Chaney v. Hutches

192 So. 556
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 1939
DocketNo. 2040.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 192 So. 556 (Chaney v. Hutches) 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
Chaney v. Hutches, 192 So. 556 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Le BLANC, Judge.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries growing out of an intersectional collision between two automobiles which *557 -occurred in the City of Baton Rouge, on August 6, 1937, at about eleven o’clock in the morning. The plaintiff, Mrs. Franklin Butler Chaney, was riding as a guest in the car of R. P. Hutches which was being driven by him at the time, going north on St. Joseph Street. That car collided in the intersection with a car owned and driven by J. M. Gilman going west on America Street.

The plaintiff, a lady some sixty years of age at the time, was seated in the back of the Hutches car with her granddaughter, ■a child of her daughter, Mrs. C. J. Le-Blanc, who was seated on the front seat with the driver of the car, R. P. Hutches. She sues both Hutches and Gilman and the ’latter’s public liability insurer, American Indemnity Company, alleging negligence on the part of the drivers of both cars. She charges Hutches with driving at an excessive rate of speed, in not slowing down for the intersection and in failing to keep a proper lookout. Gilman is charged with •driving at an excessive speed, in not reducing his speed and giving warning on approaching the intersection even though his view of the corner on the southeast was •obstructed by an ice truck parked there, in not keeping a proper lookout and in not having respected Hutches’ right of preemption of the intersection by having entered it first. The demand is for the sum of $15,000 and the additional amount of $239.-62 for medical expenses. Plaintiff suffered a broken clavicle and claims that as a result of her injury and treatment incident thereto she had two attacks of pneumonia during one of which her life was despaired of for several days.

Hutches made no defense whatever but appeared solely as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff at the trial of the case. Gil-man and his insurer answered denying any negligence and claiming that the accident ■was caused solely by the negligence of Hutches in driving at a speed in violation of the City Ordinance of the City of Baton Rouge, in not respecting Gilman’s superior right on a right of way street and his preemption of the intersection and finally, in failing to make any effort at all to avoid the collision. In the alternative they plead contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff in having failed to protest at the manner in which Hutches was driving the car and his failure to take proper precaution in entering the intersection.

The disputed facts in the case are with •.regard to the speed at which the respective cars were going when they entered the intersection and which of the two entered the intersection first. Naturally these are the important points to be considered in fixing the blame on either 'one or the other, or on both of the drivers.

Both America and St. Joseph Street are 23 ft. wide. St. Joseph Street runs due north and south and America St. due east and west. The center of the intersection between the two streets may’ be said to be 'identified by a manhole right at that point. It is not disputed that there was an ice truck, some say an ice wagon, parked on the southeast corner of the intersection facing west, the front end projecting a few feet into St. Joseph St. This parked truck admittedly obstructed the view at that corner. There is no dispute either that the cars collided about one foot north of the manhole, nor is there any dispute that the Hutches car was struck on the right 'rear end (fender, running board and door) and that the Gilman car struck the Hutches car with the left end of its front bumper and fender. Further, there is no dispute that after the impact the Hutches car continued north some 25 ft., finally turning over on the west side of St. Joseph St. just north of the intersecting line of America St., and the Gilman car moved about two paces or 6 ft., stopping just west of the manhole in the center of the intersection.

From a reading of the record we can almost sense a deliberate attempt on the part of the plaintiff and the defendant Hutches to pin the entire blame for the accident on the defendant Gilman. The district judge held that he was solely responsible and awarded judgment against him and his insurer, in solido, for the sum of $4,489.62, of which amount $750 is for pain and suffering, $3,500 fpr physical injuries and permanent disability and $239.62 for expenses. From a judgment so decreeing, these defendants have appealed. Plaintiff has answered the appeal asking for an increase in the amount of the award,

The drivers of the respective cars differ in their version with regard to the speed at which each was’ driving and which one entered the intersection first, but our ■ reaction to the testimony is that they .were both going at about the same rate of speed, approximately 25 miles per hour,, and that they both entered the intersection approximately at the same time. America Street -has the right of way over St: -Joseph St. and that being so, under the law, under *558 ordinary conditions, Gilman had a superior right to which Hutches had to yield unless by having entered ahead of him he had preempted the intersection. We conclude that they both entered the intersection at about the same time for the following reasoñs: Both streets, as we have already indicated, are of the same width, that is, 23 ft. each. Hutches says he was already in the intersection when he noticed the Gilman car about to enter and that to avoid a collision as best he could he put on speed to pass ahead of Gilman’s car. In spite of this added speed which he gave to his car, however, the impact took place only a foot or so west of the manhole which is in the center of the intersection. True, the Gil-man car struck the Hutches car on the rear end and naturally the front of the Hutches car had passed the center' point of the intersection but this, as we view it, is accounted for. by the added speed which Hutches says he put his car to in order to pass ahead of the Gilman car.

Assuming that they were travelling at approximately the same rate of speed, as we think the testimony bears out, they both were covering the same distance in a given time and it is obvious that if Hutches, as he says, increased his speed when he saw the Gilman'car, he covered the distance of 11% ft. which is one-half the width of St. Joseph St. in the intersection, faster than Gilman covered that same distance in America St. The respective distances which the cars travelled after the impact would indicate that the Hutches car must have been going faster in the intersection than the Gilman car since it travelled 25 ft. beyond the point of impact, then rolling over on its side, as against the 6 or 8 ft. which the Gilman car travelled.

With regard to this important point as to which of the two cars entered the intersection first, we find the testimony of the 'witnesses very unsatisfactory. Each driver claims that he had entered first and Mrs. LeBlanc, the only other witness on this point, does not give much assistance to the court in solving the dispute between them. She is rather indefinite in her testimony 'and frankly admits at the very end of her cross-examination that she is not positive whether the Gilman car had or had not entered St. Joseph Street when she first saw it at the time when they were in the intersection. In the absence of any better and more convincing testimony on this point we resort to the physical facts already referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
192 So. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaney-v-hutches-lactapp-1939.