turn into the left lane or middle of the highway immediately prior to the impact.
It is apparent after a careful review of the record, including the testimony of the witnesses, as well as the physical surroundings, that the accident actually occurred at a point about one hundred fifty feet from the intersection in close proximity to the mailbox.
State Police Officer Raymond Junkin who investigated the accident testified that the skid marks left by the Billac automobile commenced approximately fifty feet on the Kenner side of the intersection of Midway and Jefferson Highway and continued down the highway in the direction of New Orleans for a distance of 272 feet up to the mailbox. Dennis Barry, II, the son of the plaintiff, stated that the impact occurred just beyond the mailbox.
Plaintiff, Dennis Barry, testified that the accident happened at a point in the highway where the mailbox was located. Barry estimated the distance from the intersection of Midway and Jefferson Highway to the mailbox to be one hundred forty feet.
It is significant that two disinterested eye witnesses corroborated the testimony of the plaintiff and his son that the impact occurred just about at or slightly before the mailbox while the Barry car was traveling in the right traffic lane. One of those witnesses was Norma Sievert, who was driving her automobile in the direction of Kenner on the highway in the opposite direction from that being driven by Barry and Billac. She heard the skidding of the Billac car and saw it strike the rear of the Barry vehicle after sliding sideways down Jefferson Highway. She was approximately fifty feet on the New Orleans side of the intersection when she heard the skidding. She stated further that she saw the Barry automobile turn from Midway into the highway into the right traffic lane, and after the collision the Barry car came to a stop about four or five car lengths down the highway. This account is also corroborative of the testimony of plaintiff and plaintiff's son.
Joanne Croll, a passenger in the automobile driven by Miss Sievert and the other disinterested witness, placed the point of impact at the same location as did plaintiff and Miss Sievert. Her testimony was at variance in part to the other witnesses, however, in that she stated that the Billac car came out of Midway Street or some other side street close to Midway and into Jefferson Highway but after turning went out of control. There is no variance, however, in her testimony as to the point of impact, the factual issue for our determination.
Defendant in contending that the accident occurred approximately twenty-one feet from the intersection and not 150 feet, as contended by plaintiff, relies almost entirely on the testimony of Officer Junkin that he noticed debris on the highway 21 feet on the New Orleans side of the intersection, indicating that the impact occurred at this point. He testified that the debris was in the neutral ground lane; however, Billac testified that he thought the Barry vehicle was stopped in the right traffic lane prior to the impact. It is significant further that none of the witnesses, including the occupants of both vehicles involved in the collision as well as the disinterested witnesses, corroborated the presence of debris. While Officer Junkin stated he saw 130 feet of skid marks from the Billac automobile to the debris and 120 feet of skid marks between the mailbox *519 and the debris, he was not able to describe or identify the nature of the debris to indicate that it resulted from this accident.
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250 So. 2d 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barry-v-billac-lactapp-1971.