Champagne v. Marmande

162 So. 2d 220, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1467
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1964
DocketNo. 6083
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 So. 2d 220 (Champagne v. Marmande) 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
Champagne v. Marmande, 162 So. 2d 220, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1467 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

HERGET, Judge.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Alta Boudreaux Champagne, appealed from a judgment of the Trial Court rejecting her demands and dismissing her suit for the wrongful death of her husband, George Champagne, who was killed on July 3, 1962 by an automobile driven by defendant, Roy J. Marmande. Made defendants in the suit were Mar-mande, his liability insurer, Fireman’s Insurance Company, Elward M. Voisin and his liability insurer, Maryland Casualty Company.

In her petition Plaintiff alleges Mar-mande and Voisin were engaged in competitively racing their vehicles on the highway with Marmande in the lead; in consequence of the racing and as a direct cause thereof, George Champagne, her husband, who was engaged in mowing grass on the batture, was killed by the vehicle driven by Marmande, which went off the road onto the shoulder and struck the deceased.

Defendants denied the two drivers were racing and maintained decedent met his untimely death when he precipitously attempted to cross the road pushing the mower across in the path of Marmande’s vehicle. They further maintain Mar-mande’s vehicle did not go onto the shoulder until after it had struck George Champagne in the road.

For written reasons assigned, the Trial Judge concluded the evidence supported Defendants’ contentions.

Decedent resided on the east side of Louisiana Highway 315, which highway meanders along Bayou DuLarge in Terre-bonne Parish. The batture is separated from the property on which Plaintiff’s residence is located by the highway and, accordingly, is on the west side thereof. Mr. Champagne crossed the road to mow a “V-shaped” strip surrounding his mailbox situated on the batture and a strip of grass on the batture parallel to the road. The highway is a two-lane road and at the point where this accident occurred there is a moderately sharp curve in the road. On the evening of the accident defendants, Marmande and Voisin, accompanied by one John McElroy, after finishing work repaired to “The Floating Palace” located near Houma, Louisiana, where they partook of two or three beers each. They left the bar at approximately 6 p. m., Marmande preceding in his automobile, Voisin driving his vehicle closely behind, followed by Mc-Elroy in his vehicle, who, however, had stopped at a house nearby prior to reaching the vicinity of the accident. Defendants testified they were driving in a southerly direction at 55 or 60 miles per hour; the [222]*222speed limit was 60, but 55 was recommended in a warning sign at the approach of the ■curve. Defendants maintain decedent stepped from the shoulder of the road onto the road on the west side thereof pushing his lawnmower ahead of him into the path of .Marmande’s vehicle. The lawnmower had .a cutting blade powered by the motor, but it had to be propelled manually. Defendants further relate Marmande’s vehicle struck George Champagne and the left handle of the mower. Marmande, upon observing Champagne stepping into his path, vigorously applied the brakes and his ■vehicle was struck by the Voisin car, in consequence of which it swerved to the right following the collision with Champagne onto the west shoulder of the road.

Evidence was offered by the Plaintiff of numerous neighbors and relatives who had seen decedent mowing the grass on the batture immediately prior to the collision, "but none of them saw the collision itself with the exception of Michael Scott, an -eleven year old nephew of Plaintiff, who testified he was sitting in the rear of a parked station wagon some distance down the highway and that he saw the deceased ■standing near the mailbox on the shoulder when he was struck by the Marmande car which had run off the road. It is apparent young Scott was mistaken in his testimony. Accepting his version that decedent was standing near the mailbox when struck and in view of evidence tendered the mailbox was not disturbed or even scratched by ■either vehicle, an impossible circumstance ■of necessary concurrent events, is mute evidence of the fact Scott was mistaken.

The Trial Judge in a well considered opinion rendered judgment rejecting the •demands of Plaintiff principally on his reliance upon the testimony of a State Trooper who reported the accident and whose testimony and observations in regard to the physical findings refuted Plaintiff’s allegation that her husband, when struck, was located on the shoulder of the road, and, to the contrary, makes evident the testimony of Defendants that Mr. Champagne attempted to cross the road in the path of the approaching Marmande car. We adopt and quote the following excerpt from his written reasons:

“It is our view that the most precise and reliable testimony relating to this accident was that given by the State Highway Trooper, who was not moved by any stress or strain or excitement, but went to the place of the accident, examined the scene and found and noted some cold, dispassionate, immutable facts that reactions by one human being or another can not vary. The focal point of the testimony of the State Trooper is a mailbox situated on the west side of the highway. The Marmande car was headed south. The Trooper found skid marks made by that car in its right lane beginning at a point 39 feet north of the mailbox. Thereafter he found a continuation of those skid marks a distance of 78 feet south of the mailbox to a point where the Marmande car began to leave the paved portion of the highway, and rolled onto the west shoulder. He found the body of the decedent on the west shoulder of the highway 90 feet south of the mailbox. The Trooper noted two other significant facts. He found some indication that a pedestrian was hit in the right traffic lane just a short distance, either 10 or 12 feet, south of the mailbox. The lawnmower was found in the left lane of the highway a few feet, 12 or 15 feet, south of the mailbox.
* * * * *
“I think all of the authorities agree, and I am relying here primarily on the Drivers Guide issued by the Department of Public Safety of the State of Louisiana, that before brakes are applied there is first an apprehension of danger ahead, that the driver sees something that gives him some apprehension of danger, that he is moved by such apprehension of danger to take [223]*223his foot off the accelerator and apply it to the brakes, and that average reaction time is three-quarters of a second. In brief, there is a lapse of three-quarters of a second from the moment of apprehension of danger ahead and the removal of the foot from the accelerator and its application to the brakes, before braking can become effective. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we will have to assume that the average reaction time of the persons involved here was the average reaction time of three-quarters of a second.
“That means that before the 39 feet of skid marks north of the mailbox would have been made, there had to be an apprehension of danger and the lapse of reaction time. Reaction time necessarily involves reaction distance. Thus, if a car is running 60 miles per hour, the traveling speed is 88 feet per second and, reaction time being three-quarters of a second, reaction distance is 66 feet. Thus, if the Mar-mande car was traveling 60 miles per hour, it is evident that the apprehension of the driver took place at a point 105 feet north of the mailbox, being 66 feet of reaction distance plus 39 feet of skid marks.
“Let us examine those facts in the light of human experience.

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Related

Succession of Rock v. Allstate Life Insurance Co.
329 So. 2d 862 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1976)
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233 So. 2d 13 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1970)
Voisin v. Luke
191 So. 2d 503 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1966)
Champagne v. Marmande
164 So. 2d 350 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 2d 220, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champagne-v-marmande-lactapp-1964.