Breaux v. Flithers

144 So. 2d 574
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 17, 1962
Docket697
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 144 So. 2d 574 (Breaux v. Flithers) 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
Breaux v. Flithers, 144 So. 2d 574 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

144 So.2d 574 (1962)

Mrs. Rose Thibodeaux BREAUX, Individually, et al.
v.
Philip FLITHERS and American Universal Insurance Company.

No. 697.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

September 17, 1962.

*575 Pertuit, Gemeinhardt, Johannesen & Roberts, by James R. Pertuit, New Orleans, for appellant.

Byrnes & Wallace, by Bernard Fonseca, New Orleans, for appellee Philip Flithers.

Faris, Leake & Emmett, by Robert E. Leake, Jr., New Orleans, for appellee American Universal Ins. Co.

Before TATE, THOMPSON and BAILES, Judges.

JULIAN E. BAILES, Judge.

This action in tort was instituted by plaintiff, Mrs. Rose Thibodeaux Breaux, individually and in her representative capacity as duly qualified natural tutrix of her minor daughter, Sheryl Ann Breaux, against defendants, Philip Flithers and American Universal Insurance Company, to recover damages, both special and general, for injuries incurred by the plaintiff and her daughter, and for the wrongful death of plaintiff's other daughter, Tessie Theresa Breaux.

Defendant, Philip Flithers, was the driver of the vehicle which collided with the automobile in which plaintiff and her daughters were passengers and which was driven by plaintiff's husband, Nolan J. Breaux, who was killed in this accident. The other defendant, American Universal Insurance Company, was the public liability insurer of Nolan J. Breaux.

The accident that gave rise to this action occurred at about 6:45 o'clock on the evening of July 7, 1956, in St. Charles Parish on U. S. Highway 90, about one and one-half miles east of Des Allemands. The Breaux automobile was traveling east, and the vehicle driven by defendant, Flithers, was traveling west.

The evidence shows that the collision between these two vehicles occurred at the western end of a long curve extending from a northerly to a westerly direction. Prior to the accident, the Breaux vehicle was traveling at about 50 miles per hour and the one driven by Flithers at a high rate of speed, his exact rate of speed being undetermined. As the Flithers vehicle came around this curve and when approximately 1200 feet away, it was observed by both the plaintiff and her husband, Mr. Breaux, encroaching in the east-bound traffic lane, about three feet south of the center line. At some time after seeing the Flithers vehicle *576 in his lane, Mr. Breaux put on his brakes to slow the automobile and pulled to his right onto the shoulder of the highway. Apparently because of prior rainfall, the shoulder of the road was soft. Upon taking to the shoulder of the road, the Breaux vehicle began to slip. Believing that her husband was going to drive back onto the highway into the path of the oncoming Flithers vehicle, Mrs. Breaux seized, or attempted to seize, the steering wheel to steer it from the paved highway. Her husband thereupon struggled with his wife to free her grasp of the steering wheel, and as soon as he regained control of it, the impact occurred between his automobile and that of Flithers. The State Trooper, who investigated the accident, located the point of impact about six feet south of the center line of the highway, which was in Breaux's traffic lane.

Defendant, Flithers, who was seriously injured in the accident, admitted having drunk four or five draught beers prior to the accident. He was traveling alone, and he disclaims any recollection of the details of his driving immediately prior to the accident. Besides the fatal injuries to Mr. Breaux and his daughter, Tessie Theresa, Mrs. Breaux and the other daughter, Sheryl Ann Breaux, were seriously injured.

There was only one disinterested eye witness to the accident. He was a passenger in an automobile proceeding east in rear of the Breaux vehicle. He testified that at the moment of impact the automobile being driven by Flithers was in the middle of the highway, and the Breaux automobile was on the side of the road just off the pavement, and that at the time of the collision, he saw steam rise from the two vehicles. He was positive that the collision occurred in the eastbound lane of traffic. This was the limit of his knowledge of the facts of the accident. The only other eye witness to testify to the facts of the collision was Mrs. Breaux.

It was stipulated that the Breaux vehicle traveled a distance of 60 feet on the shoulder of the highway before it collided with the Flithers vehicle.

The trial court rendered judgment against Flithers and in favor of the minor, Sheryl Ann Breaux, in the amount of $4,000. All demands of Mrs. Breaux were rejected, and the suit against defendant, American Universal Insurance Company, was dismissed.

The judge a quo, in his reasons for judgments, said:

"The evidence points out that Breaux observed the encroachment of Flithers in his lane of travel and that he took evasive action to avoid the accident. The evidence further satisfies this Court that the evasive action of Breaux's was proper under the circumstances, as was his battle to keep the automobile from slipping, and being faced with an emergency his actions were anything but negligent. Woodward [Woodard] v. American Indemnity Co., [La.App.] 118 So.2d 284; Foster v. Fidelity Mutual Ins. Co., [La. App.] 118 So.2d 139; Dave [Dane] v. Canal Ins. Co., [La.App.] 116 So.2d 359; and others. There was no negligence on the part of Nolan J. Breaux.
"However, negligence so grave, and so uncalled for as to defy explanation was committed by plaintiff Rose Thibodeaux Breaux: By her own testimony a driver since 1951, she saw her husband in an emergency situation under most trying conditions for maintaining proper control of the vehicle, and, with deliberation and thought as she so testified, she grabbed the steering wheel. The imponderables that always surround an accident can safely be resolved in this instance by saying that nothing worse could have happened and the Court finds her negligence a proximate cause of the accident.
"Accordingly, the claims of Rose Thibodeaux Breaux are dismissed."

*577 Plaintiff prosecutes this appeal. Defendant, Philip Flithers, did not appeal from the judgment and made no appearance in this court.

Plaintiff contends, first, that the trial court erred in not holding Breaux guilty of negligence in driving his automobile from the shoulder of the highway back in the highway and into the path of the Flithers vehicle. Secondly, that the trial court erred in holding that Mrs. Breaux was guilty of negligence [that was a proximate cause of the accident] in attempting to steer [by attempting to seize the steering wheel from her husband] the automobile away from the highway and from the path of the Flithers vehicle.

The trial court held Flithers guilty of negligence that was a proximate cause of the accident. This holding is correct, because Flithers was operating his automobile in violation of that all-important section of the Revised Statutes regulating the use and operation of motor vehicles on the highways of this State, which provides:

"LSA-R.S. 32:232
"Drivers of vehicles proceeding in opposite directions shall pass each other to the right, each giving the other for at least two hundred feet before meeting, one half of the main traveled portion of the highway."

Furthermore, Flithers has not appealed from the judgment of the trial court, and the matter is forever closed as to him and his liability.

Passing now to the first assignment of error made by the plaintiff, as paraphrased, supra, we must rely on the testimony of the plaintiff alone.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 2d 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breaux-v-flithers-lactapp-1962.