Bryant v. Ritchie Grocery Co.

154 So. 472, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 682
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1934
DocketNo. 4746.
StatusPublished

This text of 154 So. 472 (Bryant v. Ritchie Grocery 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
Bryant v. Ritchie Grocery Co., 154 So. 472, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 682 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MILLS, Judge.

Plaintiff, a lady of. seventy-three years, brings this suit claiming $10,367.62 for injuries, pain, and suffering and expenses caused by being thrown violently from the seat to the floor of an automobile. The accident was due to the sudden swerving of the car in which plaintiff was a passenger, to avoid being struck -by defendant’s truck which had headed in to the sidewalk at an angle and which was backed out toward the center of the street at the time the car in which plaintiff was a passenger was passing.

From a judgment allowing plaintiff $3,000 for permanent disability and pain and suffering, and $323.68 for necessary medical, sanitarium, and nursing charges, defendant appeals. Plaintiff answers, praying that the amount be increased by $3,000.

The learned trial judge rendered a well-considered written opinion which, we think, correctly disposes of the question of liability and reasonably assesses the damages. We therefore adopt it as our own:

“This is a suit by Mrs. Margaret R. Bryant against Ritchie Grocery Company to recover damages for personal injuries received by her in a near collision between an automobile owned and operated by Mrs. Jeff Con-nella, in which plaintiff was a guest and passenger, and a truck owned by defendant and operated by one of its employees.
“The alleged accident occurred about 6 o’clock in the afternoon of October 3, 1932, on Alabama avenue, between Vienna and Trenton streets, in the town of Ruston. Alabama avenue runs east and west, is paved, and is forty feet wide between the curbs. Mrs. Con-nella was traveling west on Alabama avenue. Defendant’s truck, as Mrs. Connella’s car approached from the east, was parked against the curb, at an angle, on the north side of said avenue, headed west. When Mrs. Con-nella entered Alabama avenue, from Vienna street, she saw the truck, which was then some distance ahead of her, and observed, and commented upon the fact to plaintiff, that it was parked wrong, that is, that it was parked at an angle to the curb, and not parallel with the curb, as is required on that particular avenue, by the ordinances of the town of Ruston. Mrs. Connella kept the dangerous position of the truck in mind as she approached it in proceeding down the avenue. She blew her horn, when she first saw the truck, and then, proceeding down the middle of the avenue, she blew her hom again before reaching the place where it was parked. By this time she had slowed her car down to a speed of from five to ten miles per hour. Seeing no indication that the truck was about to be moved, and not being able to see any one in or about the truck, Mrs. Connella again blew her horn and proceeded to pass the truck; but, just as her car was in the act of passing it, the driver of the truck, without giving any warning or signal of his intention to do so, began to back the truck out into the avenue, right into the pathway of Mrs. Connella’s car, making a collision appear inevitable. In an effort to avoid a collision, Mrs. Connella quickly swerved her car to the left and out of the pathway of the truck. This swerving movement of the ear brought it into close proximity with the curb on her left, or on the south side of the avenue, and, in an effort to avoid a collision with the curb, she swerved her car quickly back to the right, into the avenue, beyond *474 the truck-. The swerving movement of the car threw plaintiff from the hack seat of the ear, where she was riding, onto the floor space between the front and back seats, inflicting upon plaintiff the injury for which she is seeking damages in this suit.
“Defendant, in its answer, denies that its truck was parked at an angle with the curb; denies that Percy Carrodine, the driver of the truck, was acting for defendant at the time of the accident; denies that he was negligent; and alleges that plaintiff’s injuries were the result of the negligence of both Mrs. Connella and plaintiff.
“The defense that the driver of defendant’s truck was not acting for defendant, at the time of the accident, seems to have been abandoned ; at least, it is not now being urged. However, the evidence is conclusive that he was acting for defendant, within the scope of his employment, at that time.

“Able counsel for defendant seriously urge as a defense the negligence of Mrs. Con-nella, the driver of the car in which plaintiff was riding, and the negligence of plaintiff herself, in the premises, as a bar to plaintiff’s right to recover. Defendant makes no contention that the alleged negligence of Mrs. Connella is imputable to plaintiff. The'contrary is admitted. The contention is' that Mrs. Connella was negligent, in the operation of her car, and that her acts of negligence, under the facts proven, were the acts of plaintiff, in that plaintiff knew of the danger involved in Mrs. Connella trying to .pass the truck, in the manner in which she did, and failed to make protest to Mrs. Connella against her doing so.

“Let hs first consider the question of the negligence of Mrs. Connella. If Mrs. Con-nella was not negligent, then it must follow, under the issue as presented in this case, that plaintiff was not negligent, for plaintiff’s alleged negligence, we might say, is secondary to that of Mrs. Connella’s negligence.

“Counsel for defendant submits the proposition, and cites numerous authorities that support it, that where danger is apparent and where it is possible to select a safe path, or a dangerous one, to select the latter is negligence of the grossest kind and character, and one so doing the latter does so at his, or her, own peril. The contention at this point is that Mrs. Connella, having observed the dangerous position of the truck, should have driven her car to the extreme south side of the street, and not down the middle of the avenue, in dangerous proximity to the back end of the truck, she did so at her peril.

“Defendant’s position on this point is not well taken. The truck, located as it was, in itself, did not create the dangerous situation with which Mrs. Connella found herself confronted. It was the movement of the truck by defendant’s employee that caused it. If the truck had remained still, and it was the duty of its driver to keep it still until she passed, Mrs. Connella would have safely passed the truck. This is not one of those cases where a person negligently runs his car into a parked car or truck on the side of the street or highway. Plaintiff did not run her car into this truck. She timely saw it, and having seen it, she took every reasonable precaution to avoid a collision with it. She sounded her horn three times and took-a safe course around the truck, assuming, of course, that the driver of the truck would, in no event, undertake to back the truck out into the street without first giving proper and timely signal of his intention to do so. It was not what Mrs. Connella did, or failed to do, that caused the accident, but it was what she was forced to do, on account of the movement of the truck, that caused the injury. It was the clear duty of the driver of the truck to ascertain that he had a clear and undisputed right of way into the avenue before he undertook to back up his truck. It was his duty to look. If he had looked, before he moved the truck, he would, without question, have seen Mrs. Connella’s car coming down the avenue and passing right behind the truck.

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 472, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-ritchie-grocery-co-lactapp-1934.