Bryan v. Magnolia Gas Co.

127 So. 124, 13 La. App. 52, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 543
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1930
DocketNo. 3705
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 127 So. 124 (Bryan v. Magnolia Gas 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.

Bluebook
Bryan v. Magnolia Gas Co., 127 So. 124, 13 La. App. 52, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 543 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

J. Audie Bryan was killed in an automobile accident due to a collision between the car he was driving and another automobile, on August 22, 1928. There survived him a widow, Mrs. Idenna Bryan, and two minor children, issue of the marriage. Mrs. Bryan brought this suit for damages for herself and her children, alleging that the accident which caused the death of her husband and the father of her children was due to the gross fault and negligence of J. M. Furrh, Jr., or those for whom he was responsible, and that Furrh was an employee of the Magnolia Gas Company. The suit is for damages against both Furrh and the gas company. Plaintiff’s demands were rejected by the lower court and she appealed.

The facts pertinent to the issue are as follows:

J. Audie Bryan was traveling east in a Ford car on a graveled highway twenty-five feet wide from shoulder to shoulder. An automobile belonging to defendant, Furrh, was parked on the south side of the road near the edge, and, approximately eighty-four feet farther east, there , was parked near the edge on the same side of the road a truck loaded with iron piping, which truck also belonged to Furrh. This automobile and truck, being on deceased’s right-hand side of the road, caused him to swerve his car to the left in order to go by them, and he got over on his extreme left-hand side of the road. Between the parked car and the truck, a side road comes into the main highway from the north side, or on deceased’s left-hand side. This side road enters the highway at a point about sixty feet east of where the automobile was parked, and about twenty-four feet west of where the truck was parked. -About the time deceased’s car reached the point where the side road enters the highway, a man, named Lynn, employed by Furrh, one of the defendants, drove another Ford from the side road onto the highway. The ■ two cars collided and deceased’s car turned to the right, angling across the highway, the left-hand side striking the rear end of the piping on the truck, went off the road, ran about thirty-six feet across the ditch and landed. Deceased’s left arm was resting in the car window and extended beyond the edge of the car. His arm struck the end of the piping and was torn practically off or, as a physician expressed it, “was traumatieally amputated.” He soon died, as a result of the shock and the loss of blood.

It is alleged, and the testimony shows, that the side road out of which Lynn drove his car up on the highway was a “blind” road. Along the edge of the highway on the north side, deceased’s left side, there were willow bushes eight or ten feet high and weeds sufficient to completely obstruct one’s view from the highway of a car coming out on the [54]*54side road, until such car was up on the embankment. Likewise, one driving a car over the side road could not see a car approaching on the highway. Plaintiff charges that it was gross negligence for Lynn to drive up on the highway, as he did, in front of the on-coming car of deceased, and that his negligence in so doing was the sole cause of the accident. On the other hand, defendants allege and contend that Lynn was guilty of no negligence and, in the alternative, that if he was, his negligence was not the cause of the collision; but, to the contrary, the collision and accident were caused by the gross negligence of deceased in leaving his side of the road and getting too close to the left-hand edge thereof, and in running at such an excessive rate of speed that he lost control of his car, which, negligence, it is claimed, so contributed to the accident as to bar recovery.

Lynn is the only one who knows just what he did, just what his movements and actions were before going on the highway. The collision itself was witnessed by several persons who were going west on the road in a car, but they were quite a distance away and saw nothing but the collision. All they could say was that the cars ran together on the road in front of them; they noticed neither car until the moment they ran together. Lynn’s testimony, therefore, as to the precautions he took before going on the road is uncontradicted. His story of the tragedy is as follows:

He was working for Mr. Furrh, who was a general contractor, stringing pipe along the north side of and parallel with the highway for a gas pipe line; that he was superintending the work and had his car over on that side of the road; that he had occasion to drive back to the main road over this side road; that there was a ditch parallel with and a few feet from the highway, which ditch was bridged; that after he crossed the bridge, he stopped and listened for cars, and, hearing none, he then changed into low gear and proceeded slowly up the embankment (the crown of ' the highway being three feet, seven inches above the level of the bridge) until his front wheels were on the edge of the road, from which position he “glanced” to see if there was anything coming, and was getting ready to( pull onto the highway and turn to his right, “and that instant the new Ford came up on my right and hit me.” He said further that he could see some distance up the highway to his left from where he was when his front wheels, got to the edge of the road, but that he could not see so well in the other direction from which deceased’s car came. If Lynn did just what he said he did, and his testimony is not contradicted on that point, it cannot be said that as a matter of law he was guilty of negligence. He says he stopped and listened before proceeding, and that he proceeded slowly and cautiously, and that the front wheels .of his automobile were not more than three feet upon the highway when the collision took place.

Blashfield, in his Encyclopedia of Automobile Law, vol. 1, p. 551, states the general rule as follows:

“One driving slowly from a private driveway into the highway, his car drifting with the force of inertia, is not required to extend his observation beyond a point where vehicles .moving at a lawful speed would threaten his safety. And a motorist, in driving an automobile from a private land into a highway, the view of which is considerably obstructed by a hedge, beyond which there is a comparatively short space in which to stop the [55]*55car at sight of an approaching automobile, cannot be said as a matter of law to be under any obligation to stop his car before coming out on the road, getting out of it, and going outside of the hedge on foot to look up and down the road for approaching vehicles before proceeding.”

See Sherwood vs American Railway Express Company, 158 La. 43, 103 So. 436.

The very rigid “stop, look and listen” rule adhered to by our courts and by the courts of other states, and as finally stated by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company vs. Goodman, 275 U. S. 66, 48 S. Ct. 24, 72 L. Ed. 167, 56 A.L.R. 645, does not apply in case of a motorist approaching a highway from a side entrance and for a very good reason. Motorcars do not run on fixed rails or tracks as do trains and are lighter and more easily controlled. Railroad trains have the right of way at all crossings and intersections and, in open territory, remote from congested sections, may run at any speed consistent with the safety of their passengers. Motorcars running on main highways have the right of way over those who enter them from the side over less favored channels.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 So. 124, 13 La. App. 52, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-magnolia-gas-co-lactapp-1930.