Dunaway v. Cade

39 So. 2d 148, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 434
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1949
DocketNo. 3094.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 So. 2d 148 (Dunaway v. Cade) 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
Dunaway v. Cade, 39 So. 2d 148, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 434 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

This is a suit by Ira Dunaway, individually and as the father of Ira Dunaway, Jr., in which he is seeking to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by his minor son as a result of a collision between an automobile owned and operated by G. L. Cade, defendant herein, and a motor bike owned and operated by the minor, Ira Dunaway, Jr.

Plaintiff alleges that his minor son was riding his motor bike on Avenue F, which street runs north and south in the City of Bogalusa, Louisiana, on May 11, 1947 at approximately 1 A.M.; that he was traveling south on said avenue and was following the automobile being operated by the defendant Cade on the same avenue in the same direction.

While plaintiff also sued the Bogalusa Lumber Company, Inc., it was shown that Cade was not acting in the scope of his authority or in the regular course of his business on any mission for the Bogalusa Lumber Company, his employer, and Bogalusa Lumber Company, Inc., having filed an exception of no right of action and testimony being taken thereon, the exception was properly sustained and plaintiff does not complain of this ruling.

Plaintiff's main cause of action is set forth in Articles 7 and 8 of his petition and these articles are as follows:

"VII. That G. L. (Bud) Cade after passing the intersection of Tenth Street with Avenue F continue south on Avenue F in the city limits of the City of Bogalusa, Washington Parish, Louisiana, petitioner's son doing likewise, staying at a reasonable safe distance behind the vehicle driven by the said G. L. (Bud) Cade. After G. L. (Bud) Cade had driven approximately 35' or 50' from the south line of the intersection of Tenth Street with Avenue F, he applied brakes to his vehicle without signal and immediately without warning began to travel in reverse, backing up and upon so doing crashed into and caused petitioner's son to crash into the vehicle as driven by the said G. L. (Bud) Cade." *Page 150

"VIII. That the said employee of the defendant corporation, Bogalusa Lumber Company, Inc., gave petitioner's son no warning whatsoever of his intention to stop and to reverse the direction of his said vehicle, and by the failure to give warning or signal caused the accident in question severely injuring Ira Dunaway, Jr. and damaging said motor bike."

Plaintiff prays for judgment individually for hospital bills, nursing service, medical service, medicines, etc. and specialist fees in the total amount of $1800.00, and further prays on behalf of his minor son, Ira Dunaway, Jr., for damages in the full sum of $90,000.00.

Defendants first filed an exception of no cause and no right of action on behalf of Bogalusa Lumber Company, Inc. and G. L. Cade. As stated, after the taking of testimony, the exception of no right of action was sustained, as to the Bogalusa Lumber Company, Inc., as Cade was on a mission of his own. The exception filed on behalf of the defendant Cade was overruled by the District Court with written reasons, and we think properly, however there is no need to discuss this ruling as counsel for the defendant Cade have not re-urged same in their brief nor in their argument.

The defendant Cade's answer was a general denial and, in the alternative, defendant plead contributory negligence on the part of Ira Dunaway, Jr. in following the defendant's car at an unsafe and unreasonably close distance; by failing to keep a proper lookout; by operating the motor bike at an excessive rate of speed; by failing to have the motor bike under proper control; by not attempting to avoid the accident by going around the Cade car to the left, the road ahead being open and unobstructed. The defendant Cade also assumed the position of plaintiff in reconvention and prayed for the sum of $87.75, the amount of damage to his automobile as a result of the accident.

The District Judge, in a well considered and written opinion, held that the defendant Cade was guilty of negligence in not giving the hand signal as provided by the provisions of Act No. 286 of 1938, Section 3, Rule 10, Dart's Statutes Section 5215, and also that as the defendant testified that he looked through his rear view mirror but did not see the motor bike, which the Judge found "to have been some twenty-five feet to the rear of him at the time", that he was therefore guilty of negligence in failing to see that which he should have seen, and the Court concluded that this negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of the accident. The Court further held that Ira Dunaway, Jr. was guilty of contributory negligence in traveling at an excessive rate of speed some twenty-five feet to the rear of the defendant Cade's automobile and that he also failed to keep a proper lookout and failed to have his motor bike under proper control immediately proceeding the accident. For these reasons, the District Court rejected the plaintiff's claim and refused the defendant's claim on the reconventional demand and assessed all costs against the plaintiff.

The plaintiff has appealed from this judgment and the defendant Cade has answered the appeal and asked that it be amended by awarding to him the sum of $87.75 as set forth in his reconventional demand which the Lower Court denied in its judgment, and that in all other respects. the judgment be affirmed.

The record reveals that on May 11, 1947 Ira Dunaway, Jr., had attended a late picture show in the city of Bogalusa, and that about 1 A.M. he was going home, traveling south on Avenue F, and that at this time, also traveling south on Avenue F was the automobile owned and operated by the defendant Cade. Ira Dunaway, Jr. was following Cade's Automobile a distance of approximately 25 feet when Cade's car came to the intersection of Tenth and Avenue F. Cade, immediately after crossing this intersection, began to slow down and the motor bike of young Dunaway ran into the rear of Cade's automobile. As a result of the accident, young Dunaway suffered severe injuries.

The testimony reveals that on the morning in question, the defendant Cade, together with his son-in-law, Mark Endicott, and a friend, Theodore Evans, were going fox hunting. Evans was sitting on the front seat with Cade and Endicott was on the back seat with one of the fox hounds. The other hounds were in the back, closed *Page 151 up in the trunk of the car. Cade testified that he was traveling south on Avenue F, approximately twenty-five miles per hour, and that just as he crossed the intersection of Tenth Street and Avenue F, one of the men in the car told him that he should have turned on Tenth Street to his right. He immediately began to stop his automobile and when he was approximately fifty to seventy-five feet south of the intersection and practically stopped, although his automobile was still moving, he was struck in the rear by the motor bike of young Dunaway. The pictures of the car introduced in evidence show the blow from the motor bike to have been practically in the rear center of the automobile, possibly slightly to the left of center. From this picture, it would seem that the motor bike struck the car with quite a bit of force, as the trunk is badly bent in and, according to the testimony, the bumper was slightly bent and the motor bike had run up on top of the bumper and mashed the front wheel so that it was jammed between the bumper and automobile. The motor bike was still fastened on to the car after the accident. Young Dunaway was thrown some five or six feet from the motor bike on the shoulder in the gravel.

Defendant Cade testified that he did not recall whether he held his hand out to signal or stop.

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Bluebook (online)
39 So. 2d 148, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunaway-v-cade-lactapp-1949.