Brock v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Ins. Co.
This text of 94 So. 2d 492 (Brock v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Ins. Co.) 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.
Opinion
Mrs. Dannie T. BROCK, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SOUTHERN FARM BUREAU CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*493 Ponder & Ponder, Amite, for appellant.
Porteous & Johnson, Adams & Reese, New Orleans, H. H. Richardson, Bogalusa, for appellees.
TATE, Judge.
This personal injury suit was tried before a jury. Plaintiff appeals from verdict and judgment dismissing her suit.
At approximately 4:30 p. m. on July 22, 1954, a 1954 Cadillac automobile being driven by plaintiff, Mrs. Dannie T. Brock, in an easterly direction on Louisiana Highway 71 collided with a motor truck driven by Willie J. Brumfield, which was proceeding in a westerly direction, almost in front of the Williams' home.
Prior to the accident, a Ford automobile driven by Hugh Douglas Cutrer was stopped in the westbound traffic lane in front of the Williams' home to give Rufus Williams a ride into Kentwood.
Made co-defendants herein were: James B. Sumrall and the Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, the owner and liability insurer respectively of the pulpwood truck driven by Brumfield, Sumrall's employee; and Hugh Douglas Cutrer and the State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance *494 Company, owner and liability insurer respectively of the stopped Ford car.
Highway 71 was blacktopped and 18' in width at the place of the accident. The weather was dry and visibility was clear.
In broad outline, the physical facts of the accident are relatively uncontroverted:
The Cutrer car, stopped to pick up Williams, was parked at least partly in its (the westbound) traffic lane of the highway. The Brock Cadillac was proceeding towards the east at a speed of 35-45 mph. It had just crossed a bridge 300 feet west of the scene of the accident when Cutrer stopped. The large pulpwood truck, westbound like Cutrer, was approaching from Cutrer's rear.
At a point approximately 100' to the rear of the Cutrer automobile, the truck brakes were suddenly applied (causing a screeching sound and skid marks 90' in length); the truck skidded straight down its own lane for approximately 60 feet then veered gradually into the other traffic lane, upon which Mrs. Brock was approaching from the opposite direction.
The point of impact was east of the Williams' driveway, i. e., to the rear of the Cutrer car; the distance being from 2'-20' east thereof according to the varying testimony. The collision between the left fronts of the truck and of Mrs. Brock's Cadillac definitely occurred in her lane of traffic, the estimates of the point of impact varying from two to six feet within same and north of the center line. Mrs. Brock's Cadillac had veered partly onto the shoulder, Mrs. Brock testifying that upon seeing the truck skidding she attempted to get off the highway. Upon the impact, her car was deflected further into the ditch, causing certain personal injuries to the two ladies riding therein.
The theory upon which Mrs. Brock brought suit was that the accident was caused through the concurrent negligence of Cutrer, the driver of the Ford, in suddenly stopping upon the travelled portion of the roadway in the truck's path; and of Brumfield, the driver of the pulpwood truck, in proceeding at such excessive speed and lacking such control of his vehicle as to be unable to avoid invading the lane of the highway reserved for opposing traffic such as plaintiff.
We do not think the evidence can be construed to hold that the stopping of the Cutrer car was either the sole or a contributory proximate cause of the accident. The preponderant evidence is that Cutrer had stopped in front of the Williams' driveway just before the truck turned a slight curve approximately 300' east of the driveway. The hitchhiker had had time to take several steps toward the car, when Cutrer noted in his mirror what he felt to be the excessive speed of the truck about 200' behind him and yelled to Williams to watch out and started his car forward.
This testimony of Cutrer is corroborated by that of his passenger and the hitchhiker and by that of plaintiff and her passenger. The point of impact was east of or behind the point where the rear of the Cutrer car was parked. The only testimony of a sudden stop such as might import liability to Cutrer and his insurance carrier, see e. g., Reeves v. Caillouet, La.App., 1 Cir., 46 So.2d 373, was that of the truck driver and one of his passengers. (The other truck passengers were not called to testify.) In our opinion both the preponderant contrary testimony and the physical facts justify the non-acceptance of the conclusion that a sudden stop precipitated the accident.
In our opinion, the driver of the pulpwood truck was just as clearly negligent, accepting the preponderant testimony that Cutrer did not stop suddenly.
The collision definitely occurred on plaintiff's side of the road. "The fact that a collision occurs while a vehicle is being driven on the wrong side of the road places the burden on the driver of such vehicle to show that the accident was not caused by his negligence in driving his vehicle on *495 the wrong side of the highway," Miller v. Hayes, La.App. 1 Cir., 29 So.2d 396, at page 398.
The probable reconstruction of the cause of the accident, based upon the testimony and the physical evidence, is that the truck driver did not perceive plaintiff's oncoming Cadillac until too late, perhaps due to inattention or to the slight curve he was on immediately before the straight stretch; that he suddenly applied his brakes and was unable to avoid veering into the plaintiff's lane of traffic.
Both plaintiff and Cutrer testified as to the apparently very excessive speed of pulpwood truck; and in corroboration point to the great damage done (even after the application of four-wheel brakes causing skid marks 90' in length) by the impact to plaintiff's automobile. The truck driver, however, testified to a speed of approximately 40 mph, coming to a complete stop immediately before the Cadillac struck him.
And although we think the physical facts, including the damage done and the deflection of plaintiff's car from its course, may tend to corroborate the version of excessive speed, we do not believe necessary a resolution of this conflict. In either event, plaintiff at a speed of 35-45 mph (i. e., 51.1' to 65.7' per second) did not have a duty under the circumstances of this case to anticipate that the oncoming truck would be so negligent in lookout and control as to be unable to avoid striking the Cutrer car without crossing over into plaintiff's lane of traffic. The truck, proceeding at the least at a similar speed, did not apply its brakes until it was 90' in the rear of the Cutrer car. At a speed of 35-45 mph plaintiff was less than two seconds away; nor did the driver actually lose control of the truck until the skid had proceeded about 60' of the total brake-marks. If the truck was proceeding at an excessive speed, the time available to plaintiff to evaluate the truck's inability to stop was slight if at all existent prior to the application of the brakes; the accident would occur before the normally prudent driver could evaluate the danger and act accordingly: for example, at a speed of 60 mph (87.6' per second) the truck would have turned the curve east of the scene of the accident and hit plaintiff 300' away in less than four seconds.
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94 So. 2d 492, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-southern-farm-bureau-casualty-ins-co-lactapp-1957.