Boland M. M. Co. v. Highway Ins. Underwriters

22 So. 2d 307, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 371
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1945
DocketNo. 18191.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 307 (Boland M. M. Co. v. Highway Ins. Underwriters) 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
Boland M. M. Co. v. Highway Ins. Underwriters, 22 So. 2d 307, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 371 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

A motortruck of plaintiff, Boland Machine Manufacturing Co., sustained damage when its operator, after dark on a rainy night, drove it into the ends of large timbers which were extending from the rear of a trailer of J. M. English Truck Lines, which trailer was attached to a motortruck of that concern and which trailer and truck had been left standing on a street in the City of New Orleans several feet from the curb.

The truck and trailer of the J. M. English Truck Lines were within the coverage of a liability insurance policy issued by Highway Insurance Underwriters, a non-resident corporation, and the plaintiff corporation, alleging that the accident resulted solely from negligence of the operator of the truck and trailer and its owners, brought this suit directly against the said insurance corporation under authority of Act 55 of 1930, and prayed for judgment in the sum of $366, alleging that it had been required to pay $306 in repairing the truck and $60 in the renting of another truck while its own was undergoing repairs.

The defendant corporation denied negligence on the part of the operator of the truck or its owners and, in the alternative, averred that the driver of plaintiff's truck was guilty of contributory negligence.

During the trial in the Civil District Court it was admitted that the repairs to the truck had cost $306 and that $26 was spent for the rental of another truck while the repairs were being made.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff for $332 and defendant has appealed.

The accident occurred at about 6:30 o'clock on the evening of January 30th, 1942 (the record in several places erroneously mentions it as June 30th, 1942), on So. Peters Street between Girod and Lafayette Streets. So. Peters Street is fairly wide. In its center is a street car track and vehicles are permitted to operate in only one direction from uptown towards Canal *Page 309 Street. It had been raining and the street was wet.

The truck and trailer of the J. M. English Truck Lines were in charge of its employee, Angelo Joseph Benandi, who was admittedly acting within the scope of his employment. The trailer was an adjustable one consisting of two rear wheels connected by an axle and a skeleton body with a long member which connected the rear wheels with the truck and which member could be lengthened or shortened as necessary in accordance with the length of the load to be transported.

There were on the trailer two timbers, estimated by some witnesses as being's long as 60 feet, but which we think in all probability were only 40 feet in length. These were square and were what are known as 12 x 12s. It is not shown whether they were new timbers or old but the record leaves us convinced that they were dark in color, and Benandi, the driver of the truck, said that since they were wet, "they were naturally dark." There were also some steel rods on the truck though neither the number nor size of these rods is given. The timbers extended beyond the rear of the trailer a distance which defendant admits was 8 feet, and which some of the witnesses say was 10 feet or more.

It was the purpose of the driver, Benandi, to make a delivery of either the steel rods or the timbers — the record does not make it clear which — at a place of business known as Murray Baker, which is located on the river side of So. Peters Street. In order to make that delivery it was necessary that the trailer be backed into the establishment and to accomplish this maneuver, which with a trailer is rather difficult, the driver went a short distance beyond the entrance and stopped, preliminary to backing into the entrance. There were other vehicles at the curb so that when he stopped the truck and the trailer they were some distance from the curb and on the outside of these other vehicles.

The record shows that when it was stopped the left side of the trailer was about three feet from the nearest rail of the street car track which was on that street, and that there was a considerable space remaining in the street through which the Boland truck could have passed had its driver noticed that it was necessary for him to swerve to the left.

Benandi left this equipment standing in the street and went into the establishment of Murray Baker to find out whether he could back into the entrance. He says that he was gone only about five minutes and that when he returned, he decided that as he would be required to wait a short time he would string certain lights along the outer edge of the trailer. While the record does not mention the character of these lights, we get the impression that there were three electric lights strung together with wire and that one end of the wire was to be plugged into the electric circuit of the truck. He says that as he was stringing these lights he saw plaintiff's truck turn into So. Peters Street about two blocks away and come towards his stationery trailer, and, feeling that the driver of plaintiff's truck might strike the timbers extended from his truck, he swung the lights back and forth as a warning but that the driver of the on-coming truck apparently did not notice the timbers nor the lights until it was too late, and that the driver of the said Boland truck, swerving to the left at the last moment, crashed into the ends of the timbers. Benandi insists that some time before this he had turned on all of the lights on the truck and trailer, and that these lights consisted of two headlights, three lights on top of the cab of the truck, two "headache" lights situated on the truck just behind the cab, and a taillight on the trailer.

Lawrence Kissinger, the driver of plaintiff's truck, says that as he approached the spot at which the accident occurred he was operating his truck at a speed of 20 miles per hour and that he, too, had to stop at the Murray Baker establishment in order to pick up some fittings; that he noticed the lights on the top of the cab which was in the roadway ahead of him but that he did not know whether these lights were on a standing or on a moving vehicle and that there were no other lights on that truck or trailer, and that he did not notice that extending towards him some 50 or 60 feet from the truck was this trailer loaded with these long timbers. He says that when he did notice the timbers it was too late and that though he attempted to swerve to the left, he could not avoid a crash.

Section 4 of Article X of Ordinance 13702, C.C.S., reads as follows: "Flag or Light at End of Load. Whenever any part of the load on any vehicle shall extend more than four feet beyond the rear of the bed or body thereof, there shall be displayed at the end of such load, in such position as to be clearly visible at all times from the *Page 310 rear of such vehicle, a red flag not less than twelve (12) inches both in length and width, except that between one-half hour after sunset and one-half hour before sunrise there shall be displayed at the end of such load a red light plainly visible under normal atmospheric conditions at least 200 feet from the rear of such vehicle.

It is conceded that the timbers extended from the rear of the trailer a distance of at least 8 feet and the record shows that on their end there was neither a flag nor a light. In spite of the vehement statements of Benandi, we think that the record by an overwhelming preponderance shows that as Kissinger approached no lights which were visible to him had been lighted on either the truck or the trailer except the three lights on the top of the cab. These lights were at least 50 or 60 feet from the rear ends of the extending timbers.

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 2d 307, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boland-m-m-co-v-highway-ins-underwriters-lactapp-1945.