Blevins v. Drake-Lindsay Co.

144 So. 257
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1932
DocketNo. 4356.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 144 So. 257 (Blevins v. Drake-Lindsay Co.) 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
Blevins v. Drake-Lindsay Co., 144 So. 257 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PALMER, J.

Plaintiff is suing to recover the sum of $351.53 as damages to his automobile, which he alleges were occasioned by a collision between his automobile and the automobile of defendants in a street intersection in the city of Baton Rouge, La., through the fault and negligence of the defendants.

On June 6, 1931, about the hour of 10:30 *258 p. m;t plaintiff’s son, Edwin Blevins, Jr., wiio was a student at Louisiana State University, was driving plaintiff’s car south on St. Hypo-lite street in the city of Baton Rouge, which runs north and south, and' defendant M. W. Drake, who is an officer in the company of defendant the Drake-Lindsay Company, Incorporated, was driving defendant’s car eastward on Laurel street, which runs east and west, and a collision occurred between their cars in the street intersection, resulting in damages to both ears and also in personal injuries to Mr. Drake.

These two streets cross at right angles, and it appears that the collision occurred while the front wheels of plaintiff’s car were at or near the south curb on Laurel street. There is a board fence several feet high paralleling Laurel street on the north side and sitting back a few feet from the sidewalk. A party approaching Laurel street from the north cannot see westward on Laurel street until he lias cleared himself of this board fence. On the occasion in question, plaintiff contends that his said son, as he approached this intersection, slowed down, looked both ways, and seeing no car within a reasonable distance, proceeding to cross the intersection at a slow rate of speed, but that when he reached a point almost entirely across the intersection, defendants’ ear, driven by defendant M. W. Drake, running at a rate of speed in excess of 40 miles per hour, “bore down upon him,” and that, although his son attempted to turn to the left and get out of the way of defendants’ automobile, doing all he could to avoid being struck, defendants’ car ran into the side of plaintiff’s car, “crushing the running board, denting in the right side, breaking the door glass,, bending the door, crushing the rear fender, bending and breaking the front spring, bending the axle, knocking the wheel out of shape, and otherwise injuring and damaging petitioner’s automobile.”

He further alleges that the collision, and the damages to his car resulting therefrom were occasioned by the gross fault and negligence of the said M. W. Drake, in operating his car at a dangerous and reckless rate of speed, in violation of an ordinance of the city of Baton Rouge and of the laws of the state of Louisiana, as well as in utter disregard of the lives and property of others. He itemized his damages as follows: $175 for repairs to his ear; $13.40 to replace a tire that was ruined in the collision: $1.25 for a headlight lens, broken in'the collision; $10.88 to cover his expenses to Baton Rouge to recover his car after it was repaired; and $150 to cover general depreciation of the car.

Defendants denied that they are responsible for the collision resulting in plaintiff’s alleged damages to his automobile. On the contrary, they pleaded that the collision resulted entirely from the gross negligence and fault of plaintiff’s son. By reconventional demand, defendants averred, in effect, that on the occasion of the collision, defendant M. W. Drake, driving a Chevrolet coupé, owned by the defendant Drake-Lindsay Company, Inc., and traveling east on Laurel street in the city of Baton Rouge, drove his said automobile into the said intersection, at which time he observed the approach of plaintiff's car on St. Hypolite street, and that said car was approaching rapidly along St. Hypolite street from his left; that realizing that the Oakland sedan, driven by. plaintiff’s minor son, was not going to stop, he (Drake) “turned his car sharply to the right, giving the Oakland sedan a chance to turn to its left and proceed out Laurel Street, which it could easily have done, if going at the rate of speed alleged in plaintiff’s petition.” But that instead, the driver of the Oakland sedan continued on St. Hypo-lite street, striking defendants’ automobile, causing their car to cross the curb and sidewalk and go upon the yard of Dr. Elowers, at the southeast corner of the said intersection ; that in the collision and as a result of defendants’ car being forced upon the curb and sidewalk and into the said yard, it had the left front wheel and front axle knocked out of line; that the left front fender was crushed; and that the automobile was generally bent and crushed, breaking one axle and a windshield, the center bar of the front bumper, as well as breaking and damaging other parts of the car. '

Defendants averred that at the time of the collision, the said M. W. Drake was traveling at a moderate and safe rate of speed and was keeping a proper lookout, and was driving in a careful manner; that he entered the intersection first and had the right of way, under an ordinance of the city of Baton Rouge; and that if plaintiff’s said son had obeyed the laws and ordinances, the accident would not have occurred.

Defendants further alleged that, as a result of the collision and through the fault and negligence of plaintiff’s said son, their automobile was damaged in the sum of $94.94, which sum was expended as repairs occasioned by the collision. They further alleged that in addition to the said repairs, the car was damaged by depreciation in the sum of $100.

Defendants further alleged that the said M. W. Drake was thrown forward in the automobile and knocked unconscious; that he was taken to the sanitarium and did not regain consciousness for about nine hours; tha.t in the collision his left collar bone was bro¿en, and that he suffered severe contusions and bruises about the body, with serious lacerations above the left eye, under the angle of the left jaw, and that he received bruises on the back of his head and on the left chest, causing him great pain; that for a week after the accident he was required to take opiates *259 and sedatives to relieve his pain and suffering ; that he was confined to his bed for several days and to his home for two weeks, but that even then he continued to suffer pain in his collar bone for four weeks; that as a result of the said accident, he had a constant headache for two weeks and has continued to suffer severely with intermittent headaches, a kind which he had never suffered prior to the accident; and that as a result of the accident, he has spent in the way of hospital bill, physician’s bill, X-ray bill, and transportation from Baton Rouge to Shereveport, his home, the sum of $62.39. He claims for pain and suffering, $500; for injury to his collar bone, $1,000; for shock, $500 — -making the total claimed in his reconventional demand, $2,062.39.

Defendant Drake-Lindsay Company, Inc., in addition to the damages above set forth, claimed that defendant M. W. Drake was employed by it at an annual salary of $3,900, and that during his illness they paid his salary, amounting to $300. They further averred that they were without the use of their said automobile for seven days, as a result of the collision, and that they are entitled to •compensation therefor at the rate of $5 per day, or a total of $35. The total amount of the reconventional demands of both defendants is as follows: Drake-Lindsay Company, Inc., $529.94; M. W. Drake, $2,062.39; making a total of $2,592.33, for which they seek judgment against plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blevins-v-drake-lindsay-co-lactapp-1932.