Eads v. Holliday

144 So. 646
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1932
DocketNo. 1054.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 So. 646 (Eads v. Holliday) 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
Eads v. Holliday, 144 So. 646 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOÜTON, J.

A public road runs southward along a bayou from Gross Tete to the town of Plaque-mine. About two miles south of Gross Tete there is a very sharp curve in that road. The east side of the road is called the bayou side, and the west side, the wood side.

Glaude Blanchard had parked his auto on the wood or west side of that road and plaintiff, Charles Eads, had also parked a truck on the bayou or east side, not on a-direct line however with the Blanchard auto, but further north.

There is a very sharp curve where the Blanchard auto was parked, and from the south to that point there were then underbrush and briars which had the effect of obstructing the vision of travelers on that road driving northward, the direction defendant was driving.

On October 6, 1930, defendant, Holliday, while driving his auto northward from Plaquemine through that curve, ran into plaintiff and severely injured him, which resulted in the damages claimed herein against defendant.

Judgment was rendered rejecting plaintiff’s demand, from which he appeals.

As defendant was driving northward, his right of way was on the east or bayou side of the roadway where plaintiff had parked his truck. When defendant reached the curve he blew his horn. Plaintiff was then standing near Blanchard’s auto and, upon hgaring the horn or the noise made by the on-coming Hol-liday car, he ran directly across the roadway, stopped at the ditch edging it, then, seeing the ear advancing on him, ran about thirty feet along the ditch, dashed from there in attempting to get away from the, impending danger and ran up against a wire fence, was struck and injured. If plaintiff had stayed near the Blanchard auto on the opposite side of the road, or had stepped behind it, he would have escaped injury. In crossing the road and going on the bayou side in the pathway of defendant’s car plaintiff was at fault. He cannot recover against defendant unless he is entitled thereto under the doctrine of “the last clear chance.”

The district judge, in dismissing the suit, did not pass on that feature of the case, upon which we think a correct solution of the contest depends.

Section 5, subdivision (a) Act No. 296 of 192S, pages 628, 632, reads, as follows: “Any person driving a vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface and width of the highway and of any other conditions then existing, and no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at such speed as to endanger the life, limb or property of any person.”

Subdivision (b) reads: “Subject to the provision (a) of this section and except in those instances where a lower speed is specified in this Act, it shall be prima facie lawful for the driver of a vehicle to drive at a speed not exceeding the following, but in any case when such speed would be unsafe it shall not be lawful.” Then the act proceeds to specify the number of miles an hour a driver is permitted to drive according to subdivision (b) indicated by the figures 1, 2, 3, 4, et seq., in the statute.

Under figure 4, the act, in referring to the miles per hour the driver is authorized to drive, says: “Fifteen miles an hour in traversing or going around curves or traversing a grade upon a highway when tthe driver’s view is obstructed within a distance of one hundred feet along such highway in the direction in which he is proceeding.”

In this case the proof does not establish the fact that a driver coming up to the curve would have had his view obstructed “within a distance of one hundred feet” going northward, “the direction in which he [defendant] is proceeding,” the last quotation being the words used in figure 4 of the statute. It is 'however shown that there was considerable obstruction to a driver coming up the way defendant was traveling caused by underbrush and briars along the wood side of the road where Blanchard’s car was parked, and also by a pecan tree standing in the curve. It is also shown that defendant was familiar with the conditions which existed there, as he frequently traveled over that highway.

It will be noticed that section 5 of the act, above reproduced, says that the driver must •drive his car “at a careful and prudent speed not greater than is reasonable and proper” 'having due regard to traffic, etc., and “width of the highway” and of any “other conditions then existing.”

In subdivision (ib) of section 5 of the act. after providing for the rate of speed fixed under figures 1, 2, 3, and 4, et seq., above referred to, the act says: “But in any case when such speed would be unsafe, it shall- not be lawful.” Hence, more than the fifteen miles an hour speed provided for under figure 4 in “traversing or going- around curves,” might in some cases contemplated in the act be “unsafe” and therefore not lawful, although the obstruction would not be one hundred feet along the highway.

These various provisions in the statute indicate that all of the regulations in regard to “speed” therein mentioned were intended for the protection of “the -life, limb or property of any person” traveling on the public highways.

*648 Defendant says he was going about thirty miles an hour when he saw plaintiff running across the highway from the Blanchard auto parked on the opposite side of the road.

The district judge says-: “I think that in view of all of the facts and conditions of this case a speed limit of thirty miles per hour in going into or around the curve was more than prudent.”

In that respect we are compelled to differ from our learned brother of the district court. That speed was twice as fast' as the one fixed under the statute when traversing or going around a curve when the view of the driver is obstructed within a distance of one hundred feet along the highway. Here, though it was not shown that the driver’s view was obstructed' within that distance, still it appears, as before stated, that there were serious obstructions to his view along that highway. With these obstructions in a very sharp curve existing there, and to the knowledge of defendant, Holliday, we think that ordinary care required him to go at a lower speed than thirty miles an hour in traversing that curve. The fact is, however, that he must have been going at a much faster speed as appears not from his estimate thereof, but by the narrative he gives of the occurrence, as we will show from his own testimony, and from other facts in connection therewith.

His testimony is that when he first saw plaintiff, that plaintiff was running across the highway, and the proof is that he ran directly and not diagonally across the road from Blanchard’s auto. ' .

Defendant says he was about sixty feet from plaintiff when he first saw him running across the road; that he “threw on his brakes” and took the ditch to avoid hitting him. His brakes, he testifies, were effective, as was shown by the skidding of the wheels of his car in the ditch where plaintiff was finally run over. He says that after plaintiff had crossed, he ran up the road; also that his car ran about thirty-five feet in the ditch from where it had entered to the spot where he struck plaintiff. It was then that the car came to a stop, as the record clearly'shows.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eads-v-holliday-lactapp-1932.