Coutanche v. Larivierre

264 A.2d 26, 107 R.I. 1, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 729
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 10, 1970
Docket717-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 264 A.2d 26 (Coutanche v. Larivierre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coutanche v. Larivierre, 264 A.2d 26, 107 R.I. 1, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 729 (R.I. 1970).

Opinion

*2 Paolino, J.

This civil action was commenced in the Superior Court by the filing of a complaint against the defendants Henry A. Larivierre, Jr. and George W. Witherspoon. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff’s lawfully parked motor vehicle was damaged when it was struck by the defendant Witherspoon’s automobile after the latter had been in collision with the defendant Larivierre’s motor vehicle at an intersection in the City of Providence. The complaint also alleges that the collision and the damages to her .car were caused by the defendant’s negligence.

A justice of the Superior Court, after hearing the case without a jury, rendered a decision against both defendants in the amount of $931. Judgments were entered in that amount plus interest, and the case is now here on defendants’ appeals from those judgments.

The accident occurred at the intersection of Governor Street, which runs north and south, and Williams Street, which runs east and west. At about 7:30 p.m. on the evening of January 20, 1967, an automobile being driven northerly on Governor Street by defendant Witherspoon was in collision with the right side of an automobile operated by defendant Larivierre. At this time plaintiff’s automobile was parked unattended on the easterly side of Governor Street, facing north, some 20 feet north of the intersection of Governor and Williams Streets.

Larivierre’s version of the collision is in substance as follows. He was driving easterly on Williams Street. Prior to reaching the intersection, he stopped at a stop sign which was located some 15 feet west of the intersection and which regulated traffic going easterly on Williams *3 Street. From his stopped position, he was-unable to-see to his right because the house located on the southwest •córner of the intersection blocked his view'in that direction. For this reason he crept forward until the front of his car was even with the curb on Governor Street and stopped again. He intended to make a left turn and proceed northerly on Governor Street. He looked to his right and saw the Witherspoon vehicle proceeding northerly on Governor Street some 300 feet away. He then looked to his left and saw a vehicle traveling south on Governor Street, also some 300 feet away. This vehicle was being operated by one John L. Beiermann. Looking once more to his right, he again saw the Witherspoon car, now some 250 feet from the intersection, and, believing that he had time enough to enter the intersection and to safely complete his turn, he proceeded into the intersection. Before he completed his turn, his vehicle was struck at the right front fender by the Witherspoon vehicle. His (Larivierre’s) vehicle then crossed the southbound lane on Governor Street and mounted the northwesterly curb before it stopped. He did not see the Witherspoon car strike plaintiff’s parked car but said that upon turning he saw the Witherspoon vehicle up against plaintiff’s automobile.

. Witherspoon testified in substance as follows. He was proceeding northerly on Governor Street at an estimated speed of 20-25 miles per hour and did not see the Larivierre vehicle until it had entered the intersection when he, Witherspoon, was some 15 feet from the intersection. He braked his vehicle and turned to his right to avoid Larivierre’s car. The two vehicles collided within the intersection, and he presumed that he struck plaintiff’s car.

John L. Beiermann, a disinterested party, was called as a witness by defendant Larivierre. His testimony is substantially as follows. He was driving southerly on Governor Street at about 25 miles per hour when he saw *4 the Larivierre car come to a stop at the stop sign. He saw the Witherspoon vehicle enter Governor Street from his (Beiermann’s) left some two or three streets south of the intersection. He was between 100 and 200 feet from the Larivierre car when it started its turn on Governor Street, and the Witherspoon car was at least as far as he (Beiermann) was, if not farther, from the Larivierre vehicle at this time. He was uncertain whether Larivierre stopped at the corner prior to entering the intersection, nor was he able to estimate the speed of the Witherspoon vehicle from the time he first saw it until the collision occurred. The Larivierre car was about halfway into its turn when the Witherspoon vehicle was 50 feet or less from it. He saw the Witherspoon vehicle come in contact with plaintiff’s parked car.

A bill in the amount of $931 representing the cost of repairing plaintiff’s car was admitted without objection.

It appears from the evidence and the arguments of counsel that neither defendant disputes plaintiff’s right to recover. As the trial justice pointed out in his decision:

“The parties have addressed themselves to avoidance, hopefully, of liability. Each apparently feeling that the other was responsible for the damages to Mrs. Coutanche’s automobile.” •

After noting that he and counsel took a view of the scene of the accident, and after relating what he saw to the testimony presented at the hearing, the trial justice went on to discuss the pertinent evidence. He found that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care and that Mr. Beiermann was a completely disinterested witness. He accepted the latter’s testimony that Larivierre had stopped at the stop sign.

In discussing the question of Larivierre’s liability, he concluded that the evidence indicated that Larivierre had stopped at the stop sign, that his view down the street at that point was very poor because the house to his right *5 blocked his view, that he had had to come out closer to the street and possibly into it to get a decent view to the south, and that he must have seen Witherspoon coming up. He noted that Larivierre admitted he saw him when he was some distance down the street. After discussing our “Obedience to stop signs” statute, 1 he found that this was a case of an immediate hazard and held that

“ * * * a person coming out of Williams Street, a more narrow street, which is less of a main highway than Governor Street, had this obligation that is related to the statute here, to observe and to govern themselves accordingly where he finds another car approaching so closely as to constitute an immediate hazard.”

Accordingly, he found that under the circumstances, if Larivierre was complying with the duty imposed on him under the stop sign statute, he would not have come out at the time that he did, that coming out he placed himself in a position of danger, and that he was negligent in so doing.

With regard to the question of defendant Witherspoon’s liability, the trial justice concluded that the latter could have operated his car with more caution than he did and that alertness on the part of Witherspoon might have avoided the collision. He inferred from the evidence, considering the distances involved, that Witherspoon was operating at a speed that was excessive under the circumstances, and that such excessive speed indicated he was not in the exercise of due care. Accordingly, he found for *6 the plaintiff against both defendants on- the question of liability.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 A.2d 26, 107 R.I. 1, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coutanche-v-larivierre-ri-1970.