Coffey v. Ouachita River Lumber Co.

191 So. 561, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 389
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5950.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 191 So. 561 (Coffey v. Ouachita River Lumber 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
Coffey v. Ouachita River Lumber Co., 191 So. 561, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 389 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff sustained serious physical injuries when a truck owned by the Ouachita River Lumber Company, Inc., operated by L. L. Stewart, an employee, on which *562 plaintiff was riding, left the highway and ■collided with a ditch hank. He sues to recover damages, and impleaded Stewart, the Ouachita River Lumber Company, Inc., hereinafter called the lumber company, and its public liability insurer, American Surety Company of New York.

The lumber company owns and operates a small sawmill in the northern end of Franklin parish and sells and delivers some or all of its output to another lumber company in the City of Monroe, 50 miles distant.

About 7:30 o’clock A. M., June 3, 1938, Stewart left the mill site in a Dodge Truck with trailer attached, enroute to Monroe, on which was loaded 2,885 feet of green pine lumber. He was accompanied by S. G. Edwards, a helper. He consented for Elisha Hill, a negro man, to make the trip with him. The water pump of the truck developed trouble and a stop was made at the town of Mangham to repair it. Plaintiff, who had worked for the lumber company the day before, got aboard the truck at that place with Stewart’s consent with the intention to accompany the party to Monroe and return on the truck to the mill. Another negro man, named Emmett Thompson, also boarded the truck at Mangham. This man and Hill sat upon a tool box against the cab of the truck facing the lumber, not over 4 feet away. Plaintiff sat down in front of and faced them. Stewart and Edwards occupied the seat in the cab.

The highway from Mangham to Monroe was then paved save for a short distance on either side of the Boeuf river, approximately 10 miles northwest from Mangham. The trip was uneventful until the truck entered upon the stretch of gravel east of the river. While thereon Stewart lost control of it. It veered to its left side, crossed the road, and after running some distance in the ditch, rammed the left bank and stopped. The impact broke one of the chains which held the lumber on the trailer, allowing a goodly portion of it to fall upon plaintiff who, by some means not made clear, had fallen to the ground.

The accident, plaintiff alleges, was attributable solely to the lack of care and gross negligence of Stewart in these respects: That he drove his truck, heavily laden as it was, on the pavement at approximately 55 miles per hour, and did not reduce this speed as he approached and entered upon the gravel portion of the road, notwithstanding danger from so doing was obvious and was well known to Stewart, who drove over the road daily; that, due to difference in surface levels, when the truck 'and trailer left the pavement, they badly jarred, and immediately thereafter the truck and trailer began to swerve from one side of the road to the other, and continued to do so for some distance, estimated to have been between 700 and 900 yards without any effort whatever by Stewart to bring them under control; that after zig-zagging down the highway for the said distance, Stewart drove the truck onto the south shoulder of the road, then into and down the ditch until it suddenly stopped as above described. That in driving the truck as aforesaid, Stewart actively violated the provisions of the Highway Traffic Regulatory Act No. 21 of ,1932.

The lumber company and Stewart admit the accident, the ownership of the truck by the former and its employment of the latter; that said truck and trailer were covered by the policy of insurance issued to the lumber company by said insurer. The acts of negligence charged to Stewart are specially denied. In contradiction thereof, it is affirmatively pleaded that Stewart was at all times driving the truck at a reasonable rate of speed, and that despite frequent inspections of the truck by a competent mechanic, the front spring thereof broke soon after it was driven from the pavement onto said gravel, which allowed the frame of the truck to drop down on its front axle and impinge certain parts of the steering control mechanism; that this caused the mechanism to lock or “freeze”, which effectively prevented control of the car’s movements by and through the steering wheel. That said accident, therefore, -is attributable solely to a latent defect in the said spring of the truck, which was not, and could not be discovered on inspection, though regularly made, the last one having been made only a few days prior to the accident.

These defendants deny any liability whatever to plaintiff on any account; and, in the alternative, plead his own contributory negligence in bar of recovery by him.

In the alternative, it is also alleged that should they be cast for any amount, that said insurer also be condemned therefor.

The insurance company resists the suit on these grounds, viz.:

1. That the relationship of Stewart with the lumber company at the time of the *563 accident and at all times prior thereto was that of independent contractor.

2. That the lumber company, at time of the accident, • was not the sole and unconditional owner of the truck involved in the accident, a condition precedent to liability on its part under the policy contract.

3. That said policy expressly excludes from its coverage any employee of the insured, and that on June 3, 1938, plaintiff was in truth and in fact an employee of the insured lumber company. In the alternative, this defendant denies any negligence on part of Stewart as a cause of the accident, but avers that it was entirely due to the breaking of the truck’s left front spring. The averments on this score being substantially the same as those set up by the other two defendants. Further, in the alternative, the contributory negligence of plaintiff, in the respects alleged upon by Stewart and the lumber company, is pleaded against his right to recover herein. Finally, in the alternative, this defendant pleads that as $5,000 is the maximum of its liability under the policy of insurance, any judgment against it should not exceed that amount.

There was judgment against all defendants in solido for $5,000, and against Stewart and the lumber company in solido .for $4,121.50. The insurance company suspensively appealed. The lumber company and Stewart appealed devolutively.

Appellee prays for enormous increase in the judgment against the two latter appellants.

We have reached the conclusion, after mature study of the record, that plaintiff has not established by a fair preponderance of the testimony that this accident was caused by the carelessness and negligence of the truck’s operator, Stewart. This being true, other defenses and issues need not be considered or passed on.

Plaintiff and his two companions testified that the truck was traveling on the pavement at a rapid rate and did not slow down before entering upon the gravel road; that they felt a slight jar when the truck left the pavement, due to the gravel’s elevation being lower than that of the pavement; that immediately thereafter the truck began to zig-zag over the road, first going to the right side and then to the left and repeating these movements, during which time it had covered between 150 and 200 yards; that following the. second swing to the left, the truck and trailer traveled some 200 feet on the shoulder, then veered further to its left and ran violently into the embankment on the opposite side of the ditch.

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 561, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffey-v-ouachita-river-lumber-co-lactapp-1939.