Davis v. Surebest Bakery

38 So. 2d 624, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 664
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 24, 1948
DocketNo. 7222.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 624 (Davis v. Surebest Bakery) 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
Davis v. Surebest Bakery, 38 So. 2d 624, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 664 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

On September 5, 1947, Rufus Lavelle Davis, age thirteen, was killed as he crossed U.S. Highway 80 at its intersection with State Highway 14. This intersection is four miles east of Monroe, Louisiana, near the Sicard overpass. This is a suit by his parents to recover damages against the driver of the truck, the bakery company which owned the truck, and its insurer.

The petition alleged that the driver of the bakery truck saw the deceased and his brother as they were being discharged from a school bus upon which they were riding; that notwithstanding the fact that he was over 500 feet distant, Harris, the driver of the truck, continued downhill; without warning; without applying brakes; without looking where he was driving, and that he allowed the truck to get beyond his control and to strike their minor son with violent force, causing instant death.

After an exception of no cause of action was overruled, defendants filed a joint answer admitting the ownership of the truck, insurance coverage and the happening of the accident at the intersection described in the petition, but alleged that young Rufus Davis was killed when he ran out into the highway from behind the bus from which he had alighted and into the bakery company's truck. In the alternative, and in the event that the driver of the truck be held negligent, defendants alleged that plaintiffs' minor son was guilty of contributory negligence, and pleaded this as a bar to plaintiffs' recovery.

The case is before us on an appeal from a judgment of the District Court rejecting plaintiffs' demands.

In order to understand the details of the accident, it is necessary that the reader know the road situation at the point of impact and for some 200 feet westward and 700 feet eastward. The impact occurred at the east prong of the Y shaped intersection of State Highway 14 (from the north) and U.S. Highway 80 (running east and west). The east prong of this Y enters U.S. 80 at a point 680 feet west of the crest of the Sicard railway overpass. As U.S. 80 leaves the bridge portion of the overpass, it turns southerly, so that the neutral ground (between the east and west prongs of the Y intersection) is directly ahead of a west-bound vehicle coming down the incline from the overpass. Young Davis' body was found across the black center line of U.S. 80 and opposite the center of the east prong of the Y intersection. From this point, it is approximately 700 feet eastward to the crest of the overpass and approximately 120 feet westward to the western end of the neutral ground between the prongs of the Y.

Plaintiffs introduced in evidence an engineer who had measured along the 820 feet of highway from the crest of the overpass down grade of 5 feet per 100 feet, to the final stopping place of defendant's truck and noted the intervening features and distances; 306.5 feet from the crest of overpass to west end of bridge railing; 89 feet from west end of bridge railing to west end of north curb; 284.8 feet from west end of north curb (along which there is a level six foot shoulder) to east prong of Highway 14 intersection; 24 feet across intersection of U.S. Highway 80 with State Highway 14 (impact was in center of U.S. 80 opposite center of this intersection); 117 feet distance along parkway and north curb of U.S. 80 from the east to the west prong of Highway 14.

Mr. Foster, driver of the school bus, when he heard the noise of impact, was going up grade at a reasonable speed and immediately stopped his bus, 115 feet east of the point of impact, where it remained until the coroner, troopers, etc., arrived. The boy's body remained in the center of the road where it fell and defendant's bakery truck remained across U.S. 80 114 feet west of the point of impact. These distances *Page 626 were noted by the State Troopers and other witnesses. We therefore know with certainty that the truck driver's only warning was given at a distance of over 600 feet from the intersection and know that the boys were within the view of the truck driver for the last 80 odd feet of his travel preceding the impact. We know that there was slightly over 200 feet of distance between the spot where the truck driver saw the boys in the position of danger and the place he stopped his truck, against the south curb of U.S. Highway 80.

The deceased, Rufus Davis, and his brother, James Davis, age fourteen, who was slightly crippled, had been to Monroe on the day of the accident. Mr. C. L. Foster, an employee of the Ouachita Parish School Board, gave the two boys a ride from the city limits eastward along U.S. Highway 80 to the point where State Highway 14 (on which the boys lived) intersected Highway 80. Mr. Foster expected to continue to his home further eastward and stopped on the right (south) side of U.S. 80 right in the mouth of the east prong of the Y road intersection of U.S. 80 and State Highway 14. leading north. This road intersection is at the foot of the Sicard overpass over the Missouri-Pacific railway. After the boys alighted, and as Mr. Foster started ahead, he observed a truck (defendant's bread truck) coming over the crest (680 feet distant) of the overpass. By the time the school bus had proceeded a hundred feet eastward, the bread truck had passed and Mr. Foster heard the noise made by its striking Rufus Davis or running through the curb and shrubbery. The school bus driver quickly stopped and rushed back to the road intersection, where he found Rufus' body almost in the center of the 22 foot wide road, with his head on the south side of the road and his feet on the north side. James Davis, unhurt, was standing over his brother's body. The truck had proceeded on past the cast arm of the Y intersection and, instead of making the left turn with the road, had continued directly ahead and over the curb into a parkway through the shrubbery and parkway and back into the road and had finally come to a stop headed south with its front wheels against the south curb of Highway 80 and blocking that highway. Its hood was dislodged during its careening progress.

In passing on plaintiffs' allegations of negligence, we have examined carefully what the record establishes as to the speed of defendant's bread truck from the crest of the overpass to the point of collision; the distance the bread truck driver was from the intersection when he observed the Davis boys near the center of U.S. 80 at that intersection (the distance of the school bus from the intersection at the time it was passed by the bread truck determines the spot where the bread truck driver could again see the Davis boys); the action of the bread truck driver in keeping straight ahead, instead of turning to the right after he observed the Davis boys; the defective pull-to-the-left condition of the bread truck's brakes, particularly as this bore on the failure to turn out to the right; and the failure of the bread truck driver to give adequate warning of his approach to the highway intersection after he had seen the boys alight at the southern end and his view of the south half of U.S. 80 was obstructed by the school bus proceeding eastward.

Harris, driver of the bread truck, at the time of the trial, testified that he was traveling 25 — and on cross-examination, possibly 30 — miles an hour at the time he saw the boys near the center of the road. However, he told the State Troopers in answer to their questions as they filled out their routine report, that he was going 45 miles per hour at the time "danger of accident first noticed" and that he had broken down the speed to 35 miles per hour at the time of impact. Young James Davis estimated his speed at 45 miles an hour, but the surest indication in our minds that his truck was making relatively high speed is the fact that it was not brought to a stop until it had gone more than 100 feet beyond the point of impact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 624, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-surebest-bakery-lactapp-1948.