Cain v. Houston General Ins. Co.

327 So. 2d 526
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 1976
Docket12806 to 12809
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 327 So. 2d 526 (Cain v. Houston General 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.

Bluebook
Cain v. Houston General Ins. Co., 327 So. 2d 526 (La. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

327 So.2d 526 (1976)

John Henry CAIN et al.
v.
HOUSTON GENERAL INSURANCE CO. et al.

Nos. 12806 to 12809.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

February 9, 1976.
Rehearing Denied March 15, 1976.
Writs Refused April 27, 1976.

*527 Whitmeyer & Rubenstein by Claudius E. Whitmeyer, Shreveport, for John Henry Cain.

Dodd, Barker, Avant, Wall & Thomas by James D. Thomas, II, Baton Rouge, for Jennie V. Cain.

Dixon, Thomas & Fleming by Edmund M. Thomas, Shreveport, for Edwina Lynne Cain, Individually and as Provisional Tutrix of the Minor, Marcellus DeWayne Cain.

William D. Hall, Shreveport, for Mary Jean Dotie, Provisional Tutrix of the Minors, Roy Lea Dotie and Patricia Ann Dotie.

Ronald R. Thompson, Robert J. Jones, Norman L. Sisson, D. Ross Banister, William W. Irwin, Jr., Jerry F. Davis, Johnie E. Branch, Jr., Baton Rouge, for State of La., Dept. of Highways.

Before HALL, MARVIN and SMITH, JJ.

En Banc. Rehearing Denied March 15, 1976.

MARVIN, Judge.

A one-vehicle accident resulted in fatal injuries to three guest passengers and non-fatal injuries to the driver and his wife. Four separate lawsuits, each naming the State Department of Highways among the defendants, were filed and eventually consolidated for trial below. From a judgment rejecting their demands against the State, all plaintiffs appeal. We reverse the lower court.

The accident occurred shortly after midnight on October 17, 1973, at a slight curve on Louisiana Highway 175, a two-lane blacktopped highway about four miles south of the municipality of Pelican. This road, running generally north and south, is classed as a secondary road by the State.

John Henry Cain was proceeding southerly on the highway in his 1965 Chevrolet. Roy Lee Cain, his brother, was riding in the right front seat. In the back seat of the car were Jennie V. Cain, wife of John Henry Cain, and their two children, Roderick, almost three years of age, and Johnette, almost two. Jennie V. Cain was pregnant at the time of the accident and gave birth to Tamisha Cain some seven months later. Roy Lee Cain and the two children were fatally injured in the accident.

*528 John Henry Cain (No. 12,806) and Jennie V. Cain (No. 12,807) brought separate actions for their respective injuries and for the wrongful death of the two children. Roy Lee Cain was a married man with a wife (Edwina) and child (Marcellus). Before his marriage to Edwina, and at a time when no marital impediments existed as to either, Roy Lee became enamored of one Mary Jean Dotie, and by her fathered two children, Roy Lea, age 7, and Patricia Ann, age 6, whom he consistently acknowledged as his illegitimate children.

Edwina Cain, individually and as tutrix of Marcellus, brought suit for the wrongful death of Roy Lee Cain (No. 12,808). Mary Jean Dotie, as provisional tutrix of the acknowledged illegitimate children of Roy Lee Cain, Roy Lea and Patricia Ann Dotie, brought suit for the wrongful death of Roy Lee Cain (No. 12,809). All plaintiffs sued the State Department of Highways. In the suits by Edwina Cain (No. 12,808) and by Mary Jean Dotie (No. 12,809) John Henry Cain was also made defendant on alternative allegations of negligence.

All plaintiffs are from Shreveport. John Henry Cain had never driven this highway before the accident and had no knowledge from any source as to its condition other than his experience in traversing the highway that night. On the night in question, after having worked during the day, John Henry Cain and his passengers proceeded on a nighttime drive towards Pleasant Hill at Roy Lee Cain's request. He wanted to visit someone there. The parties stopped south of Shreveport and Roy Lee Cain purchased a six-pack of 16 ounce beer. He and John Henry Cain each drank one can and were drinking a second can of beer when the accident occurred. The investigating officer observed beer cans, several empty and one full and unopened can in the wrecked vehicle and noted the spillage or smell of beer inside the car. John Henry Cain said the can from which he was occasionally sipping had been placed in a holder on the floor of the car sometime before the accident and that he was not driving while holding the beer.

John Henry Cain had traversed several miles of Highway 175 before reaching the accident site. The roadway he had covered was described as typical of most north Louisiana secondary roads. It was what is referred to as a 20 foot blacktopped road with shoulders of 3-5 feet, with an occasional pothole, some edge rutting and erosion and some shoulder erosion.

About 3.7 miles south of Pelican along the westernmost edge of the highway edge, erosion had narrowed the paved surface to about 18 feet and there was an approximate 4 inch drop-off and rut extending for a several foot distance along this edge of the highway. To compound the situation, the State had painted the center line elsewhere than the exact center of the highway. The striping error resulted in the southbound lane being only 6.5 feet wide as compared to approximately 12 feet wide northbound. The center line or striping on the part of the road already traversed by John Henry Cain up to the site of the accident was painted generally in the center of the paved highway surface.

About 150 feet northerly of the narrowed southbound lane and the site of this edge erosion and rut there is the crest of a slight hill or incline. John Henry Cain's testimony of his speed (40-45, not over 50 mph) was not contradicted, but was corroborated by an accident reconstruction expert and engineering professor from factors present after the accident. John Henry Cain and his wife testified that his lights were on the high beam. When the vehicle topped the hill and proceeded in the southbound lane the right wheel or wheels of the car dropped off the narrowed southbound lane into the rut. When John Henry Cain attempted to return his car entirely to the paved portion he lost control, veered across the highway some 213 feet and collided with a pine tree of approximately *529 one foot diameter. There was no other traffic in the area of the accident.

The district superintendent of the Highway Department testified he traveled the road on inspection trips at least weekly and that for several months he had been aware of the "low" spot as he called it, but that he did not consider it to be particularly hazardous or dangerous. Persons who lived in the area and often traversed the road testified otherwise as to whether the low spot was hazardous.

The trial court found John Henry Cain to have been negligent in driving while his ability to do so was impaired by the consumption of alcohol and for his failure to maintain control. The trial court held that Jennie V. Cain and Roy Lee Cain, the adult guest passengers, were barred from recovering as against John Henry Cain because of their assumption of risk and contributory negligence in riding with John Henry Cain with knowledge of his driving ability being impaired. The lower court found no negligence on the part of the State with respect to maintenance of the highway or creation of a hazardous condition. We disagree with the conclusions of the trial court to be drawn from the facts as found below.

NEGLIGENCE OF THE STATE

According to the accident reconstruction expert, the headlights of an approaching car at 40-50 mph at the crest of the incline some 150 feet north of the eroded highway, rut and drop-off, would not have disclosed the hazard until it was too late for the driver to see and to react to the hazard.

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Bluebook (online)
327 So. 2d 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cain-v-houston-general-ins-co-lactapp-1976.