Dupuy v. Veazey

63 So. 2d 756, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 564
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1953
DocketNo. 19951
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 63 So. 2d 756 (Dupuy v. Veazey) 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
Dupuy v. Veazey, 63 So. 2d 756, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 564 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Eloise Dupuy, surviving spouse of Joseph N. Dupuy, instituted this suit against defendant, Richard E. Veazey, endeavoring to recover the sum of $23,425 for the wrongful death of her husband, which occurred in the intersection of St. Charles Avenue and Terpsichore Street, between three and four o’clock a. m. on January 21st, 1951, when Dupuy, a pedestrian, was struck by defendant’s vehicle as he attempted to cross the lakeside roadway of St. Charles Avenue.

Defendant answered and denied that he was guilty of any negligence; he asserted that Dupuy fell or threw himself in the path of the car and that he was intoxicated; and, in the alternative, pleaded the contributory negligence of the decedent.

From a judgment in favor of defendant dismissing plaintiff’s suit she prosecutes this appeal.

The record reveals that defendant was driving uptown in St. Charles Avenue in the general direction of Jackson Avenue. Dupuy was crossing St. Charles Avenue where it is intersected by Terpsichore Street, walking from the river towards the lake. Dupuy crossed the riverside roadway, then the neutral ground and entered the lakeside roadway of St. Charles Avenue. When he reached the approximate center of this roadway he was struck by the right front bumper and fender of defendant’s vehicle. The resulting injuries were almost immediately fatal.

Defendant concedes that he observed Du-puy as he stepped from the neutral ground [757]*757into the lakeside roadway of St. Charles Avenue when he was approximately ISO feet removed from the situs of the accident and travelling twenty-five or thirty miles per hour, at which time he sounded his horn; he noticed that the walk of Dupuy was not a normal gait; Dupuy had cleared the path of the automobile and had arrived at a point of relative safety in the street when “he fell backwards, staggering, falling. I am sure I have seen a drunk staggering * * *. He took two or three steps and fell”. Defendant further admits that when he observed the decedent leaving the neutral ground and entering the lakeside roadway of St. Charles Avenue, he did not reduce his speed nor attempt to swerve his car until the moment decedent suddenly fell or staggered backwards into the right front portion thereof, at which time he sharply turned left and subsequently applied the brakes of the vehicle.

Counsel for plaintifif in relying upon the well established principles of law originally enunciated in the cases of Rottman v. Beverly, 1936, 183 La. 947, 165 So. 153 and Jackson v. Cook, 1938, 189 La. 860, 181 So. 195 and reiterated in subsequent cases, insist that even if the decedent was negligent and even though that negligence continued up to the moment of impact, defendant is liable if he had the last clear chance of avoiding the accident and failed to do so. • In relying on the doctrine of last clear chance counsel for plaintiff has, in effect, admitted the negligence of Dupuy. Burns v. Evans Cooperage Co., Inc., 1945, 208 La. 406, 23 So.2d 165.

Counsel for defendant, on the other hand, concedes the merit of plaintiff’s counsel’s assertion with respect to the foregoing general principle of law, i. e., the doctrine of last clear chance applies despite the fact that a plaintiff’s negligence continues up to the moment of the accident, but he points •out that the application of this doctrine depends in the last analysis upon the defendant’s superior knowledge of the peril coupled with his ability to avoid the injury, or, more specifically since the pedestrian moved to a point where it appeared to the motorist that he would be safe in relation to vehicles, and then staggered backwards into the path of the automobile, the peril of the pedestrian was so suddenly created that the motorist was not afforded “a last clear chance” to execute any preventive measures to avoid the imminent accident.

The only eyewitness to the accident was called on behalf of plaintiff. He was Santo Brocato, a taxicab driver, who was parked in the neutral ground section of Terpsichore and St. Charles, facing the immediate situs of the accident and waiting for defendant’s car to pass in order that he could traverse the lakeside roadway of St. Charles Avenue. His version of the accident substantiates in graphic detail the testimony of defendant as to the manner in which the accident occurred. The front seat of defendant’s car, in addition to himself, was occupied by two guests, Mrs. Malcolm O’Hara and Mrs. Claude Foret, Jr., who did not observe the occurrence of the accident. Mrs. Foret was “dozing” and Mrs. O’Hara merely felt the impact of the car with the body of decedent, and her first impression was that the right side of defendant’s vehicle had “brushed” the “fender or bumper” of another vehicle.

The record is devoid of any proof that Dupuy was intoxicated although innuendo is there to that effect. The record is likewise devoid of any proof that defendant knew or should have known, at any time prior to his car’s actual contact with the body of Dupuy that he was intoxicated. Plaintiff’s counsel insist, however, that defendant is confronted with the impact of a strong inference of knowledge of intoxication since defendant recognized when he was 150 feet removed from the situs of the accident that Dupuy’s walk was not normal, but “a stooped walk. Not a rapid walk as you and I would walk across the street.”

The only question posed for our consideration is whether the facts and environmental characteristics of the accident as disclosed 'by the record permits of the application of the doctrine of last clear chance.

[758]*758In Rottman v. Beverly, supra [133 La. 947, 165 So. 156], the court reasoned that:

' “In cases of discovered peril, it is pertinent and material to ascertain whether the defendant could, after discovering plaintiff’s peril, have averted the accident by the exercise of due diligence. If he could have averted the accident by the exercise of due diligence and failed to do so, his negligence in that respect is considered the proximate and immediate cause of the injury, and the plaintiff’s negligence the remote cause, and the plaintiff may recover although his negligence continued to the instant of the accident. The basis of recovery in such cases is the defendant’s superior knowledge of the peril and his ability to avoid the injury. He has the last clear chance. 20 R.C.L. § 116, page 141.
“Of course, there can be no recovery against defendant if he used due care in discovering the peril and after discovering it could not avoid the accident, as in such case there would be no negligence at all on the part of the defendant.’’

In Jackson v. Cook, supra, the ratio de-cidendi of the Rottman case was extended to cover not only what the defendant actually observed prior to the accident, but what he was intellectually capable of observing and doing if he had maintained a reasonable lookout. Therefore, the legal or philosophical distinction between the Rottman case and the Jackson case is that: In Rottman v. Beverly, Mrs. Rottman’s acts of gross negligence continued up to the moment of the accident. Beverly, the driver of the automobile, actually observed her in her perilous position- in time to avert the accident had he exercised reasonable care. In Jackson v. Cook [189 La. 860, 181 So.

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 2d 756, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupuy-v-veazey-lactapp-1953.