Dr. H. C. Josephson and Mrs. Effie Josephson v. American Employers Insurance Company

231 F.2d 416
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 1956
Docket15754
StatusPublished

This text of 231 F.2d 416 (Dr. H. C. Josephson and Mrs. Effie Josephson v. American Employers Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dr. H. C. Josephson and Mrs. Effie Josephson v. American Employers Insurance Company, 231 F.2d 416 (5th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

BORAH, Circuit Judge.

Brought under Louisiana Revised Statutes of 1950, LSA 22:655, against the public liability insurer of a one ton pick-up truck driven by Earl Bell, the suit was for damages for injuries sustained by Mrs. H. C. Josephson in an automobile accident and to recover an amount claimed by her husband, Dr. Josephson, as reimbursement for expenses resulting therefrom. The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of defendant. From the judgment entered on the verdict plaintiffs appeal.

The facts, to the extent that they need here be stated, are these: On the afternoon of the day in question Mrs. Josephson as the sole occupant of a DeSoto automobile was driving in a northerly direction on U. S. Highway 71. Upon reaching a point about five miles south of Coushatta, Louisiana, and as she drew near a culvert and post and the Perryman gravel driveway which lay 69 feet beyond, 1 she was driving in her right traffic lane behind a car which was occupied by soldiers. Immediately ahead of the soldiers’ car and in the order named were the Bell truck and a third car the identity of which was unknown. From this point forward, the testimony is in sharp conflict. It was the testimony of Mrs. Josephson that the soldiers’ car which she had been following for some distance passed the Bell truck and when she saw that it had also passed the vehicle ahead of the truck, she waited a few minutes to see whether the driver of the truck was going to pass the car in front of him. During this interval she followed the truck at a distance of 75 feet and at a speed of 40 miles per hour, which conformed to the speed of the truck. That when she received no intimation that the truck was going to pass the car which it was following she looked ahead and behind for oncoming and following traffic and seeing none pulled over into the left traffic lane, sounded her horn and increased the speed of her car to 50 miles per hour. Mrs. Josephson further testified that when the front of her car was fifteen or twenty feet south of the culvert and post, and her right front fender and the door of the truck were not more than three or four feet apart, Bell suddenly pulled over to the left and into her traffic lane without giving any hand signal or other warning of his intention. When this occurred, Mrs. Josephson said that she started blowing her horn and pulled further over to the left and off the paved portion of the highway as far as she *418 could go without driving off the culvert or into the post. That at this point she applied her brakes in an attempt to stop, trying all the while to stay off the paved portion of the highway as much as possible in order to avoid hitting the truck. This she was successful in doing and after she had passed the post the truck moved on ahead of her. At this time she frankly concedes that she still had control of her car but when she ran into loose gravel in the Perryman driveway and while trying to get back on the pavement her car skidded completely across the highway and came to rest in a ditch facing in the direction from which it had come.

Appellee concedes that the four vehicles here involved were in the same relative position hertofore described as they approachd the culvert, but it contends that when the soldiers’ car passed the Bell truck and the unidentified car, Bell did not wait for the soldiers’ car to get back into its right traffic lane but immediately pulled over to his left to go around the unidentified car. That when Bell undertook to pass the car ahead his truck was half way across the culvert and he then knew that Mrs. Josephson was eight or ten feet behind him in her right traffic lane for he had checked her position by looking into his rear view mirror before beginning his passing maneuver. According to Bell three-fourths of his truck had passed the unknown car at the time he first heard the horn of the Josephson car and when he then looked back through his mirror he saw that car in the left traffic lane skidding across the road right by the Perry-man driveway. Bell testified positively that he did not at any time see this car on the shoulder of the highway and that no part of appellant’s car ever got to a point where it was ahead of or even with any part of his truck. Thus, as in most cases of this kind, the evidence was conflicting and the jury who saw and heard the witnesses resolved the question of negligence, as indicated by their verdict, in favor of appellee.

On this appeal, appellant urges three points of error. First, that the court erred in failing to give four requested instructions. Two of the instructions sought related to the duties which devolve upon the driver of a motor vehicle before attempting a “left turn.” The third asked the court to charge the jury “that the blowing of a horn by the overtaking vehicle is for the convenience of the rear vehicle and not for the benefit of the forward vehicle * * * ” and that “it is immaterial whether or not * * * a horn was blown by the [rear] vehicle, because the forward vehicle had no right to veer into the left traffic until he is certain that the road is clear” etc. And the fourth instruction sought was to the effect that if the defendant truck suddenly turned into plaintiff’s traffic lane and forced her off the highway, the defendant would be liable irrespective of whether or not any direct contact was made between the two vehicles. We are in no doubt that the instructions sought were rightly refused. This case clearly involves a passing situation and there is nothing in this record which even remotely suggests that the truck driver was attempting to make a left turn on the highway. The duties which the law imposes on drivers of overtaking and passing vehicles are set forth with clarity in the LSA-Revised Statutes of 1950, 32:233 2 and the court in its charge *419 clearly tracked the language of this statute. Under Subsection B 3 of the applicable law it is clear that appellants’ third requested instruction is erroneous on its face. As to the fourth requested instruction it is sufficient to say that the court charged the jury that the plaintiffs based their claims upon various alleged acts of negligence on the part of the truck driver Bell and asserted that his negligence solely and proximately caused the accident in the following respects, among others: That he gave no signal before cutting sharply to the left; that he did not look to his left or rear before cutting into the left lane; and that all of the enumerated acts of negligence forced Mrs. Josephson off the paved portion of the road causing the accident. From the balance of the court’s charge it is clear that the jury were authorized to find for the plaintiffs if they believed that Bell's negligence solely and proximately caused the accident. It follows that it was implicit in the court’s charge that contact between the vehicles was not necessary in order to authorize recovery.

Appellants’ second point is levelled at the charge which was given by the court.

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231 F.2d 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-h-c-josephson-and-mrs-effie-josephson-v-american-employers-ca5-1956.