Crysel v. Gifford-Hill & Co.

158 So. 264
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1935
DocketNo. 4914.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 158 So. 264 (Crysel v. Gifford-Hill & 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
Crysel v. Gifford-Hill & Co., 158 So. 264 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

R. W. Briggs & Co. had a contract with the Louisiana Highway Commission to construct a concrete highway, including grading of roadbed, clearing and grubbing the right of way, and construction of drainage structures, from Choppin to a point south of the village of Lena, in Rapides parish. This company sublet to defendant, Gifford-Hill & Company, Incorporated, what is referred to as the “dirt work,” retaining for itself the laying of the concrete after the roadbed had been put in condition for such to be done. Defendant then sublet a part of the dirt work to one Mose Whitehead, who was engaged in executing his contract when the accident out of which this litigation arose occurred.

Before daylight the morning of November 11, 1931, tlie plaintiffs, employees of R. W. Briggs & Co., accompanied by two fellow workmen, started to their work in Crysel’s Ford roadster, by him driven. They were proceeding south on the concrete highway and, when near the village of Lena, their car was run into by a truck going north, alleged to have been owned by defendant and operated by one John Bradley, alleged to be defendant’s employee and on a mission for it at the time. Plaintiffs suffered personal injuries for which they sue separately for damages, and for physician’s bills for services made necessary to them by the accident They allege that the sole and proximate cause of the collision between the truck and car was the negligence, carelessness, and recklessness of defendant’s employee, Bradley, in the driving and operating of the truck, among others, in these respects, to wit:

1. That the truck was being driven without lights.

2. Thát the truck was being driven at a speed of from 40 to 45 miles an hour.

3. That the truck was being driven on the wrong or left side of the road.

4. That no proper lookout was being kept by the defendant’s truck driver.

5. That the speed of defendant’s truck was such that its driver could not stop it within the scope of his view.

Defendant denies that the truck which collided with Crysel’s car was owned by it and denies that Bradley, the driver thereof, was its agent, servant, or employee. It is affirmatively averred that a part of the dirt work on said highway was sublet by it to Mose Whitehead; that under the contract between them Whitehead was to have full charge and control over the work which he was obligated to perform; that he owned his own vehicles and hired his own men, and exercised complete control over them; that the doing of said work by him was free and independent from any control or direction of defendant; that said truck was owned and controlled by Mose Whitehead and his employees, and was being driven by his employee when the collision occurred; and that said employee was paid by Whitehead from his own funds and was not under the control or direction of defendant or its agents or employees, nor. was he on a mission for it. In other .words, Whitehead is described as an *266 “independent contractor.” It is further averred that Crysel was driving his own car, when the accident occurred, in a reckless and negligent manner and at an excessive rate of speed, without lights, and on the wrong side of the road; and that therefore he was guilty of contributory negligence which, in the alternative, is pleaded in bar of plaintiffs’ right to recover.

Plaintiffs prevailed in the lower court, and from judgments awarding them substantial damages, defendant appealed. Plaintiffs here pray for increases in the judgments in their favor.

Plaintiffs first instituted suits against R. W. Briggs & Co. under the Workmen’s Compensation Law (Act No. 20 of 1914,. as amended), which were dismissed on exceptions of no cause of action. (La. App.) 146 So. 489. The present suits were then instituted, and from adverse judgments appeals were prosecuted by defendant to this court. The judgments were reversed and the cases remanded for the purpose of admitting testimony offered by defendant, hut excluded by the trial court, on the issue of agency. (La. App.) 151 So. 674. The case is now before us on all the issues i-aised by the pleadings.

The lower coux-t found and held that Mose Whitehead was not an independent contractor, but an employee of defendant, and that the collision resulted from the negligence of Bradley in that he was driving the truck on a foggy morning before daylight, without lights, too fast in the conditions existing at the time, and did not keep his side of the road.

Bradley, testified that the lights of his truck were burning brightly, but that Orysel’s car had no lights at all. Plaintiffs and one of their two companions as witnesses admitted that the regular lights on the Crysel ear were not burning, but that they had attached -a hunting lamp to the top of the left fender, and from its reflection were able to travel at a slow rate of speed down the highway, seeing, their way as they moved along. They say further that Bradley was driving his truck rapidly and had no lights at all, and drove head-on into the Crysel cai\ No other persons saw the accident, except the other workman with plaintiffs. He did not testify in the case.- .Bradley’s evidence stands alone against the others. The car was struck on the left side of its front end and partly knocked on to the dirt shoulder of its side of the road. The truck being the heavier of the two vehicles and going at a speed much gi-eater than the car, this result would be expected. It remained on the pavement. The hunting lamp, claimed to have been on the Crysel car, was damaged by the impact, and was found after the collision near or at the spot where it occurred.

The testimony of plaintiffs and their witnesses cleai-ly fastens responsibility for the collision on Bradley, and establishes with equal certainty lack of negligence on the part of Crysel of such chai-aeter to even bar i-e-covery by him. The physical conditions at the situs of the collision after the accident fairly well support their version of it. While Bradley testified on direct and redirect examination that the Crysel car was not on its side of the road, but on his, when the collision occurred, yet on cross-examination he gave the following sui-prising testimony:

“Q. Now, you say you were going down the middle of the i-oad about 15 miles an hour? A. I was on the right hand side of the xroad when struck.

“Q. And you stayed on your right hand side of the road all the time? A. Yes, sir, until struck.

“Q. And when it struck you were in the middle of the road? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Then you left your right hand side of the road just before the accident? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. And started over to the left hand side of the road? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. And before you got all the way over to the left hand side of the road you ran into this car — that is correct, isn’t it? A. Yes, sir.”

Whatever else may be said of the testimony given by this witness, certainly these patent contradictions therein go far toward destroying the probative weight of his testimony as a whole.

The trial judge experienced no difficulty in reaching the conclusion- that the collision occurred in the manner and for the reasons urged by plaintiffs. We think the evidence abundantly sustains him.

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crysel-v-gifford-hill-co-lactapp-1935.