Drewes v. Miller

25 So. 2d 820, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 403
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1946
DocketNos. 18419, 18420.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 25 So. 2d 820 (Drewes v. Miller) 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
Drewes v. Miller, 25 So. 2d 820, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 403 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

These actions for damages, which were consolidated in the lower court and here for trial and decision, arise out of a collision occurring on Haynes Boulevard between three dump trucks, two of which are owned by the plaintiffs and the other by the defendant, Dewey Miller. Plaintiff, Milton E. Drewes, owner of one of the dump trucks, brought suit against Miller and his liability insurance carrier, American Automobile Insurance Company, alleging that the accident was caused by the negligence of the driver of the Miller truck; that, as the result thereof, his truck sustained damages amounting to $785 and that he was further entitled to recover the sum of $1350, representing loss of use of his truck for a period of ninety days at $15 per day. Plaintiff, Raymond Lewis, likewise alleging that the accident was due to the carelessness of the driver of the Miller truck, sought recovery against the defendants of the sum of $89 for damages sustained by his truck and an additional $150 for loss of use of the truck for 10 days at $15 per day.

The defendants admitted the accident but denied any liability to the respective plaintiffs. They contended that Miller's driver was free from fault and that the accident was due solely to the carelessness of the driver of the Drewes truck. Alternatively, insofar as Drewes claim was concerned, defendants pleaded contributory negligence on the part of his driver as a bar to his recovery.

After a trial in the lower court on the issues formed by the pleadings, there was judgment in favor of plaintiff, Drewes, and against the defendants, in solido, for $572 and in favor of plaintiff, Lewis, for $89. Defendants have appealed and the respective plaintiffs have answered, praying for increases in the awards allowed them by the trial judge.

[1] The issues presented for decision, respecting liability, involve questions of fact only. The accident occurred on August 17, 1944, at about 2:45 p.m. on Haynes Boulevard. This boulevard is a black-topped two-way road, 25 feet in width, with a 6 foot gravel shoulder on each side, running from New Orleans to Little Woods, Louisiana. It is more or less parallel with the shoreline of Lake Ponchartrain and, at or near the point of collision between the vehicles here involved and for a distance of several hundred yards of the approach, the road runs in a straight line. Plaintiffs' theory of the accident (which is substantiated by their witnesses) is as follows: Four vehicles were within the immediate vicinity of the accident at the time it occurred. Travelling in the direction of Little Woods were three vehicles (1) a station wagon, owned by an establishment known as "Mama Lou's" which abuts the boulevard; (2) the Lewis truck and (3) the Miller truck. The fourth vehicle, the Drewes truck, was coming from the opposite direction, or towards New Orleans. Shortly before the mishap, the Miller truck had been preceding the Lewis truck. However, it appears that the Miller truck stopped for the purpose of discharging a passenger and, while it was thus stopped, the Lewis truck passed and followed closely behind the station wagon until the latter came to a stop on the right hand side of the highway in front of "Mama Lou's" establishment. When it did so, the Lewis truck also stopped and then started forward again in an endeavor to pass it. Just as the Lewis truck was in the act of passing the station wagon, the Miller truck, which was travelling to the rear of the Lewis truck at an admitted speed of 35 miles per hour, overtook the Lewis truck and swerved further over on the left side of the road in order to pass it. While the Miller truck was engaged in this maneuver, the Drewes truck appeared on the scene from the opposite *Page 822 direction and the driver thereof, finding the entire road blocked by the three oncoming vehicles, slowed down in the hope that the Miller truck would be able to regain its proper side of the highway and thus avert a collision. However, the efforts of the driver of the Drewes truck were unavailing because the two trucks were in such close proximity to each other that the driver of the Miller truck, despite his speed, was unable to complete his overtaking operation and provide sufficient space for the Drewes truck to pass. As a consequence, the left front fender and bumper of the Drewes truck came in contact with the left rear fender and wheel of the Miller truck, causing the right front wheel and fender of the latter to collide into the left side of the Lewis truck. The impact between the left front fender and bumper of the Drewes truck and the left rear fender and Wheel of the Miller truck caused the Drewes truck to swerve to its left on the roadway where it turned over on its left side with its front facing the south side of the road.

The defendants' theory of the accident, as testified to by the driver of the Miller truck, gives a wholly different picture of the occurrence. The driver, one J.W. Roscoe, stated that the accident did not occur until after the Lewis truck had completely passed the stopped station wagon and had regained its proper side of the highway. He says that, after the Lewis truck had passed the station wagon and pulled in front of it, it came to a stop "half on the shoulder and half in the roadway"; that, while it was in this position, he attempted to pass it and that, when he did so, the Drewes truck, travelling on the wrong side of the road at a high rate of speed, struck the left rear end of his truck and caused its right front fender and wheel to collide with the left side of the stopped Lewis truck.

The judge of the lower court did not believe the driver of the Miller truck and accepted the statements of plaintiffs' witnesses as genuine. We fully agree with his conclusion on the facts and hold that the accident occurred substantially in the manner as claimel by plaintiffs. It follows, therefore, that there cannot be any doubt that the driver of the Miller truck was guilty of the grossest sort of negligence.

This resolution settles the liability of the defendants, insofar as plaintiff, Lewis, is concerned. However, defendants claim that the driver of the Drewes truck was guilty of contributory negligence and they point to the evidence of four of their witnesses (who did not see the accident but who stated that they observed the Drewes truck travelling in the roadway at a speed of 60 miles an hour at a point several hundred yards from the place at which the accident occurred) as establishing their plea.

[2] The testimony concerning the speed of the Drewes truck given by defendants' witnesses does not impress us to any appreciable extent as it seems to consist of mere vague guesses and impressions of witnesses who had little more than a fleeting glance of the truck as it was travelling on the highway. Furthermore, Champagne, the truck driver, denies that he was travelling at a rate greater than twenty-five miles per hour. In such circumstances, we cannot say that defendants have established their plea of contributory negligence by a clear preponderance of evidence in view of the conclusion reached below.

[3] The only other question presented for consideration is the quantum of damages. The estimates, introduced in evidence, showing the costs of the necessary repairs to the damaged vehicles are $572 for the Drewes truck and $89 for the Lewis truck. Lewis complains that the award in his favor for $89 should be increased so as to allow him recovery of $30 for two days loss of use of the truck while the repairs were being made. Inasmuch as Lewis has failed to produce evidence exhibiting that he expended any sum whatever for the rental of another truck for two days to replace the damaged truck, his claim for loss of use cannot be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
25 So. 2d 820, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drewes-v-miller-lactapp-1946.