Craker v. Allstate Insurance Company

250 So. 2d 746, 259 La. 578, 1971 La. LEXIS 4297
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 28, 1971
Docket50944
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 250 So. 2d 746 (Craker v. Allstate Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craker v. Allstate Insurance Company, 250 So. 2d 746, 259 La. 578, 1971 La. LEXIS 4297 (La. 1971).

Opinion

SUMMERS, Justice.

Plaintiff Dorothy Craker instituted this tort suit to recover damages for personal injuries .and medical expenses resulting from a collision between a 1965 Dodge automobile owned and driven by Albert Lancon, in which she was a'guest passenger, and a large trailer truck, whose driver and owner are unknown. It is a direct action against Allstate Insurance Company, the liability insurer of Lancon’s 1965 Dodge.

After a jury trial, a verdict was rendered in plaintiff’s favor for $750, the award including personal injuries, pain and suffering and medical expense. On appeal, the Third Circuit increased the award to $5,000, the limit of the policy coverage. 239 So.2d 184. We granted review on Allstate’s application. 256 La. 909, 240 So.2d 373.

Plaintiff testified that at approximately four o’clock on the morning of May 4, 1967 she was riding as Lancon’s guest in the right front seat of the Dodge. The scene was a country road with no street lights, and it was raining. They were traveling on the old Jeanerette highway from Jeanerette to New Iberia. Plaintiff had been sleeping about fifteen minutes and was asleep at the time. She was awakened by the collision of the Dodge with a large object. She was thrown violently forward by the impact, her head striking the windshield. The blood gushed from a large wound on her forehead, streaming into her eyes, but in the blur she observed a truck fleeing the scene. To the best of her knowledge the truck had no lights and was stopped in the roadway at the time of the impact.

*581 Lancon was able to start his automobile, and he took plaintiff to a motel where she remained until that afternoon. Then she went to Charity Hospital in Lafayette where the wound was sutured. Other medical treatment followed.

Lancon did not testify at the trial, and his deposition was not taken. Plaintiff’s subpoena for him to appear and testify was returned with the notation that he was in Alaska.

From the facts thus disclosed in the record, the Court of Appeal observed: “Essentially all that Miss Craker was able to prove concerning the accident is that Lancon was driving the car, and that it collided with the rear of a truck.” The Court then conchtded:

But we believe that this was sufficient, under the laws of this state, to make out a prima facie case of negligence on the part of Lancon * * * under the Saia rule (Louisiana Power & Light Co. v. Saia, 188 La. 358, 177 So. 238 [1937]). Allstate then incurred the burden of proving that its insured was within the Vozvell exception. (Vowell v. Manufacturers Casualty Insurance Company, 229 La. 798, 86 So.2d 909 [1956]). This they have not done; the only witness called by Allstate was Miss Craker, and she was asleep prior to the collision.

We do not agree with this conclusion.

In the Saia Case plaintiff sued for property damage sustained by its vehicle allegedly because it collided on the highway with an unlighted, parked truck and trailer belonging to defendant. The case was decided on an exception of no cause of action filed by the defendant; the Court reasoning that it affirmatively appeared from the allegations of plaintiff’s petition that its driver was guilty of contributory negligence because the sole and only reason given for not seeing the parked truck and trailer was that “it was quite dark.”

Recognizing the statutory mandate that vehicles operated at night must have headlights making objects clearly discernible within 200 feet, the Saia Court concluded that a motorist is held “to have seen an object, which, by ttse of ordinary care and prudence, he should have seen in time to avoid running into it and that the driver of an automobile is guilty of negligence in driving at a rate of speed greater than that which he could stop within the range of his vision.” The Court reasoned that since plaintiff did not amend its petition, which it could have done, to allege any unusual circumstance which might have confused the driver or prevented him from seeing the parked vehicle, the allegations before it demonstrated contributory negligence.

. The rule applied in the Saia Case that a motorist is held to have seen an object *583 which by the use of ordinary care and prudence he should have seen is not without exceptions as the evolution of the rule in subsequent cases demonstrates. Tate, Law-Making Function of the Judge, 28 La.L.Rev. 211 (1967); Malone, Torts and Workmen’s Compensation, 19 La.L.Rev. 334 (1958) and 18 La.L.Rev. 63 (1957). The so-called “range of vision” or “assured clear distance” rule has proven unworkable and unrealistic with modern vehicles on modern highways.

In Vowell v. Manufacturers Casualty Ins. Co., 229 La. 798, 808, 86 So.2d 909, 913 (1956), we defined exceptions to the rule in these words:

Our rule that a motorist traveling on the public highway after dark or during a rainstorm, or other abnormal conditions, which prevents him seeing ahead, except imperfectly, and for a short time and distance, must guard against striking objects in the road with which he may be suddenly confronted, constitutes an * * * exception to the general rule is itself subject to the exception that a motorist traveling by night is not charged with the duty of guarding against striking an unexpected or unusual obstruction, which he had no reason to anticipate he would encounter on the highway.

As a logical sequence to the attitude expressed in the Vowell 'Case, the Court’s holding in Suire v. Winters, 233 La. 585,. 592, 97 So.2d 404, 406 (1957), further relaxed the “assured clear distance” rule:

* * * no hard and fast rule can be laid down, but the surrounding circumstances and facts bearing on this particular case necessarily must be considered. The duty to use reasonable care for the safety of others places the operator of a motor vehicle under continuing duty to keep a proper lookout for other vehicles which may be properly parked along the road as required by statute or dictated prudence. However, although it is the duty of a motorist to have his car under such control that he can bring his vehicle to a stop within his range of vision, the standard the law gives us to ap’ply is that to be exercised by a reasonably prudent motorist under a given set of facts and circumstances then prevailing and not that exercised by imaginary ideal motorists.

Stated another way, “ * * * all that has been asserted is that the reasonable man foresees certain dangers, others he does not. Which ones are foreseeable is a question that has to be answered by common sense, on the basis of the circumstances in each case. It cannot be nailed down by specific rules, no matter how detailed.” Robertson, Conclusions of Fact in Civil Cases, 29 La.L.Rev. 78 (1968). See also Gaienne v. Cooperative Produce Co., 196 La. 417, 199 So. 377 (1940); Woodley & Collins v. Schuster’s Wholesale Produce *585 Co., 170 La. 527, 128 So. 469 (1930); Albright v. Tatum, 37 So.2d 888 (La.App. 1948); Herring v. Holicer Gas Co, 22 So. 2d 868 (La.App.1945).

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Bluebook (online)
250 So. 2d 746, 259 La. 578, 1971 La. LEXIS 4297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craker-v-allstate-insurance-company-la-1971.