Edwards v. Frost

191 So. 591, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 397
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5943.
StatusPublished

This text of 191 So. 591 (Edwards v. Frost) 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
Edwards v. Frost, 191 So. 591, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 397 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

This is a suit to recover damages occasioned by a collision in which four automobiles were involved. J. M. Edwards sued to recover damages caused him when his automobile was damaged, and for the amount of medical and hospital bills he paid on account of injuries his minor daughter received in the accident. He also claims damages for future medical ano *592 hospital bills to be incurred in treatment óf his minor daughter, and for the use and benefit of his minor daughter for the injuries she received and for her pain and suffering. He made defendants, A. S. Frost, the driver and owner of the car which collided with plaintiff’s car; Maryland Casualty Company, Frost’s liability insurer; and Ralph Holloway, the driver and owner of the car which collided with the Frost vehicle.

Judgment was rendered below in favor of plaintiff and against all defendants, in solido, in the following amounts: For J. M. Edwards, individually, in the sum of $387.17, with five per cent per annum interest from judicial demand; and for J. M. Edwards for the use and benefit of his minor daughter, Caroline French Edwards, in the sum of $5,000, with five per cent per annum interest from judicial demand.

Ralph Holloway has not appealed. The other two defendants have appealed sus-pensively from the judgment rendered below.

The accident occurred on Highway 80 between the towns of Rayville and Holly Ridge, between the hours of eight and eight-thirty P. M. Mr. Edwards, who' lives at Holly Ridge, was, at about eight P. M., called on to pull a truck out of the ditch at a point on the Dixie-Overland Highway, No. 80, between his home and Rayville, Louisiana. The highway is a standard paved concrete road and, at the point where the truck was in the ditch, is level and straight for a long distance both east and west. The highway runs almost due east and west. On this particular occasion the weather was clear and the pavement dry. Soon after being called, Mr. Edwards sent a truck in charge of Cotton Fuller to the scene of the troubled truck. Soon thereafter he followed in a Plymouth sedan owned and driven by Earl Rogers. Immediately behind him and following him to the scene were Mr. Edwards’ daughter, Caroline French Edwards, and her escort, Lee Ineichen, in Mr. Edwards’ Plymouth car. Miss Edwards, Earl Rogers and Lee Ineichen intended to continue on to Monroe to attend a dance. After arriving at the place where the truck was in the ditch the two Plymouth cars were parked on the north side of the highway, on the shoulder about two feet off the pavement, both cars headed west, the Rogers car in front and the Edwards car from five to ten feet behind it. All lights were burning on the two cars. Approximately 20 feet west of the two parked Plymouth cars, the truck was in the ditch on the south side of the highway. The truck sent out by Mr. Edwards was also on the south side of the highway, both trucks entirely off the pavement and headed east. The Edwards truck was ahead of the ditched truck and in position to tie to it and attempt to pull it out. Both trucks had their lights on.

As soon as Mr. Edwards arrived at the scene he and Rogers got out of the car and, with the assistance of a negro, placed flares out, one 60 feet east of the trucks on the south side of the highway; one 60 feet west of the trucks on the south side of the highway, and one approximately 40 feet east of the Edwards Plymouth car on the north side of the highway. The flares were placed on the edge of, or on the shoulder near the edge of, the pavement. After the flares were in place Rogers got into the rear seat of the Edwards car and was conversing with Miss Edwards and Ineichen, who occupied the front seat of said car, when the accident occurred.

Defendant Frost’s car was traveling in a westerly direction and when it was near the Edwards car it partially left the pavement on the north side and ran into the rear of the Edwards car. The Frost car was rammed from the rear by a car driven by defendant Holloway, who was also traveling west. The force of the impact drove the Edwards vehicle into the rear of the Rogers car and both were forced 10 to 20 feet west into a post and into the ditch on the south side of the highway. The Frost vehicle continued west and came to a stop some 20 to 40 feet west of where the Edwards Plymouth stopped, and the Holloway car came to a stop approximately ten feet east of the Edwards car.

At the time of the collision Miss Edwards was seated on the front seat of her father’s automobile, with one arm on the back of the seat and one leg tucked under her, in order that she might face both escorts during their conversation. The collision threw Rogers from the back seat onto the front seat, and threw Miss Edwards’ back against the dashboard with sufficient force to break off the instrument knobs thereon and to throw her to the floor of the car. The back of the from seat was badly bent. Miss Edwards was seriously injured.

*593 There is no dispute over the facts thus far. There is a dispute as to whether the Frost vehicle struck the Edwards automobile before or after the Holloway car struck the Frost car; or whether the Edwards car was rammed by the Frost car and the latter by the Holloway car simultaneously. There is also a dispute over the location, as to the pavement, of the Frost vehicle before being rammed by the Holloway car. The lower court, after describing the scene of the accident as we have above, found:

“The situation as described constituted a danger zone, which was clearly visible to anyone approaching on the highway from either direction. Defendant A. S. Frost was travelling at a moderate rate of speed in a Plymouth pick-up truck in a westerly direction. As he approached the scene he slowed down, came almost to a stop and pulled partially off the pavement just before he reached plaintiff’s car, thus placing his car half on and half off the pavement just to the rear of the Edwards car. He evidently pulled off the pavement between the flare on the north side and the parked sedan. He testified that he did not intend to stop, but intended to continue on through the danger zone.
“Just at about the instant that Frost reached the Edwards car, he was struck from behind at the left side of the rear end of his car by a Chevrolet sedan driven by Ralph Holloway. The Frost truck was in turn driven into the left rear of the Edwards car, causing the damage complained of here. The Frost car had practically reached the Edwards car when it was struck by Holloway, as none of the witnesses heard more than one crash. The Edwards car was knocked against the Plymouth sedan parked ahead of it but nothing is claimed in this suit on account of any damage to that car.
“From all of the testimony the defendant Holloway was evidently driving quite fast, was not keeping a proper lookout and is clearly liable. There is some testimony that Frost did not have a tail light burning but this point seems to have been abandoned by plaintiff as an act of negligence on the part of Frost. In fact plaintiff seeks to recover from defendants Frost and Maryland Casualty Company on the ground that Frost was negligent in driving up to the immediate rear of plaintiff’s car, with his car partly on and partly off the pavement, and that this negligence was causally connected with the accident.
“We think there is merit to plaintiff’s contention.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 So. 591, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-frost-lactapp-1939.