Dane v. Canal Insurance

116 So. 2d 359, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 1092
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 25, 1959
DocketNo. 9034
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 116 So. 2d 359 (Dane v. Canal Insurance) 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
Dane v. Canal Insurance, 116 So. 2d 359, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 1092 (La. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

This is an action in tort, one of six, arising out of an automobile collision between a Ford automobile, owned and operated by Curtis Dane, and a Chevrolet taxi of Scott Harrison, driven at the time by Wesley McDonald.

The collision occurred at approximately 10 p. m., Saturday, February 23, 1957, on U. S. Highway 80, between Rayville and Holly Ridge, in Richland Parish, Louisiana. The six suits were consolidated in the court below and, from judgments rendered, appeals were taken and perfected in three of the number to this court. They are, other than the instant case, that of Dane v. Southwest General Insurance Company, La. App., 116 So.2d 362, and that of McDonald v. Southwest General Insurance Company, La.App., 116 So.2d 363. These appeals have been consolidated for the purpose of trial.

Made defendants in the instant case are Scott Harrison and his public liability insurer, Canal Insurance Company; and made defendant in each of the two consolidated cases is the Southwest General Insurance Company, the public liability insurer of Curtis Dane.

In the trial in the district court, it was found that the negligence of Wesley McDonald constituted the sole and proximate [360]*360cause of the accident and, accordingly, judgment was rendered in plaintiff’s favor in the instant case and in favor of the defendants in the other cases. The defendants in the instant case and the plaintiffs in the consolidated cases have appealed.

Curtis Dane and his wife, Mrs. Martha Dane, plaintiff herein, accompanied by Mrs. Donna Compton, were en route from Fort Lee, Petersburg, Virginia, where Dane was stationed in the Army, to their home in Weatherford, Texas, preparatory to his leaving for service in Korea. Dane was 19 years of age and Mrs. Dane 17 years of age at the time of the accident. Mrs. Dane was asleep on the rear seat of the car and Mrs. Compton was asleep on the front seat to the driver’s right. They departed from Fort Lee about 7 p. m., Friday, February 22, 1957, and, except for time out for four meals, rest stops, and to purchase oil and gas, Dane, who alone operated the car, had driven continuously approximately 27 hours and covered a distance of 'approximately 900 miles. Their trip was one of nonstop from Fort Lee, Virginia, to Weatherford, Texas, a distance of approximately 1,300 miles.

In the taxi were the driver and three fare-paying passengers: Ellen Gasper, on the seat with the driver; and Olivia Brown and Willie Mae Booker on the rear seat, the first on the left and the latter on the right. The passengers boarded the taxi at Scott’s Bar on Highway 80 at Rayville, Louisiana, for transportation to their residences at Holly Ridge. The taxi then proceeded easterly on the highway when, on meeting the Dane automobile, the collision occurred.

The highway runs in a general east and west course, is surfaced with asphalt, or blacktop, and is approximately 24 feet wide, with a line dividing the north, or westbound, traffic lane from the south, or eastbound, traffic lane. The shoulders are of sod, approximately six feet in width. On each side of the highway a ditch runs parallel thereto and borders the shoulders. The highway is straight and practically level for a distance of a mile or more in each direction from the scene of the accident. Prior to the time of the accident, rain had been falling, but, at the time, had reduced to a mist or drizzle. The highway surface was therefore wet.

The accident may be characterized as of a “head-on collision” type. The left front of each vehicle struck the left front of the other. Both vehicles were, for all practical purposes, demolished. The Ford came to rest, following the accident, with the rear at the north side of the highway facing in a southeasterly direction, blocking, entirely, the north side, or the westbound, traffic lane of the highway. The taxi proceeded some distance easterly beyond the Ford and came to rest, with its rear wheels in the south highway ditch and its front wheels on the south shoulder, facing in a northwesterly direction.

From injuries received in the accident, Wesley McDonald, the taxi driver, was killed. Ellen Gasper received injuries from which she died several months later. Olivia Brown and Willie Mae Booker were also injured, but their injuries were of a less serious nature. Curtis Dane and Mrs. Donna Compton were pinned in the wreckage of the Dane car. Dane was severely injured and immediately became unconscious, in which condition he remained for 11 days and suffered traumatic amnesia.

The injuries received by Mrs. Martha Dane almost defy description or comprehension. From injuries to her spine, she was completely paralyzed from high waist level down. It was necessary, on the night of the accident, that she undergo an emergency decompressive laminectomy to relieve pressure upon her spinal cord. Additionally, she suffered the loss of an unborn child. Her condition is such that for an indefinite period of time, and, perhaps for the remainder of her life, her only means of locomotion will be by wheel chair.

In the instant case, Mrs. Dane, as a guest passenger of her husband, seeks to recover [361]*361damages in compensation for the injuries sustained, and pain and suffering endured, of Scott Harrison and his insurer. During the trial, by stipulation, her claims were reduced to $5,000, the maximum contractual liability of the insurer. In her companion suit, she seeks to recover damages of her husband’s liability insurer, the Southwest General Insurance Company, whose contractual liability was also limited to $5,000 to any one person injured in any one accident.

Negligence charged to Curtis Dane consists of excessive speed, in view of the weather conditions prevailing at the time, and of encroaching several times, without reason or necessity, into the left, or opposite, lane of travel in the face of oncoming traffic. Negligence charged to Wesley McDonald consists of his failure to keep or maintain a proper lookout or to observe the encroachment in his lane of travel by the westbound automobile, failure to apply his brakes timely or to take other evasive action to avoid an accident when there was ample time and opportunity to do so, and then imprudently applying his brakes at a time when such action was too late and not a proper evasive action, but which then was a causative factor in the occurrence of the collision, and, finally, in operating the taxi with defective brakes when, on their application, the taxi swerved to its left and into the opposing traffic lane.

The defendants in this case charged that the accident and collision were caused solely and only through the fault and negligence of Curtis Dane, as detailed in the aforesaid particulars. Additional charges were that Dane was fatigued from constant driving without sleep or relief; that he was not in proper control of his car, permitted it to weave and zigzag across the center line of the highway at an excessive rate of speed and to collide with the taxi in its lane of travel. In the alternative, defendants plead that Curtis Dane was guilty of contributory negligence in the particulars hereinabove set forth, and, further in the alternative, that plaintiff, Mrs. Martha Dane, was guilty of independent contributory negligence in riding in an automobile when she knew, or should have known, that the driver was fatigued, and in allowing her husband, the driver, to proceed at night under adverse weather conditions, and in her failure to observe or to protest the continuation of his acts of negligence.

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Related

West v. McDole
292 So. 2d 839 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Succession of Papa
192 So. 2d 854 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1966)
Breaux v. Flithers
144 So. 2d 574 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
Dane v. Canal Insurance Company
126 So. 2d 355 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1960)
Spears v. Biles
121 So. 2d 522 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)
Powell v. Travelers Insurance Company
117 So. 2d 610 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1960)
Pearson v. Taylor
116 So. 2d 833 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)
Dane v. Southwest General Insurance
116 So. 2d 362 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)
McDonald v. Southwest General Insurance
116 So. 2d 363 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 So. 2d 359, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 1092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dane-v-canal-insurance-lactapp-1959.