Droddy v. Southern Bus Lines

26 So. 2d 761, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 461
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1946
DocketNo. 2811.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 761 (Droddy v. Southern Bus Lines) 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
Droddy v. Southern Bus Lines, 26 So. 2d 761, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 461 (La. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

This is a suit for damages arising out of a collision occurred on February 17, 1945, at about five o'clock in the afternoon at a point in an intersection between a highway leading east and west and being a main highway connecting the cities of Alexandria and Lake Charles and another highway running south and north and leading to the military reservation at North Camp Polk in Vernon Parish. The vehicles involved in the collision were a bus of the Southern Bus Lines, Inc., which was travelling west towards Leesville, and a Plymouth automobile belonging to and being driven by Elmer Bailey, one of the plaintiffs in the suit. There are two other plaintiffs, Edgar Droddy and Mitchell Droddy who with two other passengers, occupied the car with Bailey. The two Droddys appear in the suit on the guest theory which might well save them from a plea of contributory negligence that could be successfully presented against Bailey, the owner and driver of the car. They were severely injured, especially Edgar Droddy and their demand for damages is limited to the personal injuries which they sustained with incidental expenses. The demand of Edgar Droddy including hospital and medical expenses is for $20,000, that of Mitchell Droddy $7,125 and that of Elmer Bailey which includes the loss of his automobile as well as minor physical injuries and loss of wages, $1,756.50.

As already stated the bus was going west and the car was travelling north, as is alleged in the petition of the plaintiffs and in which it is further alleged that among the proximate causes of the collision were, (1) the fast and excessive rate of speed at which the bus was going for more than 600 feet before reaching the point of collision, (2) the failure of the driver to slow the bus down and have the *Page 763 same under control so as to be able to stop within 5 feet at any time after he had entered the intersection, (3) his failure to keep a vigilant look-out for vehicles in and about the intersection after he came within 500 feet of it, and, (4) his failure to stop the bus after he had seen or should have seen the Bailey car about to enter the intersection.

In their petition plaintiffs also described the intersection in detail, alleging that a very large sign was posted some 500 feet east on the north side of the north and south highway to give warning to drivers approaching the intersection from the east of the junction and they also describe a certain small house situated somewhere on the southeast corner of the intersection. Although they do not seem to charge specifically as they did on the other matters, that the bus driver was negligent in failing to observe the warning sign and, although it is strongly contended also that this small house created an obstruction on the southeast corner of the intersection and should have called for greater care and caution on his part, they do not charge failure in that respect as a particular act of negligence. Testimony was freely admitted with regard to these matters however and there seems to have been no objection to it being considered.

The Fidelity Casualty Company which carried public liability insurance on the bus is made co-defendant with the Southern Bus Lines, Inc., and in a joint answer filed by them, after admitting those allegations which they could safely admit, they generally deny all other allegations on which liability against them could be founded. Further answering they set out their version of how this accident occurred, alleging, first, that the road on which the Bailey car was going is a less travelled road than the main paved highway leading from Alexandria to Leesville and therefore the bus had the right of way. They further allege that at the time of the accident there were large stop signs placed at the intersection against traffic on the north and south intersecting road. They allege that the bus driver approached the intersection at a reasonable rate of speed of 30 to 35 miles an hour, that he blew his horn as he neared it, as was his custom, that he saw the Bailey car approaching from his left, both vehicles being in clear and open view of each other and he also observed the Bailey car slowing down as if to stop in observance of the stop sign which faced it. They allege that under the circumstances the bus driver proceeded to go across the intersection in a normal manner and as he did so, plaintiff's car speeded up. They aver that when it became apparent to the bus driver that the Bailey car was not going to stop, he applied his brakes and pulled over to his right as far as possible in order to avoid a collision but it was then too late. Defendants disclaim any negligence on the part of the bus driver and aver especially that the proximate cause of the collision was the negligence of Bailey in failing to see the bus which was in plain and open view and in failing to observe the stop sign at the intersection.

In the alternative defendants plead contributory negligence on the part of Bailey and that the other two plaintiffs were likewise contributorily negligent in failing to have observed the bus and properly warn the driver Bailey. As another alternative defendants plead the doctrine of joint enterprise among all three of the plaintiffs as a bar to their recovery.

After trial in the lower court there was judgment in favor of defendants dismissing the plaintiffs' suit and they have taken this appeal.

The following facts are not seriously disputed: The bus was travelling west on a main highway which enjoys the right of way over the road which the Bailey car was travelling toward the north, and also there were signs, one east of the north and south highway warning traffic going west of the junction of the two roads and also stop signs placed about the intersection and particularly one facing traffic going north as it approached the intersection. It is not disputed that the collision took place somewhere in the northwest quarter of the intersection and that the Bailey car collided with the bus at that point because of the driver's effort to pass ahead of it by having turned to his left. It is *Page 764 not disputed also that the automobile continued to the west after having collided with the bus and came to a stop some 50 feet from the point of collision; that the bus continued in the same direction it was going, towards the west, and travelled off the paved slab of the highway a considerable distance and came to rest partly in a ditch at a point approximately 150 feet from the point of collision. It is generally agreed also that it had been raining before, but not at the moment of the accident.

The seriously disputed points in the case, as we view them, are with regard to, the rate of speed at which the respective vehicles were travelling; whether this small house on the southeast corner of the intersection formed an obstruction to the view of either driver which called for greater attention on his part in approaching the intersection and finally whether either driver made any diligent effort in time just before entering the intersection to try to avoid the collision either by stopping or having his vehicle under proper control.

[1] Taking up the question of the speed of the vehicles we find that the preponderance of the evidence shows that neither was travelling at an excessive rate and that could hardly be said to have been the proximate cause of the accident on the part of either. The only testimony to the effect that the bus was going very fast comes from the plaintiffs themselves and this is denied by the bus driver as well as two of the passengers who testified in the case and another witness who viewed the accident.

R.R. Hyatt was a witness for the defendants and he seems to be the only eye witness besides the parties who were involved in it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 761, 1946 La. App. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/droddy-v-southern-bus-lines-lactapp-1946.