Clark v. De Beer

188 So. 517
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 5820.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 188 So. 517 (Clark v. De Beer) 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
Clark v. De Beer, 188 So. 517 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

The fifteen-year-old son of plaintiffs, Joe L. Clark and Mrs. Lucinda Clark, was struck by an automobile driven by Miss Willie Creed, at the intersection of Murray and Third streets in the City of Alexandria, Louisiana. Fie was riding a bicycle. The .accident occurred during the noon hour of Sunday, November 15, 1936.

■ The automobile was being operated with ,the consent of its owner, Miss Gladys De-Beer, and was covered by a policy of liability insurance written by the Travelers Insurance Company.

Death resulted to the child on the following morning.

The injuries and death are attributed by the parents solely to the alleged gross negligence and carelessness of Miss Creed. They ask damages in this proceeding, from said driver, the car’s owner and its insurer.

Defendants deny that the automobile operator was in any manner negligent in her driving, and, alternatively, aver that decedent was contributorily negligent.

The trial judge rejected plaintiffs’ demands and they appealed.

For the purpose of this discussion we shall consider Third street as running north and south and Murray street east and west. They cross at right angles. Each has a paved surface 33 feet in width. Suspended above the center of the intersection is an electric semaphore signal light used in the directing of traffic. The usual light of green for “go”, red for “stop”, and yellow for “caution” are displayed at appropriate intervals. Yellow lines, drawn on both streets ten feet back or away from their respective intersectional corners, provide a lane for pedestrian travel.

Parallel with Third street are Second and Fourth streets. The former lies east of it while the latter is on the west.

The mass of testimony relating to the manner of the occurrence of the accident is exceedingly conflicting. Regarding this lack .of uniformity, the brief of plaintiffs’ counsel interestingly states:

“To say that this case, an automobile injury one, contains the usual amount of conflicting testimony would be putting it too mildly and not doing full justice to the case. In the many years of experience of the writer of this brief in the trial of cases of this nature he has never seen one in any ways to be compared to this case as to conflicting testimony. Four witnesses for plaintiff, for instance, testified the driver of the Creed car ran through a red light and five or six witnesses for defendants testified the light was green. Four or five witnesses for plaintiffs* testified the Clark boy came from the direction of Second street or the river going in the direction of Fourth street and the three ladies in the car and three other witnesses testified he came from the direction of Fourth street or the opposite direction. Several witnesses for plaintiffs testified the Clark boy was pulled from under the automobile, whereas a larger number of witnesses testified that the car passed completely over him, one or more even testifying that the boy then got up and fell in the arms of one of the witnesses. These illustrations are only a few of the many irreconcilable statements of the various witnessscs.”

After a careful and thorough study of the record, we find the pTeponderance of the evidence favoring the hereinafter detailed pertinent facts.

About ten o’clock A. M., of the day of the accident, Miss Creed and two other young ladies entered the 1935 Ford coupe *519 which they had borrowed from Miss De-Beer, its owner, and proceeded on a pleasure drive to Bunkie, Louisiana, a nearby town. All were nurses at the Baptist Hospital located in Alexandria and their departure was made from the nurses’ home there. They had dinner at their destination and immediately thereafter began their return journey. On reaching Third street in Alexandria they turned left thereon and traveled north toward Murray street and the Baptist Hospital. When approaching the intersection in question the aforementioned semaphore signal flashed a red or stop light in their direction. Miss Creed, the driver, thereupon brought the machine to a stop at a point a short distance south of the yellow line of the nearest pedestrian lane. There she remained until the red light and the' following yellow or caution one had been displayed. After looking both ways on Murray street, and on the appearance of the green light, she continued north and into the intersection, traveling on her right side of the street. No traffic appeared within the range of her vision except one or more approaching automobiles on Third street. She had negotiated about two-thirds of the crossing when plaintiffs’ son, on his bicycle, suddenly appeared in her path, of travel. This was the first view of him that she had. Her car was then moving in low gear at about ten miles per hour. The boy and his vehicle were knocked to the pavement, and both right wheels of the automobile passed over his body. The car was swerved to the left. It came to a stop after traveling about twenty feet from the initial point of contact and after striking another motor vehicle.

The child had come from the direction of Fourth street and was traveling on Murray street toward Second street, or the east. He was using the left or north side of the thoroughfare and was propelling his bicycle at a speed faster than that of the automobile. An eye witness describes his manner of travel thusly: “He was riding a bicycle and pedaling very fast; in fact, he was riding his pedals, pumping very hard.” The red or stop signal which faced him was not obeyed. Instead, he ventured forth, in disregard of the warning and without slackening his speed, and found himself in front 'of the slow-moving Ford coupe in the northeast quadrant of the intersection.

With further reference to the facts of the casé, we quote the following from the brief of plaintiffs’ counsel:

“We shall undertake with confidence to point out herein the error of th.e District Court in this case. We shall do- so taking the testimony of witnesses for defendants and for the purpose thereof, will admit that the Judge of the District Court was correct in saying, as he evidently did, that the driver of the car was proceeding across, the' intersection on a green light and that, therefore, the Clark boy either entered the intersection on a red light or the light had turned red after he entered the intersection and that he came from the direction of Fourth Street as contended by defendant rather than from the direction of Second street as contended by plaintiffs. As will be hereinafter pointed out, we believe the error of the District Court was one of law rather than of fact, although the Judge did not assign written reasons for his decision.”

Undoubtedly the cyclist was grossly negligent and careless in traveling fast into the intersection, on the wrong side of the street, against a stop signal, and without giving heed to traffic enjoying a right of way privilege there; and his negligence continued up until the moment of the accident. On the other hand, it is clear that Miss Creed was free from any negligence whatsoever, unless it can be concluded that she, through the proper exercise of due diligence and of her faculties of observation, could have seen the child in time to avoid the accident, and failed in the performance of her legal duties.

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188 So. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-de-beer-lactapp-1939.