Bobbie Lee Suggsmrs. Betty Suggs Bryant, and Fannie Doris Suggs Carter v. National Homes Corporation

308 F.2d 105, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 4173
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 1962
Docket19372_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 308 F.2d 105 (Bobbie Lee Suggsmrs. Betty Suggs Bryant, and Fannie Doris Suggs Carter v. National Homes Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobbie Lee Suggsmrs. Betty Suggs Bryant, and Fannie Doris Suggs Carter v. National Homes Corporation, 308 F.2d 105, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 4173 (5th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

DeVANE, District Judge.

This automobile accident case was tried to a jury. Following an extended trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant. This verdict is amply supported by the evidence in this case and no complaint is made by appellants that the verdict is contrary to the evidence.

Under these circumstances, it is the duty of the Court to affirm the judgment unless the Court finds that the trial Judge, during the trial of the case, committed reversible error. Realizing this, appellants’ assignments of error are based entirely upon their claim that the Court committed error (1) in refusing to admit in evidence certain ordinances of the City of Blackshear, Georgia, and (2) in giving certain charges and in refusing to give certain requested charges of appellants. After a brief statement of the facts in the case, the Court will consider these assignments of error in the order in which they appear in appellants’ brief.

Appellants are the children of Archie Suggs and Dessie Suggs, both deceased. Archie Suggs died May 20, 1960, as a result of injuries he received in a rear-end collision with appellee’s tractor-trailer on May 9, 1960, on Main Street in the city limits of Blackshear, Georgia. Des-sie Suggs, widow of Archie Suggs, filed suit on July 26, 1960, against appellee for the wrongful death of Archie Suggs. Dessie Suggs died on November 15, 1960, before the case was tried and on motion *107 appellants, her children, were made parties.

Appellee manufactures prefab houses and ships them by tractor-trailer trucks all over the country. On May 9, 1960, one of appellee’s trucks was going south loaded with a house on Georgia Highway 121 and proceeded to a point within the city limits of Blaekshear, Georgia, where it met another one of appellee’s tractor-trailer trucks, which was unloaded and going back north. It was about 10:00 o’clock at night. The southbound truck signaled the northbound truck to stop. Both trucks stopped at a point on Main Street, the same being a paved street in the City of Blaekshear, Georgia. These trucks were approximately 50 feet long and 8 feet wide. The street on which these trucks stopped is somewhere between 35 and 38 feet in width with a curb on each side. Each truck parked in its lane of traffic, the southbound truck in the west lane and the northbound truck in the east lane of traffic, each near the curb.

Archie Suggs was a policeman, employed by the City of Blaekshear on duty at this time and was riding in the front seat of a police car with Ernie Courson, another policeman, who was driving the car. As the police car' proceeded south on Main Street, it passed the northbound truck on its left and struck, the rear of the southbound truck, injuring both occupants of the police car. As stated above, Archie Suggs later died on May 20, 1960, and Ernie Courson recovered.

The two parked trucks of appellee were approximately 150 feet apart and were unattended at the time of the collision. The drivers of these trucks were engaged in a conversation at the rear of the northbound truck.

There was conflict in the evidence as to whether the bright lights of the northbound truck were left burning when it was parked and there was conflict in the evidence as to whether there were lights on the rear of the southbound truck.

Police Officer Courson, the driver of the police car, testified that the headlights on the parked truck headed north were bright, but he could not testify as to whether they were on bright or dim and he would not testify that they blinded him so that he could not see. He also' testified that he could not say that the headlights on the parked truck going north affected his vision, because he said he always slowed down when he met bright lights.

Another witness testified that when he drove to the scene of the accident shortly after it happened, he could see the truck parked on the east side of the street for several hundred yards and that the lights from this truck did not prevent him from seeing the other parked truck on the west side of the street. Luther Johnson, ambulance driver, testified that when he approached the scene of the accident, he was not blinded by the lights on the parked truck headed north which faced him as he drove to the scene of the accident.

There was conflicting testimony at the trial of the case as to whether there were rear lights on the southbound truck prior to the accident. There was testimony by witnesses that arrived at the scene of the accident promptly thereafter that the rear lights of the truck were burning when they arrived at the scene.

This evidence clearly made a case for the jury and the case was appropriately submitted to the jury, which, as stated above, returned a verdict in favor of ap-pellee.

The first assignment of error of appellants relates to the refusal of the Court to admit two ordinances of the City of Blaekshear, Georgia, relative to parking. When first tendered, the Court refused to admit these ordinances and then changed his mind and reversed his position and ruled that he was going to allow a portion of these ordinances to be admitted in evidence, but later he ruled them out entirely.

This ruling of the Court is of great importance to appellants for the reason that the chief negligence of appellee as claimed by the appellants is the violation of these ordinances in the parking of its truck on the streets of Blaekshear in *108 violation thereof. It is the contention of appellants that these ordinances made it unlawful for the trucks to be parked at that point on the street of the city.

The ordinances referred to were of the common type where the city marks off parking space in the business section of the city and requires that automobiles be parked in designated marked off parking space. It is agreed by the parties that in the vicinity where these trucks stopped, there was no designated parking space along the street.

Appellants’ interpretation of the ordinances is to the effect that the ordinance defining the method of parking in the business section of the city within designated parking spaces made it unlawful for anyone to park an automobile at any point along the highway where there were no designated parking spaces. This certainly is a strained construction of the ordinance. It is entitled to no such interpretation from this Court and the Court finds and holds that the parking of these trucks under the circumstances did not violate these ordinances and the Court was amply justified in taking them away from the jury.

The second assignment of error involves the question of the refusal of the Court to give certain charges requested by appellants and the Court giving certain charges to which the appellants took exception. The trial Judge in this case, as do most trial Judges in like cases, refused to give certain of the requested charges of appellants, but in substance gave his own charge covering the same subject matter. The Court has carefully considered the charges requested by appellants and those given by the Court and finds and holds that the Court’s charge in each instance was sufficient and that no error was committed in refusing to give the charges as requested by appellants where the same subject matter was covered in charges given by the Court. .

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Related

Wade H. Marlowe, Jr. v. Garden Services, Inc.
411 F.2d 473 (Fifth Circuit, 1969)
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382 F.2d 752 (Fifth Circuit, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
308 F.2d 105, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 4173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobbie-lee-suggsmrs-betty-suggs-bryant-and-fannie-doris-suggs-carter-v-ca5-1962.