Boullion v. Bonin

2 So. 2d 535
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1940
DocketNos. 2172, 2239.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2 So. 2d 535 (Boullion v. Bonin) 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
Boullion v. Bonin, 2 So. 2d 535 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

These two suits for damages, consolidated for trial in the Court below and for argument and submission before this Court, arose out of the same automobile accident which occurred in the Town of Kaplan, Vermilion Parish, on September 11, 1937. The accident was an intersectional collision between a Dodge truck belonging to Jules S. Motty, doing business as Motty Ice Works, driven at the time by Rudolph E. Boullion, and a Ford Coupe belonging to Kaplan Rice Mills, Inc., which was being driven at the moment by Dallas Bonin. It happened at about noon in the intersection formed by the junction of Cushing Avenue and Sixth Street. It is admitted that both drivers were employed by the respective owners of the vehicles which they were driving and that they were, at the time, acting within the course and scope of their employment.

Cushing Avenue runs directly north and south and Sixth Street, east and west. Cushing Avenue is fifty feet wide on the side north of Sixth Street and widens to seventy-six feet after it crosses that street. Beginning immediately on the south side of Sixth Street where it measures seventy-six feet, there is a neutral ground in the center measuring fourteen feet, thus leaving a lane of travel thirty-one feet in width on both sides of the neutral ground. Sixth Street is twenty-seven feet wide on the side east of Cushing Avenue and thirty-seven feet on the side west. On the west side of Cushing Avenue there are buildings at or near the corner of the intersection but on the east side both corners are clear of any obstructions to the view of automobile drivers. Cushing Avenue is a right of way street and a town ordinance prescribes that cars entering it must come to a stop before doing so.

Rudolph Boullion, plaintiff in one of the suits, was driving his employer's truck on Sixth Street, travelling west, Dallas Bonin, made a defendant in both suits, was driving his employer's Ford coupe on Cushing Avenue, going south. The two vehicles collided at a point near the southwest corner and well beyond the center of the intersection. The force of the impact caused the Dodge truck to be pushed against a telephone post on the southwest corner of the intersection and the driver, Boullion, was thrown from the truck on the sidewalk, sustaining personal injuries for which he seeks to recover damages from Bonin, driver of the Ford car, and his employer Kaplan Rice Mills, Inc., and its public liability insurer, Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, in solido, in the sum of $2,527. The Dodge truck was damaged to the extent of $492 which the owner, Jules S. Motty, alleges it would cost to have it repaired and he sues the same defendants to recover that amount from them, in solido.

The claims of each are based on the allegations made by the plaintiff in each suit that the Dodge truck had crossed the entire intersection of the two streets when Bonin, going at an excessive rate of speed, in violation of the town ordinance, and without keeping a lookout for other vehicles, entered the intersection and negligently drove his car into the middle of the right side of the truck. It is further alleged that the brakes of the Ford car were in bad condition, making it impossible to *Page 537 safely stop the car in the event of an emergency such as this but the testimony did not support such charge of negligence.

The defendants, in both suits, deny the negligence charged by the plaintiffs and aver that to the contrary, the accident was caused by the sole negligence of Boullion, the driver of the Dodge truck, in entering Cushing avenue without stopping at the intersection as he was required to do by the town ordinance, and in driving at an excessive rate of speed without keeping a proper lookout for traffic on the streets. In the alternative, they plead, in case Bonin should be shown to have been negligent, that Boullion's contributory negligence in the manner as just set out, stands as a bar to the recovery of the plaintiffs in both suits.

On the issues as thus presented, the district judge, after trial, concluded that the drivers of both vehicles were negligent, that they equally contributed to and were equally responsible for the accident. He accordingly dismissed the suit of each of the plaintiffs and they have appealed.

It seems clear from the testimony, as found by the district judge, that the defendant Bonin was guilty of gross negligence. He was on his way to the rice mill and admits that he was in a hurry to get there. He did not know exactly how fast he was driving but "guesses" that it was about forty miles an hour. Although his view on the side from which the Dodge truck was coming was clear and unobstructed, he did not see the truck enter the intersection and only saw it as he was about to hit it. When asked whether he had applied his brakes, he answers that he doesn't remember but doesn't believe that he did. A witness named Arestide Broussard who saw him pass on the street at a point two blocks from the intersection testifies that according to his judgment, he was then going about fifty or fifty-five miles and it looked to him as though he was picking up speed instead of slowing down.

Boullion states that he wasn't going more than twenty miles an hour and when asked to designate on a plat the point in the intersection where the truck was at the time it was struck, he places it well beyond the west side of the neutral ground on Cushing Avenue south of Sixth Street. That point, in relation to the width of the intersection shows that he was already at least two-thirds, if nor more, across the intersection. The Ford car hit the truck right in the middle, pushing it against the telephone post. The force of the impact was strong enough to break that post. Bonin's negligence can easily be concluded from the rate of speed at which he was driving, his failure to keep a proper lookout for traffic which may be entering from a side street into the avenue on which he was travelling and his failure to apply his brakes or do anything to try to avoid running into the truck.

Boullion admits that he entered Cushing Avenue at the intersection without stopping, in direct violation of the ordinance of the town, the provisions of which he was fully aware, and without sounding the horn of his truck or giving any other warning whatsoever. He says that he looked in both directions for traffic as he entered the intersection and not seeing any car approaching proceeded on, looking straight ahead. He had equal opportunity of seeing the Ford car approaching the intersection from the north as did Bonin of seeing the truck and why, if he did look in that direction, as he says he did, and did not see it, has not been explained and cannot be understood. He therefore was clearly negligent in entering the intersection without stopping, in violation of the ordinance, and in failing to keep a proper lookout for approaching traffic.

To the extent therefore that the district judge found both drivers negligent we can say that we are in accord with his findings of fact but in our opinion, there is a further reason to which we can look for the proximate cause of this accident and if the liability of either party can be fixed because of it, it becomes the duty of the Court to examine into it and decree the liability, if any. We have in mind that rule of law which arises in cases of this kind and which places the responsibility for the accident on the party who had the last clear chance to avoid causing injury. Whilst the plaintiff in either suit has not pleaded the doctrine of last clear chance against the driver of the defendant car we find that in a case of this kind, where a defendant alleges that the plaintiff was negligent, since the plaintiff is presumed under the Statute Code Prac. art.

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Bluebook (online)
2 So. 2d 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boullion-v-bonin-lactapp-1940.