Benton v. Griffith

184 So. 371
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1938
DocketNo. 1898.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 184 So. 371 (Benton v. Griffith) 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
Benton v. Griffith, 184 So. 371 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

The plaintiffs, Mrs. Benton and her husband, McVea R. Benton, filed a suit against P. H. Griffith, Sr., and the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, the former for $7,500 for personal injuries, and the latter for damage, to his automobile and expenses incurred on account of the injuries received by his wife, in the total sum of $925.10. This suit was filed on March 30, 1937, and bore the docket number 11,-963. After the filing of several motions, exceptions and an answer by 'the defendants in that suit, and the filing of several motions and supplemental pleadings by the plaintiffs, the suit was dismissed as in case of non-suit on motion of the plaintiffs on May 28, 1937.

On the same day, May 28, 1937, the present suit was filed by plaintiffs for the same amount and based on the same cause of action as the first suit, and in this last suit P. H. Griffith, Jr., was joined with the other two defendants. The petition alleges that Mrs. Benton sustained serious personal injuries, described in the petition, on January 25, 1937, when the car in which she was riding, owned and driven by her husband, was run into on the Jefferson Highway about one mile southeast of the city limits of Baton Rouge around 6:30 o’clock P. M., by a car coming in the opposite direction and driven by the defendant P. H. Griffith, Jr-

The negligence charged against young Griffith is that he was driving on the wrong side of the road and without keeping a proper lookout; that he was in an intoxicated condition and was driving at an excessive rate of speed. The father of young Griffith is sought to be held on the ground that the son was driving the car with the permission and consent of his father while a member of his father’s household and as the agent of the father acting within the scopetof his agency. The allegation is fur *373 ther made that young Griffith is a habitual drinker of alcoholic liquors to the knowledge of his father, and as such, in the alternative, it is alleged that at the time young Griffith was an unfit, unsuitable and dangerous person to drive a car to the knowledge of his father. It is not alleged nor claimed that young Griffith was a minor. The bonding company is sought to be held as the insurer of P. H. Griffith, Sr., against public liability on the car driven by young Griffith.

Defendants filed a motion to strike out that part of the petition which alleges that P. H. Griffith, Jr., is an habitual drunkard and was an unfit person to drive a car to the knowledge of his father. Defendants also filed an exception of vagueness. Both the motion and the exception were overruled. The defendants filed separate answers ; the bonding company making what is equivalent to a general denial; P. H. Griffith, Jr., denied that he was guilty of any negligence, and alleged that he was attempting to pass a car in front of him going in the same direction, and just as he pulled to the left to pass the slow-moving vehicle in front of him, he saw the Benton car coming in the opposite direction at a distance of approximately twenty feet; that the reason he did not see the Benton car earlier was because it did not have any headlights burning and a rain was falling. He alleges that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of Benton in driving his car without lights, and in the alternative, young Griffith alleges that if he was guilty of any negligence which he denies, both plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence; Benton in driving his car in a heavy rain at night without lights, and Mrs. Benton in riding in this car under such conditions. P. H. Griffith, Sr., made a general denial of liability and specially denied that his son was acting as his agent, or in any other capacity that would render him liable for the acts of P. H. Griffith, Jr.

After the defendants had answered, plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition (which through inadvertence was given the docket number of the first suit) in which they alleged that the insurance policy issued by the defendant bonding company was issued in the name of the wife of P. H. Griffith, Sr.; that the automobile covered by the policy and involved in the collision was community property and was purchased by Mrs. Griffith with the knowledge and consent of her husband, or in the alternative, that her husband ratified and confirmed the purchase of said car by his wife in her name; and further in the alternative, that Mrs. Griffith is a member of the Griffith household and the mother of P. H. Griffith, Jr., who was driving the insured car at the time of the collision with her consent. Further exceptions were filed by the defendants and overruled by the court.

After a trial on the merits the court rendered judgment against all three defendants, in solido, in favor of Mrs. Benton for $5,850 and in favor of Mr. Benton for $920.10. All three defendants have appealed.

There are four principal questions presented in the case: (1) Whether or not P. H. Griffith, Jr., was guilty of negligence which was the sole and proximate cause of the accident; (2) if young Griffith’s negligence was the cause of the accident, is his father also liable under the pleadings and the evidence; (3) is the bonding company liable for the negligent acts of young Griffith ; and (4) if there is liability on the part of any or all defendants, is the amount of damages awarded by the trial court excessive?

On the first point, we have no difficulty in reaching the conclusion as did the trial judge, that the negligence of young Griffith was the sole cause of the accident. There is some testimony to show that young Griffith had been drinking and was under the influence of liquor at the time of the accident. However, regardless of the question of whether or not this young man was under the influence of intoxicating liquor at the time to a sufficient extent to affect his driving, the testimony abundantly shows his negligence. He admits that his car was on his left or wrong side of the road when it was struck by the Benton car. He claims that he was passing another car and had pulled his car over to the left for that purpose when he was suddenly confronted with the Benton car coming' from the opposite direction on its right side of the road. He attempts to excuse his failure to see this approaching car by saying that it had no lights burning. But he is the only witness who says that there were no lights on the Benton car. Both Mr. and Mrs. Benton state that the lights .on their car were burning, and another witness who was following the Benton car only a few feet behind corroborates the testimony of the two plaintiffs by saying that the tail light on the Benton car was burning after the col *374 lision, although he could not say if the headlights were burning before the collision. It is reasonable'to assume that, if the tail light on the 'Benton car was burning at the time of collision, the headlights were also burning.

Young Griffith says that he pulled his car to the left and went into the ditch on that side of the road when he saw the Benton car just a few feet in front of him; that he hit the right front of the Benton car with the right front of his car; that he was going about thirty-five miles per hour; that it was misting rain at the time, and his windshield wiper was working. It is not contended that the Benton car was speeding nor is it claimed that this car was on the wrong side of the road. The only negligence charged to the driver of the Benton car was that the lights were not on.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-griffith-lactapp-1938.