Comer v. Travelers Ins. Co.

27 So. 2d 438, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 480
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 1946
DocketNo. 2824.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 So. 2d 438 (Comer v. Travelers Ins. 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
Comer v. Travelers Ins. Co., 27 So. 2d 438, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 480 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinions

A fatal accident with tragic consequences to all persons involved gave rise to this lawsuit. The victim was a little girl, Dora Jane Comer, aged seventeen months and the only child, at the time, of Robert W. Comer and Mrs. Essie Christine Hicks Comer, his wife, plaintiffs in the suit.

At about 2:40 p.m. on July 10, 1943, she was run over by an automobile owned and being driven by Reverend Van M. Dykes, her uncle, while he was backing it out of the driveway at the Comer home, 917 Mayflower Street in the City of Baton Rouge, where he and his wife also resided with the Comer family. The child was immediately taken in a car to the Baton Rouge General Hospital and died some fifteen minutes after arriving there.

The Travelers Insurance Company had issued a policy of public liability insurance on the car of Reverend Dykes and this suit has been instituted by Mr. and Mrs. Comer against that company, under the provisions of Act No. 55 of 1930, claiming damages for the death of their child in the sum of $15,000 each. Their demand is predicated on the alleged negligence of Reverend Dykes in several respects, all of which are denied by the defendant in its answer to their petition. Exceptions of vagueness and of no cause and no right of action had been previously disposed of and they are not urged before this court.

There was judgment in the court below in favor of the defendant and plaintiffs have taken and perfected this devolutive appeal.

The material facts in the case are not seriously disputed and liability against the defendant depends exclusively on the question of the negligence, vel non, of Reverend Dykes, under the facts and circumstances surrounding the accident as they appear from the record.

By a stipulation of counsel a photograph of the Comer home showing particularly the front porch and the concrete walk leading from the steps to the concrete driveway on which the car was parked at the time, together with minute measurements of the porch and walk, and also of the hedge directly in front of the porch, has been filed in the record, and this the court has found of great assistance in considering and analyzing the testimony of the various witnesses in the case.

The house is located in the 500 block of Mayflower Street and bears municipal No. 917 of that block. Mayflower Street runs east and west and the house faces south. The front porch measures 22.2 feet from east to west and 7.4 feet from north to south. The steps are on the east *Page 440 end of the porch, and a person going up the steps from the sidewalk must take five steps, the fifth placing him on the front porch floor. The walk leading to the driveway connects with the walk leading from the steps to the sidewalk along the north side of Mayflower Street and this walk leading west to the driveway measures 19.7 feet in distance to the driveway. The width of the driveway itself is 7.6 feet. The average width of the hedge immediately in front of the porch is 6 feet and the distance from the south edge of the hedge to the north edge of the sidewalk on the north side of the street is 9.7 feet.

Reverend Dykes is a minister of the Baptist faith. Not long before this accident happened he had received an assignment to a church in St. Francisville, Louisiana. Apparently he had already begun his ministry but had not yet moved there. He was gradually moving some of his personal effects in his automobile and had been engaged in loading on the day of the accident. He did all the loading in the back yard of the residence and after he had finished he backed his car through a gate separating the back from the front yard and parked it on the driveway after having latched the gate, preparatory to his leaving. According to his testimony, which we believe is the most accurate on this point, the car was parked with the rear bumper just about flush with the south side of the hedge.

Mr. Comer and Reverend Dykes' wife were brother and sister. It does not appear how long they had been living together in this home but it is shown that their relations were most cordial and pleasant and it is also shown that Mr. Dykes was very fond of the Comer child who also seems to have been greatly attached to him. Reverend and Mrs. Dykes had a daughter by the name of Kathryn who had recently joined the Waves. She had previously been employed in some government capacity in Washington and in Detroit but had been with her parents a little over two months, living with them in the Comer home. She was a young lady over twenty-two years of age and she also seemed to have been very devoted to the child, Dora Jane.

The family had their dinner at the noon hour on the day of the accident and at about 2:30 Reverend Dykes was about ready to leave on his trip to St. Francisville. According to his testimony they drank coffee in the kitchen just before he left and he then walked through the hall with Kathryn, to the porch. The child followed them after they had stopped on the porch a second or two. He kissed them both good bye, when, he says, they were near the swing on the porch. That would have placed them on the west end, about three or four feet from the very end of the porch. He then walked to the steps, then down the steps to the walk then around the hedge and on to the car. When he reached the rear end of the car he looked back and towards the porch, to see if there was anything behind him, as he says he usually did, and as there was nothing he then proceeded to get into the car. He states positively that the child Dora Jane was not in the yard at that time. As he got into his car and sat at the driver's wheel, his daughter spoke to him from the porch and told him to be sure to tell the people in St. Francisville that she was sorry she was not going to see them before she left to go to New York which would be in a few days. He then says that she told him "good-bye and be good."

He then started the motor without difficulty and looked from his left side to the rear end of the car to see if the driveway was clear. He also looked to his right but was unable to see anything because the hedge on that side obstructed his view. Thinking that it was safe to do so he immediately started to move his car backwards. He says that he moved very slowly and is sure that he could have walked faster than the car was going at the time. As the car moved he says he heard a light bump which he thought was the noise from the scratching of the hedge against the car, but on second thought he stopped and as soon as he did his daughter turned and ran down the steps and as soon as she got on the ground she saw the child and screamed. That was the first cry he heard any one utter and he immediately stepped out of the car. She shouted to him to pull *Page 441 up as the car was on the child. He jumped back in the car, pulled up three or four feet, stopped the car and when he saw what had happened he "went all to pieces." A neighbor, Mr. Luther Gillingham, who was sitting on the porch of the residence almost adjoining the driveway where the car was, ran to their assistance and he and Mrs. Dykes took the child to the hospital where, as already stated, it died within a few minutes.

The testimony of Miss Kathryn Dykes does not vary very much from that of her father except on the point as to the child being with them on the porch at the time he kissed them and bade them good bye.

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Related

Butler v. Temples
88 S.E.2d 586 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1955)
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34 So. 2d 511 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1948)
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Bluebook (online)
27 So. 2d 438, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comer-v-travelers-ins-co-lactapp-1946.