Employers Fire Ins. Co. v. Langley

197 So. 178, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 166
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1940
DocketNo. 6140.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 197 So. 178 (Employers Fire Ins. Co. v. Langley) 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
Employers Fire Ins. Co. v. Langley, 197 So. 178, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 166 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The new Ford Tudor sedan of P. I. Harveston, being driven by his wife, was seriously damaged as a result of the side swiping by it of the 1%-ton Ford track of Joe Langley in the daytime on the graveled highway between Hodge and Arcadia, Louisiana.

Prior to the accident, plaintiff issued to Harveston its policy of insurance whereby he was insured against property damage arising from collision and/or up-set, etc., of the car, as therein defined. The policy was in force when the accident occurred. It carried the customary $50 deductible clause.

The extent of damage to the Harveston car was amicably determined between insurer and insured. The amount thereof was fixed at $707.82. This amount, less the $50 deductible, was paid to Harveston and the holder of mortgage notes against his car. Plaintiff was thereby, as is ex-, pressly stipulated in the policy, subrogated to all of the rights and actions which Harveston had or could enforce against Langley and his agent, Lester Blankenship, a young negro man, operator of the truck, arising out of or resulting from said accident and the negligence of Blankenship as the proximate cause thereof. In addition, Harveston sold the damaged car to plaintiff. It was thereafter sold by plaintiff for $155 cash, the best offer made for it after considerable effort to secure a better one.

Plaintiff, as subrogee, instituted this suit against Langley and Blankenship in solido for the amount paid by it to Har-veston and his mortgagee, to-wit: — $657.82, on the theory that the accident was solely caused by Blankenship’s negligence.

The accident occurred when Mrs. Plar-veston undertook to pass (on its left side) the Langley truck, which was then in the act of making a left turn across the highway in order to reach a haul road used to transport pulp wood to a nearby mill. Both vehicles were moving northward. The specific acts of carelessness and negligence accredited to Blankenship are as follows, to-wit:

1. Not giving any signal or warning of the intention to make the left turn.

2. Not heeding the signal (sounding of horn) of the Harveston car, giving notice of its presence and intention to pass.

3. Not looking to his rear to ascertain if road conditions warranted the making of the left turn.

4. Attempting to make said left turn when the other car was in the act of passing the truck.

Defendants deny that the accident was due to any extent to Blankenship’s negligence, but, on the contrary, to the carelessness and negligence of Mrs. Harveston in these respects to-wit:

1. That she was driving the car in a reckless and careless manner when attempting to pass the truck.

*180 2. That she ran into and against the truck while at stop on its side of the highway without giving signal of her desire or intention to pass.

3. That she did not respond to the signal given by Blankenship (extension of left hand and arm) of his intention to make the left turn.

In the alternative, should it be found that Blankenship was guilty of any negligence whatever, the contributory negligence of Mrs. Harveston in the respects named is pleaded to bar recovery by plaintiff.

Defendants appealed from judgment for $382.82 against them in solido. -Plaintiff, by answer to the appeal, insists that the judgment should be increased to the sum of $502.82.

The highway at the locus of the accident is 22 feet wide. It is straight for a considerable distance above and below the point. It is on a fill 4 or 5 feet high, with parallel ditches. On the date of the accident (August 3, 1935) the gravel was loose and dry; traffic thereon, especially at rapid speed, created heavy dust. Each side of the highway was lined with a luxuriant growth of weeds. The presence of the haul road, which the truck intended to take, was not marked. It could not be seen by motorists until very close to it on account of said weeds. An improvised crossing over the ditch to the haul road then consisted of boards laid on poles.

Mrs. Harveston, Blankenship and another negro man were the only eyewitnesses to the accident. She testified that she followed the truck a brief time before the collision; that the dust created by it was somewhat heavy but did not prevent her seeing it at a safe distance; that when it pulled to its right and came to a stop, or practically so, she drew closer to it' and construed the truck’s movement as evidence that her signal had been heard by its driver, and as an invitation to her to pass; that she immediately maneuvered her own car to accomplish this; that she sounded the horn twice before passing the truck at a speed of between 35 and 40 miles per hour; that without giving any sign or signal of its purpose to do so, the truck began to move to its left across the road; that her front right wheel successfully passed the truck without contact, but that her right rear wheel struck or side swiped the left front fender and wheel of the truck. Immediately, her own car went out of control, turned over two or three times and finally rested on its side across the highway, approximately 75 feet beyond the truck, which was stopped immediately at locus of the accident.

Blankenship and his helper testified (in contradiction of the answer) that the truck did not come to a stop, but was slowly pulled to its right, preliminary to executing a circular movement across the road; that before beginning the turn and while yet on their side of the road, Mrs. Harveston drove her car into the side of the truck. Pertinent to this contention, Blankenship testified as follows:

“Q. Did you look back to see if a car was coming? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. When did you look back? A. Just before — when I held out my hand.
“Q. You held out your hand and looked back? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you see any car coming? A. No, sir.
“Q. Was it too dusty to see it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. The dust was so bad you couldn’t see the car coming ? A. Yes, s-ir.
“Q. And after that you turned around and the accident happened? A. Yes, sir.”

The above-quoted testimony of Blankenship tends to prove two points, viz:

That if he extended his hand and arm in token of his intention to turn, he simultaneously looked to the rear for traffic and saw none because of the dust’s density, and regardless of his inability in this respect, he undertook to make the turn. If the dust was so dense that he could not see the Harveston car a short distance away, surely that density prevented Mrs. Harveston from seeing the extended hand and arm, if extended.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 178, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/employers-fire-ins-co-v-langley-lactapp-1940.