Crow v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co.

10 So. 2d 105
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 1942
DocketNo. 2437.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 So. 2d 105 (Crow v. State Farm Mut. Automobile 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
Crow v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co., 10 So. 2d 105 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

This is a suit for damages arising out of a collision between a made-up Ford truck owned and being driven at the time by the plaintiff, Troy Crow, and a G.M.C. truck belonging to the Pelican Furniture Company, Incorporated, of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and being in charge of and driven by one of the defendants, John H. Grand, Jr. The State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company carried public liability insurance on the G.M.C. truck and is joined as defendant in the case. The collision took place about four miles west of Slidell in the Parish of St. Tammany, at about 6:30 p.m. on February 7, 1941, when it was already dark. The highway at that point is of standard concrete pavement, eighteen feet in width with the usual black stripe running in the center, and is straight for a considerable distance. The demand of the plaintiff is for $9,320.80 of which $9,000 is for personal injury, pain, suffering *Page 106 and resulting disability, $280.80 for loss of earning and $50 for damages to his truck.

In his petition plaintiff alleges that he was driving west from the town of Slidell in a careful and lawful manner, proceeding on his right lane of travel on the highway and that on reaching a point one mile west of the settlement of Bonfouca, he noticed a truck, painted white, occupying its proper lane of travel also, approaching him from the opposite direction. He avers that he then reduced the speed of his truck and guided it to his right, proceeding along the extreme north edge of the highway; that when his truck and the approaching white truck were less than five hundred feet distant from each other the truck driven by the defendant, John H. Grand, Jr., which had been following the white truck, suddenly pulled from behind that truck at an excessive speed, in an effort to pass ahead of it to its left and collided with his truck in the north lane of the concrete part of the highway which he was properly traveling on.

The defendant, Grand, is charged with negligence in the following particulars: (1) Driving a heavy truck along the highway at an excessive and unlawful speed; (2) Suddenly and without giving any warning driving his truck onto his left or the north side of the highway and there striking plaintiff's truck; (3) Attempting to pass another vehicle traveling in the same direction he was going without first ascertaining that the highway in front of him was free of approaching traffic a safe distance away to permit him to do so in safety; (4) Failing to have his truck under proper control.

The defendants filed a joint answer in which they admit that a collision took place at the place and time alleged by plaintiff but deny all charges of negligence made against the driver of the G.M.C. truck, John H. Grand, Jr. They aver on the contrary that he took all necessary precautions in preparing to pass ahead of the truck in front of him, such as giving proper warning and looking to see if the lane of travel on his left was clear of on-coming traffic. They further allege that when about one hundred and fifty feet from the rear of the truck ahead of him, he looked and observed no lighted vehicles coming, so he proceeded gradually to his left but before he had completely veered his truck in that direction its lights were thrown on an object he had not seen before and which turned out to be the approaching unlighted truck of the plaintiff. He tried to cut back to his right at once in an effort to get out of its way but it was then too close to him and a collision became unavoidable. They further aver that the roadway was wet and one could not safely operate a truck in the darkness without lights. All of this negligence on the part of the plaintiff, they aver, was the sole cause of the accident and further, they plead the same in the alternative, as contributory negligence on his part, in the event it should be held that the driver of the G.M.C. truck was guilty of any negligence. They also plead under the facts and circumstances then existing, that plaintiff had the last clear chance to avoid the accident.

After trial in the district court, there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,750. Defendants appealed and plaintiff has answered the appeal praying for an increase in the amount of the award to the sum originally prayed for by him.

The defendant, Grand, was conveying a party of Boy Scouts from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on a fishing trip to Clermont Harbor, Mississippi. One of the boys, Donald Lockwood, was seated with him in the cab and all the others were in the back of the truck which was covered with a tarpaulin. As the driver of the white truck proceeded on, without knowing most probably, that an accident had occurred, and there was no one else on or around the highway at the time, the only eye-witnesses were the drivers of the respective trucks and the boy, Donald Lockwood.

Plaintiff testified that he had come to Slidell on the morning of the accident and stayed there until about 5:30 that afternoon when he left to go back to his home at Lacomb. He had had trouble with the lights of his truck and had spent some time trying to repair them but in doing so broke the right hand headlight. He did not get another one then because, he said, he had an extra one at his home which he could use. He states that he connected the left front headlight with the generator by means of a wire and insists that it was burning when he left Slidell and also when the accident happened. He states that he was traveling at about thirty miles per hour and for quite a distance observed the lights of a vehicle coming towards him from the east and later on those of another vehicle following *Page 107 that one. As the leading vehicle approached his truck he noticed that it was a truck painted white. It was being driven in the lane of travel to the driver's right as was also the vehicle that was following it. He says that as he was about to meet the first truck, the vehicle behind it which turned out to be the G.M.C. truck driven by the defendant, Grand, "whipped out" from behind it. At that time the front end of his truck was almost at the rear end of the white truck. The driver of the other truck then turned to his right, cutting his wheels back, and as he did so the two trucks collided, his truck striking the defendant's truck on the left side at about the door. He estimates that at the time the defendant's truck pulled over to its left to pass ahead of the white truck, he was one hundred feet back of it and was traveling between fifty and fifty-five miles an hour.

The defendant, Grand, testified that he had been following the white truck for some eight or ten miles, holding back of it at a distance of from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet. He made several attempts to pass ahead of it but each time was confronted with lights coming toward him so he pulled back to his side of the road. Finally in one such attempt, the road being straight, he pulled gradually to his left, looking ahead and as he did so, failing to see any light or anything else, he speeded up in order to pass ahead of the white truck. When the front end of his truck was about even with the rear end of the white truck, his lights shone on some object in his path which turned out to be the plaintiff's unlighted truck. He turned to his right in an effort to pull back of the white truck but as he was in the act of doing so, his truck was hit at about the door by plaintiff's truck.

The testimony of the young boy, Donald Lockwood, corroborates that of Grand to the extent that he also, on looking ahead on the highway as the truck was being turned left from its right lane of travel, did not see any vehicle with lights showing, approaching from the opposite direction.

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Bluebook (online)
10 So. 2d 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crow-v-state-farm-mut-automobile-ins-co-lactapp-1942.