Boothe v. Teche Lines, Inc.

143 So. 418, 165 Miss. 343, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 273
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1932
DocketNo. 30099.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 So. 418 (Boothe v. Teche Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boothe v. Teche Lines, Inc., 143 So. 418, 165 Miss. 343, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 273 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant brought this action in the circuit court of Adams county against appellee to- recover damages for a personal injury suffered by her and injury toj and loss of, certain personal property she had in the car in which she was traveling caused by a collision alleged to have been the result of the negligence of the driver of appellee’s bus. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee, from which judgment áppellant prosecutes this appeal.

This is a companion case to Teche Lines, Inc., v. Pasavanti (Miss.), 140 So. 677. Appellant with the appellee in that case were passengers in the Buick automobile when the collision took place between it and the bus. The evidence in the present case and in that is substantially the same in all respects.

The allegation in appellant’s declaration as to the movement of the car in which she was traveling is in this language: “Plaintiff herein was a passenger in a certain automobile then being driven by Mrs. Sarah Heatherly, and that said car was proceeding on a public highway with the destination of Natchez, Mississippi and was proceeding in a general northerly direction towards the city of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.” This allegation of the declaration is referred to because appellee claims that appellant is bound to- the proposition that the Buick car had come to a standstill when the collision took place. Appellant and four ladies, all related, being sisters or cousins, lived in Natchez and had been to New Obleans on a shopping trip and were returning' to- Natchez in a Buick sedan. Mrs. Heatherly, one of the party, was driv ing the car. The collision between appellee’s passenger bus and the Buick car occurred near Reserve in the State of Louisiana. The highway on which the passenger *349 bus and the Buick car were traveling runs north and south, and at the point where the collision took place it is straight for a half mile or more in each direction. It is not a paved highway, but is graveled, and is about thirty feet wide. There had been recent heavy rains, and the highway was slippery. The Buick car was traveling north, the passenger bus south, the bus was thirty feet long by seven feet wide, and weighed something like sixteen thousand pounds and had double wheels. The result of the collision was that appellant suffered personal injuries and had to pay medical and hospital bills, and certain personal property owned and carried by her in the car was destroyed in part and damaged in part.

In her declaration the appellant charged, in substance, that the collision between the bus and the Buick car and the resulting injury and damage was caused by the bus being operated at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed in view of the condition of the highway, which was wet and slippery; that the driver of the bus was negligent in failing to keep a lookout for objects on the highway and for failing to have the bus under control; that, instead of keeping on his right-hand side of the highway, he got over on his left-hand side, resulting in the collision; that he was operating the bus in such a careless and negligent manner as to- lose control of it; that he operated it in such a negligent manner as to cause it to skid into the car in which appellant was riding; that the bus was being operated in violation of the statutes of Louisiana.

Appellant and the four ladies with whom she was riding in the Buick car, and one Seine, testified that they saw the bus coming down the highway going south approaching them as they were going north. Seine was south of the place where the - collision occurred; that, when they first observed the bus, it was about three hundred feet north of the Buick car; that the highway was graveled and wet and slippery; and that the bus was *350 running at a very high rate of speed and zigzagging, or swaying, back and forth from one side of the road to the other. Appellant and the other four ladies in the car testified that, when they saw the bus approaching them in that manner, and when it was about three hundred feet north of them, they immediately pulled the Buick car over to their extreme right-hand side of the road near the ditch, as near as they could get to it, and brought the car to a stop; that, when the car stopped, the bus was still about a city block away from them, but coming very rapidly “zigzagging or skidding” back and forth across the road; that the bus was first on one side of the road and then on the other, and before it reached their car— it was headed directly toward it — the driver suddenly swerved the bus to his right-hand side of the road, which caused its rear to skid over on the other side of the road and strike the Buick car; that the impact tore off the running board of the Buick car and struck its rear door and rear fender; that the rear wheels of the Buick car went into the ditch on its right-hand side of the road where it was standing and the front wheels remained on the highway; and that the wheels on the right-hand side of the bus went into the ditch on that side of the highway.

The testimony of appellant and of her four companions was corroborated by the witness Reine; however, another witness introduced by appellant testified that, when the collision took place, the Buick car had not come to a standstill, but was slowly moving north. Five witnesses for appellee, four of whom were disinterested, gave evidence which, if true, exonerated the driver of the bus from any negligence in its operation. In other words, there was a conflict between the testimony of the witnesses for the respective parties. Certain physical facts were undisputed; ■ they are: Immediately after the collision the rear wheels of the Buick car were in the ditch on its right-hand side of the road and its front wheels up on the road, and the right-hand wheels of the bus were in or near the ditch on its right-hand side of the *351 road; the fender of the Bhick ear on its left-hand side was mashed in or torn off, the rear door on that side had been struck and damaged; the front fender of the left-hand rear wheel of the bus was damaged, showing that it had struck the Buick car, but there was no indication whatever that any part of the bus back of its left-hand rear fender and wheel had come in contact with the Buick car. In other words, the physical facts showed that, so- far as concerned the bus the only part of it that came in contact with the Buick car was the front part of its left-hand rear fender.

We held in the Pasavanti Case, which as stated was in all substantial respects the same as this so far as the question of liability is concerned, that appellant in that case was not entitled to a directed verdict of no liability. The court en banc thoroughly considered the question in that case, and réached the conclusion that the issue of liability was one for the jury and not for the court. That decision is controlling here.

Under the law of Louisiana, contributory negligence is a complete defense to an action of tort. The court recognized that the substantive rights of the parties were governed by the laws of Louisiana. In the trial of the case, the court applied the rule in Louisiana.

Appellee contends that the court should have gone further and applied the rules of evidence which obtain in that state, and, if that had been done, the evidence was wholly insufficient to sustain liability on its part.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 418, 165 Miss. 343, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boothe-v-teche-lines-inc-miss-1932.