Brown v. Benjamin

120 So. 2d 325
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1960
DocketNo. 9204
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 So. 2d 325 (Brown v. Benjamin) 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
Brown v. Benjamin, 120 So. 2d 325 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

This is a suit by plaintiff, widow of John Arthur Brown, individually and for the use and benefit of her minor children, for damages from the death of her said husband resulting from a multi-vehicle accident. Massachusetts Fire & Marine Insurance Company is a co-plaintiff in this action, seeking recovery of property damages sustained by its assured-assignors. The defendants are Hollis Benjamin, driver, Martin J. Moore, owner, and Canal Insurance Company, liability insurer, of one of the truck-trailer units involved in the accident. The named defendants appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs. Written reasons for judgment were not given by the trial judge.

The series of collisions out of which arose this and a companion suit, occurred on U. S. Highway 80 shortly after 4:00 o’clock, A.M., on December 16, 1957, at a point in close proximity to the intersection of a gravel road, which location is known as Bennett’s Crossing, some 3.1 miles west of Rayville in Richland Parish, and approximately two miles west of the Village of Girard. The highway in the neighborhood of the point of collision is straight and level for several miles in each direction and at the time of the accident the surface of the highway was dry and conditions of visibility were unimpaired.

The undisputed facts related to the occurrence of the collisions are that a large truck trailer, driven by the decedent, owned by the A. & B. Truck Lines and insured against collision damage by plaintiff, Massachusetts Fire & Marine Insurance Company, and hereinafter referred to as the Brown truck or trailer, moving east on the highway, collided with the trailer portion of another truck-trailer unit driven by Benjamin, hereinafter referred to as the Benjamin truck or trailer; short minutes after this collision a Jeep motor vehicle, driven by William L. Vanderford, plaintiff in the companion suit to which reference is above made, moving east, crashed into the left side of the Brown trailer in the south lane of the highway, and again, after passage of a very brief period of time, a truck-trailer unit driven by Jack Hoover, owned by the Mercury Truck Lines and insured against collision and liability by plaintiff, Massachusetts Fire & Marine Insurance Company, also collided with the left side of the Brown trailer. At the time of the accident the Brown trailer was loaded with a large truck owned by Mercury Truck Lines, hereinafter referred to' as the “piggyback” truck; the Hoover trailer was loaded with another trailer unit also belonging to Mercury Truck Lines, and the Benjamin trailer did not carry any load.

The basis of the claims of plaintiffs in this and the Vanderford suit is predicated upon the contention that the original collision between the Brown truck and the Benjamin trailer was due solely and exclusively to the negligence of Benjamin, who had jack-knifed or angled the trailer portion of his unit in such manner that it extended across the south lane of travel of the highway, thus blocking the passage of the Brown unit in its eastbound course along said lane.

As the result of the collision between the Brown and Benjamin vehicles the “piggy-back” tractor broke loose from its fastenings and rolled down upon the cab of the Brown truck. The driver, caught between the frontal impact of the collision itself and the crushing blow of the “piggyback” tractor on the rear of his cab, was instantly killed.

After careful consideration of the record, we are of the opinion that the proper determination of this appeal must rest upon the resolution of a single factual issue, which is the location of the impact with reference to the east and westbound lanes of travel of the highway.

Plaintiffs and defendants have evolved, and insistently urge, two violently opposed [327]*327and completely irreconcilable theories as to the manner in which the original collision occurred. Plaintiffs insist that Benjamin, who was en route from New Orleans to Warren, Arkansas, for the purpose of picking up a load of lumber, had missed his turn-off at the village of Girard, which would have taken him by the shortest and most direct route to Mer Rouge and thence to Warren; that upon discovering this error in his driving, Benjamin was engaged in attempting to back his truck trailer unit into the south gravel road intersection at Bennett’s Crossing with the intention of reversing his direction and retracing his route to the turn-off at Gir-ard; and that while so engaged, and with his trailer angled across the south lane of Highway 80, the Brown truck collided with a full frontal impact against the left side of the Benjamin trailer at a point some sixteen feet toward the rear thereof. This theory rests upon the opinion explanation of the investigating State Troopers, whose testimony will be subsequently discussed in some detail in this opinion. With equal insistence defendants contend that at the time of the collision the Benjamin truck was moving west in its proper lane of travel at a speed of approximately forty-five miles per hour and was struck or sideswiped by the Brown truck, whose driver turned his vehicle across the center line of the highway and rammed the left side of the Benjamin trailer. In support of this theory defendants rely upon the testimony of Benjamin and the testimony of the witness, Ralph H. Snider, who is denominated as an expert safety engineer and accident analyst.

At the very outset of the development of our factual findings we wish to make the specific and definite observation that theories and speculations as to the explanation of why the Benjamin trailer was in the right, or wrong, lane of the highway are unimportant and irrelevant. The ultimate issue, as above observed, must be the determination of the location, with reference to the highway lanes of travel, of the Benjamin trailer and the Brown truck at the moment of impact, which determination must be adjudged upon the basis of the weight of evidence reflected by the record.

Some thirty minutes, more or less, after the first collision, Louisiana State Trooper W. H. Thomason arrived at the scene of the accident and made a thorough investigation of the surrounding physical circumstances and conditions. Shortly after the arrival of Trooper Thomason, he was joined by Sgt. Floyd Edwards and Trooper Stroud, who- participated, to some extent, in the investigation being made by Thom-ason. Both Trooper Thomason and Sgt. Edwards testified at length on trial of the case. Trooper Stroud had moved from the State some time after the accident and was not tendered as a witness.

Trooper Thomason had been employed with the Louisiana State Police for a period of almost eight years, and Sgt. Edwards had been so employed for a period of almost nineteen years. Both of these witnesses were skilled, by practical experience in on-the-spot investigations of many hundreds of automobile accidents, and, as the result of such experience, we believe they were qualified not only to testify as to their specific factual -findings, but, further, to express expert opinions and conclusions drawn therefrom.

Without the need for excessively detailed recapitulation of the testimony of these witnesses, we are of the opinion that their factual findings amply support and justify their conclusions that the impact of the collision between the Benjamin trailer and the Brown truck occurred entirely within the south lane of Highway 80, which was the proper lane of travel for the eastbound unit being driven by Brown.

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Related

Welch v. Hayes
246 So. 2d 864 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
Gandy v. Feazel
155 So. 2d 474 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Stevens v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company
133 So. 2d 1 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)
Hollins v. Jefferson Oil Co.
124 So. 2d 629 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)
Vanderford v. Canal Insurance
120 So. 2d 333 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 2d 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-benjamin-lactapp-1960.