Cangiamilla v. Brindell-Bruno, Inc.
This text of 210 So. 2d 534 (Cangiamilla v. Brindell-Bruno, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
Joseph J. CANGIAMILLA
v.
BRINDELL-BRUNO, INC., George W. Locke, Maryland Casualty Company and the City of New Orleans.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*535 John A. Salvaggio, of Garvey, Salvaggio & Prendergast, New Orleans, for Joseph J. Cangiamilla, plaintiff-appellee.
Alvin J. Liska, City Atty., Samuel Richard Exnicios, Asst. City Atty., for the City of New Orleans, defendant-appellant.
Francis G. Weller, of Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, New Orleans, for George W. Locke, Brindell-Bruno, Inc., and Maryland Casualty Company, defendants-appellants.
Before REGAN, CHASEZ and HALL, JJ.
CHASEZ, Judge.
This is an action in tort to recover personal injuries received when the car driven by plaintiff, Joseph Cangiamilla, collided with a pickup truck driven by George Locke, an employee of Brindell-Bruno, Inc., insured by Maryland Casualty Company. Also named as a defendant in this suit was The City of New Orleans which is allegedly responsible for failure to replace a Stop sign which would have controlled George Locke's entrance into this intersection. After a trial on the merits the lower court awarded a judgment of $25,018.57 in favor of plaintiff Joseph Cangiamilla and against the defendants Brindell-Bruno, Inc., George W. Locke, Maryland Casualty Company and The City of New Orleans. It was further decreed that a judgment be rendered in favor of Brindell-Bruno, Inc., Maryland Casualty Company against thirdparty defendant, The City of New Orleans, for a sum of one-half the amount for which they have been cast in judgment. Likewise, The City of New Orleans was granted a judgment as a third-party plaintiff against Brindell-Bruno, Inc. and Maryland Casualty Company for one-half the amount for which it was cast in judgment. From this judgment each defendant cast has appealed suspensively.
The facts preceding the collision are essentially undisputed. Mr. Cangiamilla was driving up Bruxelles Street, a one-way street in the lakebound direction at an estimated fifteen to eighteen miles per hour. He was familiar with Bruxelles Street and knowing that normally his right of way was protected by Stop signs on all intersecting streets, he assumed that he could safely proceed at a speed slightly less than the twenty miles per hour limit. When Mr. Cangiamilla approached the Treasure Street intersection, he testified that he looked to the left and subsequently to the right, just before the moment of his collision with Mr. Locke.
Mr. Locke was driving from a supply house to a plumbing job in Kenner in the course of his employment with Brindell-Bruno. Although he had been in the area before, he was not familiar with the particular route he was taking on the day of the accident. He testified that as he approached the intersection of Bruxelles from an easterly direction on Treasure Street, he was traveling at an estimated fifteen to twenty miles per hour. He further testified that he saw the one-way sign on Bruxelles but saw no Stop sign controlling his approach to the intersection. He stated that he looked to the left, and seeing nothing to cause him to reduce his speed, he proceeded through the intersection. The testimony leaves some doubt whether his view was blocked or whether he simply looked and saw no car on Bruxelles, but the important fact about which there is no doubt remains; that is, when he actually entered the intersection, he had seen no cars and he looked straight ahead without appreciably decreasing his speed.
The physical aspects of the collision indicate that the Cangiamilla automobile had reached at least the center of the intersection when the right front of his vehicle was struck by the left front of Mr. Locke's pickup truck. The force of impact pushed the *536 Cangiamilla automobile across the intersection and into a vacant lot adjacent to it. Although Mr. Locke's truck was heavily damaged on the left side, he suffered no injuries. Mr. Cangiamilla received substantial injuries which are well documented by the evidence. He incurred a sub-dural hematoma which may be defined as a liquid clot located under the membrane which covers the brain. This clot was relieved by surgery which required two burr holes to be drilled through the bony structure of his skull. Mr. Cangiamilla has essentially recovered from this delicate surgery but he still complains of some loss of memory and occasional discomfort. Dr. Culicchia, the physician who performed the surgery, testified that Mr. Cangiamilla could develop convulsions as a late complication to this injury, but no further evidence of this possibility has been introduced. Suffice it to say that the injuries accounted for in the original judgment are definitely substantiated by the record.
The City of New Orleans' responsibility towards the plaintiff concerns the maintenance of a Stop sign on Treasure Street. Although Treasure Street is normally controlled by Stop signs at its intersection with Bruxelles in both the East and West approaches, there was no Stop sign on Mr. Locke's western approach. The evidence reveals that the Stop sign that would have controlled this approach was knocked down on January 10, 1965 and was not reported replaced until almost two weeks after Mr. Cangiamilla's accident on March 11, 1965. Testimony of the police officer who investigated the incident which originally caused the sign to be knocked down reveals that this fact was relayed to the dispatcher who was to forward that information to the Department of Traffic Engineering. The officer also stated that he reported this again when he noticed the sign had not been replaced some time after the original incident. Although the Department of Traffic Engineering normally takes prompt action on damaged Stop signs, their records do not show that any report was received stating that the Stop sign in question was knocked down. The Police Department, an agency of the City of New Orleans, did have knowledge of this hazard, however, and according to the investigating officer, attempted to relay this information to the proper municipal agency.
Liability was assessed by the trial court and judgment was rendered against the appellants as herein stated. The theory of liability relied upon by the trial court embraces the doctrine of preemption as controlling Mr. Locke's negligence and knowledge of a hazardous street condition as a basis for the City's negligence. Since this suit is largely one of fact and the record abundantly shows that there is no manifest error in the trial court's analysis of the evidence, then the only question which remains on appeal concerns the proper conclusion of negligence in light of these or other theories of liability.
There is no question that the judgment assigning negligence to Mr. Locke is correct. We are referred to the case of Fontenot v. Hudak, 153 So.2d 120 (La.App., 3rd Cir.1965), which dealt with an almost identical fact situation. In that case the appellate court declined to adopt the preemption doctrine, because the two automobiles had entered the intersection at approximately the same time. We find that such is the case in the present controversy. Both automobiles were traveling from fifteen to twenty miles per hour and they collided at a point just beyond the center of the intersection. Neither driver saw the other until just before the moment of collision. Finding the testimony and other evidence to be correct as certainly did the trial judge, we find that it logically follows that the automobiles must have entered the intersection at approximately the same time.
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