Brown v. Dalton

143 So. 672
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
DocketNo. 1017.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 143 So. 672 (Brown v. Dalton) 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. Dalton, 143 So. 672 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

The Old Spanish Trail is a state highway which runs westward from the town of Jean-nerette through New Iberia on its way to the Texas line.

At about a couple of miles from Jeanner-ette the Old Spanish Trail is intersected by a gravel side road known as the Bay-Side Bridge Road, which rqns north and south. This side road comes to a stop at the south line of the Spanish Trail where it forms a blind intersection. On the east side of this Bay-Side Bridge Road and on the southeastern corner where it intersects the Spanish Trail stand the large frame store building of Firmand Petitfils and a filling station.

In the intersection a collision occurred *673 between an auto which Clarence Lemaire was driving and one driven by R. C. Dalton, defendant. Plaintiff, Brown, who was sitting next to Lemaire on the front seat of his auto, was injured in the collision, brought this suit in damages against defendant, and recovered judgment for $771.50, from which defendant appeals.

It is shown that Brown was an invitee or guest of Lemaire, and the question presented for decision is as to whether he is entitled to damages as such.

Defendant who was driving on the side road, southward, testifies that when he got to the’ intersection and before entering it, he stopped his car, saw the car driven by Lemaire who was then coming westward on the Spanish Trail Highway, and which was at that time at a distance of about two hundred feet, as was verified by subsequent measurements. He says he took it for granted that the Lemaire car was traveling at a legal rate of speed and that he proceeded to go across the intersection. His testimony is that he made a left-hand turn when he entered the highway in going across. He testifies that he lived in the vicinity and always stopped before entering the intersection where there was a stop sign.

Mr. Bonvilain, whose residence is on the southwest corner of the Bay-Side Road where it adjoins the highway, says he frequently noticed that defendant stopped his car before entering the intersection. It is true, he says, that he did not see him stop on the occasion in question, but testifies that when he passed his home he was traveling at about fifteen miles an hour. If such was the usual or ordinary conduct of the defendant when getting to the intersection and that on the day in question he was going at the slow speed of about fifteen miles when he passed by the premises of Mr. Bonvilain, it would seem that it is very likely that, as usual, he stopped his car on the day the collision occurred. Besides, it clearly appears that neither Lemaire nor Brown could say whether defendant had stopped his car at the intersection as they saw him, as they testify, only a moment before they ran into his auto in the intersection. It also clearly appears that when the ears collided, or just before, defendant was merely creeping along at a speed of about five or six miles an hour, which authorizes the inference that he had stopped before going into the highway, as was testified to by him.

It is unquestionably true that due to the Petitfils large frame building store and the filling station which stood on the southeastern corner of the intersection, that Le-maire, driver of the car in which plaintiff was sitting, did not have an uninterrupted view of the traffic upon the Bay-Side Road entering the intersection for a distance of two hundred feet from such intersection.

In such cases, under subsection b, par. 3 of section 5 of Act No. 296, 1928, p. 633, the driver, when his view is obstructed as was the situation in the instant case, must not go at a speed exceeding fifteen miles an hour when within fifty feet of the intersection. If Lemaire, when within fifty feet of the intersection, had been going at fifteen miles an hour, as defendant was traveling at six miles when crossing the intersection, no collision could possibly have occurred. Defendant had the right to assume, as he says he did, that the Lemaire car was then traveling at a legal rate of speed and which entitled him to the right to go across the intersection as he proceeded to do.

This Bay-Side Road is graveled, is not a private roadway, connects two highways, is a state highway, and therefore comes within the purview of the provisions of the statute above referred to.

It was shown, however, by the imprints of the wheels of the cars on the pavement and the remnants of broken glasses from the autos, that the collision between the cars occurred south of the center line of the pavement. That fact is corroborated by the markings in red on the Jones’ Map introduced in evidence as explained by the preponderance of the testimonial evidence in the case.

It further appears that not only had defendant crossed over this center line when Lemaire ran into his car, but that he had effected the turn to his left and was heading eastward towards Jeannerette south of that center line and was running parallel with it, when Lemaire, going westward, struck his auto.

It is appropriate to state here whether defendant entered the intersection first, or whether Lemaire failed to slacken his speed to the rate of fifteen miles an hour when fifty feet from the intersection as required by the statute regulating traffic on our public roads, are matters not necessary to be considered as essential for a correct solution of the case, as defendant had actually gone across the center line of the pavement, was headed eastward on the south thereof, was running parallel-therewith when the Le-maire car was swerved to its left side across that center line and ran into defendant’s car. When the cars collided it is not disputed that defendant was going at about five or six miles an hour, the rate of speed at which he proceeded in making his left turn across the pavement of the highway.

The collision occurred on a bright day at about 11 o’clock in the forenoon, on the highway, a straight road, with no other cars, vehicles, or obstructions that could have *674 prevented Lemaire from seeing a car coming towards him on that highway.

Lemaire says he was traveling then at forty or forty-five miles an hour, and Brown, his guest, the plaintiff, estimated his speed at thirty-five or forty miles an hour. The concrete pavement on this highway is eighteen feet wide with shoulders on each side about six feet each, giving an open space of thirty feet from ditch to ditch. It is almost impossible to believe that if Lemaire had then been driving at forty or forty-five miles an hour, or at thirty-five or forty, according to Brown, that he or Brown would have failed to see the defendant’s car in time to relax their speed to avoid a colllision with the other coming at about six miles an hour, unless Lemaire was inexcusably negligent and Brown, his guest, entirely listless, or could have failed to pass on their right side and to the left side of defendant’s car, where there was an open space of nine feet on the pavement, and in addition of six feet on the shoulder of the roadway.

Emile Bourg testifies that he has a filling station located about seven hundred feet from the Petitfils filling station near which the cars collided. He says, on the morning in question, which he fixes at about 11:20, about the time the collision occurred, he was sitting at his desk and saw the Lemaire car going on the highway westward towards New Iberia.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 So. 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-dalton-lactapp-1932.