Beach v. Union Brewing Corporation

187 So. 332, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 128
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1939
DocketNos. 17150, 17147, 17148, 17149.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 187 So. 332 (Beach v. Union Brewing Corporation) 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
Beach v. Union Brewing Corporation, 187 So. 332, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 128 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

There are involved here four suits for damages. They result from a motor vehicle accident which occurred at about 10:30 o’clock on the night of September 10, 1937, on the Airline Highway a little more than a mile on the New Orleans side of the Lutcher Junction.

The vehicles involved were a Ford coach owned and driven by Everett G. Smith, one of the plaintiffs, and an unlighted ' stationary truck and trailer owned by defendant, Union Brewing Corporation, and at the time in charge of Earl Laird, an employe acting within the scope of his employment. The truck and trailer — to which, for convenience, when we refer to the entire conveyance, we shall call the “truck”, — had been proceeding towards Baton Rouge, as was the Ford coach when it ran into the rear of the stationary trailer.

With Laird on the front seat of the truck was Louis Liemann, a helper. Just before it reached the point at which the accident occurred and just as it was about to pass a vehicle going in the opposite direction, Laird attempted to “dim” the lights of the truck. As he did so, all of the lights were suddenly extinguished by the burning out of an electric fuse, as it was later discovered. When the lights went out, the vehicle was in total darkness. Instead of driving off the paved portion of the highway, Laird brought the truck to a stop on the extreme right edge of the concrete. While it was standing in that position, the Ford coach of Mr. Smith approached from the rear. On the front seat of the Ford with Smith, was Charles Kenneth Beach, a guest passenger, and on the rear seat was Alfred T. Allen, another guest. As the Ford approached the stationary truck, which none of the occupants of the Ford noticed, there was approaching from the opposite direction another automobile. The driver of this third car and Smith both “dimmed” their lights and, just as Smith again turned on his bright lights, which extended further along the road ahead, he noticed the stationary truck, but he was at that time so close to it that he could not stop and his Ford crashed into the rear end of the said trailer. All three of the occupants of the Ford were injured and the Ford itself was seriously damaged.

*334 The Home Insurance Company of New York had issued to Smith a policy of insurance in which it had agreed to protect him against loss in excess of $50 caused by damage sustained by the Ford as the result of collision. The said insurance company, as plaintiff in one' of these suits, seeks recovery in the sum of $242.87, averring that it paid to Smith all but $50 of the loss resulting from damage to his car and that, by this payment, it became subrogated pro tanto to Smith’s rights against the parties at fault.

Thus, the four plaintiffs are:

(1) The Home Insurance Company;

(2) Everett G. Smith, who claims $5,356 for his personal injuries and his expenses and $50 as that part of the damage to his automobile which he himself was compelled to pay;

(3) Alfred T. Allen, who claims $3,-223.50 for his physical injuries and expenses resulting therefrom, and,

(4) Charles Kenneth Beach, who claims $17,867.46 for his physical injuries) expenses, et cetera.

The defendants are:

(a) Union Brewing Corporation, owner of the truck and employer of Laird;

(b) Laird, the driver of the truck, and,

(c) Fidelity & Casualty Company, admittedly the liability insurance carrier of the Union Brewing Corporation.

In the petition eight charges of negligence are set forth in detail. They may be summed up as follows:

(1) That there was negligence in stopping the truck on the concrete portion of the highway instead of on one of the unpaved shoulders. It is alleged that in so doing Laird violated the provisions of Title 2, Section 3, Rule 15(a) of Act 21 of 1932, which, in part, provides that: “ * * * in no event shall any person park or leave standing any vehicle,'-whether attended or unattended, upon any highway unless a clear and unobstructed width of not less than fifteen (15) feet upon the main traveled portion of said highway opposite such standing vehicle shall be left for free 'passage of other vehicles thereon, * * * ”.

(2) That there was negligence in parking the said truck, without lights on the truck itself, or on the trailer, and in particular in that no flares were placed along the roadway, as required by Act 164 of 1936, which, in Section 1, among other things, provides that, at nighttime, “the operator of a motor truck or combination thereof * * * shall ‘immediately upon bringing his vehicle to a stop upon, or immediately adjacent to the traveled portion of the highway, at any timo during the period of from one-half hour after sunset to one-half hour before sunrise, place one lighted flare at the side of such vehicle just inside the black line marking the center of paved highways and near the center of dirt or gravel highways; place one lighted flare approximately one hundred feet to the front of such vehicle and place one lighted flare approximately one hundred feet to the rear of such vehicle ; and shall maintain such lighted flares in such position during the time said vehicle remains parked”.

(3) That there was negligence in not otherwise warning Smith and those with him that the truck was so placed, in other words, in not running back along the highway to flag any automobile which might be approaching, and,

(4) That there was negligence in operating the truck at all since the lighting system was defective.

Defendants denied that there was any reason to believe that the lighting system of the truck was in any way defective and averred that the said truck had been properly inspected and had given no indication of any defect, and they also asserted that the entire cause for the extinguishment of the lights was the sudden and unexpected blowing out of a fuse; that this may occur without any known cause, and that there is no way to determine by inspection whether such a fuse is a perfect one, or is on the verge of giving way.

They also denied that there was any negligence involved in the stopping of the said truck, or in leaving it without lights for the few moments which intervened between the blowing out of the fuse and the collision, and they averred that Laird and his assistant, as soon as the truck could be br.ought to a stop, did everything within their power to light and properly place the flares, as required by law, and that, before they could get them placed, the Ford, at excessive speed, crashed into the rear end of the trailer.

In the alternative defendants charge contributory negligence in Smith in not seeing the truck and trailer stopped upon the highway, in not having the said Ford under such control as would permit *335 of its being stopped within the distance illuminated by its headlights, and they charge, also, that both Allen and Beach were themselves independently negligent in permitting Smith to drive at that rate of speed and in not themselves noticing the stationary truck ahead of them.

There was judgment below in favor of defendants, dismissing all suits. All plaintiffs have appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 332, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beach-v-union-brewing-corporation-lactapp-1939.