Elliott v. Lynch

113 So. 2d 52, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 1191
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1959
DocketNo. 9005
StatusPublished

This text of 113 So. 2d 52 (Elliott v. Lynch) 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
Elliott v. Lynch, 113 So. 2d 52, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 1191 (La. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

This is an action in tort arising out of an automobile collision in the early afternoon of July 27, 19S7, occurring on Spring Creek bridge on U. S. Highway 165 approximately two miles north of Glenmora. The vehicles involved were a Chevrolet owned by plaintiff, Otis W. Elliott, and driven and operated at the time by his wife, Mrs. Mabel Melder Elliott, and a Ford automobile owned and driven by defendant, Donald S. Lynch. The defendants are Lynch and his public liability insurer.

The charges of negligence relied upon by plaintiffs are that defendant Lynch was driving at an excessive rate of speed and in his left or wrong lane of traffic, which course he allegedly continued to pursue notwithstanding the approach of the Elliott vehicle. Counter charges of negligence are laid to Mrs. Elliott allegedly constituting the proximate cause of the accident, or, in the alternative, a contributing cause thereof, in her failure to make proper observation of approaching traffic or to keep and maintain a proper lookout, and in driving, at least partially, on the wrong side of the road, notwithstanding the approach of defendant’s vehicle in its proper lane of travel.

The conclusion reached by the trial court was that plaintiffs failed to discharge their burden of proof and establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the accident was occasioned by the negligence of [53]*53defendant Lynch. From a judgment rejecting their demands, plaintiffs have appealed.

The highway, a concrete paved thoroughfare, runs generally north and south and, by a bridge 24 feet wide and 287 feet long, crosses Spring Creek. The highway at the scene of the accident is straight except for a slight curve to the right as one approaches the bridge from the south. At the time of the accident there were no unfavorable or unusual atmospheric conditions ; the weather was clear and dry. Mrs. Elliott was proceeding south en route home from her employment at the Central Louisiana State Hospital. Lynch, accompanied by his wife, was returning from a vacation to their residence in Terre Haute, Indiana, and was traveling north.

The issue for determination is entirely factual. The charge that Lynch was proceeding at an excessive rate of speed was not borne out but disproved by the evidence and the charge has been abandoned. The issues in the final analysis have been reduced to the charge by each driver that the other was operating his vehicle in the wrong lane of traffic and, as a corollary thereto, failed to keep and maintain a proper lookout for approaching traffic. There were only three persons witnessing the accident — Mrs. Elliott and Mr. and Mrs. Lynch. Momentarily before the impact and on observing that an accident was inevitable and immediately impending, Mrs. Lynch exclaimed: “The car is coming at us” and then fainted from fright. Mrs. Elliott was rendered unconscious, sustained serious and permanent injuries and Donald ,S. Lynch was likewise injured and stunned.

The accident occurred on but near the north end of the bridge. The impact of the collision was between the extreme left fronts of the vehicles involved. Following the accident the Lynch Ford came to rest 38 feet from the end of the bridge and almost perpendicular to the highway, with the rear of the car resting against the east ..guard rail of the bridge, the left front wheel on the center line of the highway, and the front bumper extending 18 to 21 inches over the center line of the highway. The Chevrolet came to rest headed generally south, the direction in which it was traveling, with the front end angling toward the center line of the highway, and the left front assuming a position opposite the left front of the Ford approximately 20 or 22 inches distant from the center line of the highway. The rear of the Chevrolet had struck the west railing of the bridge 26 feet from the north end. The conclusions as to these facts are reached from the testimony of Troopers Phillip Higdon and Alton Dusang, who investigated the accident, and from the testimony of and the photographs taken by O. U. Payne, Jr., an insurance adjuster who happened upon the scene soon after the occurrence of the accident. Payne was not concerned, at any time, with an official investigation of the accident but he made available to plaintiffs and defendants alike the photographs taken by him.

The testimony of the three eyewitnesses may be briefly summarized. Mrs. Elliott testified she first observed the Lynch car as it approached the south end of the bridge on its right-hand side of the highway; that her speed was approximately 40 miles per hour, which she maintained to the moment of the accident; however, she did not know whether she steered her car to the right or whether she applied her brakes. Nevertheless, she maintains she continued in her lane of travel and that the defendant, Lynch, suddenly darted across the center line of the highway and struck her automobile in her lane of travel.

Defendant Lynch testified that he reduced his speed in negotiating the curve, after which and on attaining a position where he could see beyond the bridge, he observed the approach of the Elliott car some distance north of the bridge in its proper lane of travel, but as he entered the bridge, Mrs. Elliott, not yet having reached the bridge, veered her car [54]*54toward and into his lane of travel by approximately p/2 to 2 feet, whereupon he decelerated his motor and further reduced his speed, -thinking that she would return to her proper lane while she had time to do so. But, continuing her course as she entered upon the bridge, defendant applied his brakes when about one-third the distance across the bridge, and then applied his brakes very hard when about one-half the distance across. > Momentarily before the impact it appeared to him that Mrs. Elliott made an effort to return to her side of the highway by swerving the front of her car in that direction, too late, however, to avoid the collision. Lynch further testified he reduced his speed further on approaching the bridge, which, at the time of the collision, was only 35 miles per hour or thereabouts. He says the left front of his car was struck by the Elliott Chevrolet and spun around, coming to rest in the position it was found following the impact.

Mrs. Lynch was positive her husband in driving across the bridge was in his proper lane, never at any time departing therefrom. When her husband applied his brakes and blew his horn, Mrs. Lynch testified Mrs. Elliott was coming directly towards them on his side of the bridge.

In addition to references heretofore made to the testimony of Troopers Higdon and Dusang, Higdon testified that by the force of the impact both cars were driven back. He found debris from both vehicles and in both traffic lanes, the major portion of which was on the west side or in the Chevrolet’s traffic lane, beginning near the center of the street and extending in that lane approximately feet. He also testified to skid marks 15 feet in length angling towards and ending at the center line and leading directly to the wheels of the Lynch Ford. Considerable sand and loose dirt covered portions of the pavement in the vicinity of the accident and the trooper found, according to his testimony, impressions or tire marks near the west bridge rail, which he concluded were made by the right rear wheel of the Chevrolet. From these findings the trooper “concluded” the point of impact was 38 feet south of the north end of the bridge and approximately 18 inches to two feet west of the center line of the highway, or in the Chevrolet’s traffic lane. Trooper Dusang assisted Trooper Higdon in the investigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 So. 2d 52, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-lynch-lactapp-1959.