Excel Insurance v. Hunt

221 So. 2d 65, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5065
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1969
DocketNo. 2645
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 So. 2d 65 (Excel Insurance v. Hunt) 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
Excel Insurance v. Hunt, 221 So. 2d 65, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5065 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge.

This is an action for damages arising out of a motor vehicle collision. The plaintiffs are: Alton L. Rudisill, driver of one of the vehicles involved; Excel Insurance Company, the collision insurer and subrogee of Rudisill; and Millers Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Texas, the -liability insurer (with uninsured motorist coverage) and subrogee of Rudisill. The defendant is Richard A. Hunt, owner and driver of the other vehicle which was involved in the collision.

The defendant answered and filed a re-conventional demand claiming damages from Rudisill and his liability insurer, Millers Mutual Fire Insurance Company. Judgment on the merits was rendered by the trial court awarding damages to plaintiffs Rudisill and Excel Insurance Company, and rejecting defendant’s reconven-tional demand. Defendant Hunt has appealed.

The issues presented on this appeal are whether either or both of the drivers of the two vehicles were negligent, and if so, whether that negligence was a proximate and contributing cause of the accident.

The collision occurred about mid afternoon on April IS, 1967, at the intersection of Louisiana Highway 1200 and the Roy Hoyt Road, in Rapides Parish. Highway 1200 runs east and west. The Roy Hoyt Road runs in a northwest-southeasterly direction at that point, and it joins or connects with the north side of Highway 1200, forming a “T” or a “Y” intersection. Highway 1200 is blacktopped and is maintained by the state. The highway and the blacktopping end at the western edge of this intersection, however, and that part of the roadway which continues to run westward from the end of the highway is gravelled, is not maintained by the state and is known as the Thomas Gravel Pit Road. Highway 1200 and the Gravel Pit Road form a straight line, and the latter appears to be a continuation of the highway. The Roy Hoyt Road also is gravelled, and it forms about a 60 degree angle with the-highway at the point where the two thoroughfares join.

" 'This intersection was uncontrolled at the time of the accident. Neither Highway 1200 nor the Roy Hoyt Road had been designated by law or by ordinance as being a preferred road, and there were no signs or markers in that vicinity indicating that motorists on one road had the right of way over motorists on the other.

The weather was clear and dry and visibility was good when the accident occurred. Some trees located near the intersection, however, prevented motorists trav-elling west on the highway and motorists travelling southeast on the Hoyt Road from seeing each other until they reached points near the junction.

Immediately before this accident occurred plaintiff Rudisill was driving his pick-up truck west on Highway 1200, at a speed of approximately 40 miles per hour. He intended to drive through the intersection and to continue to- travel west on the Thomas Gravel Pit Road. When he reached a point about midway through the intersection, and while still in the westbound lane of traffic on the highway, the right side' of his truck was struck by the right front part of the Hunt automobile. Defendant Hunt at that time was driving his automobile in a southeasterly direction on the Roy Hoyt Road at a speed of about 25 miles per hour. He intended to turn to his left at the intersection and to drive east on Highway 1200. The collision occurred shortly after he entered the crossing.

The point of impact was on the hard surfaced slab, in the westbound lane of traffic of Highway 1200, about six feet south of the north line of that highway. It is appar[68]*68ent, therefore, that the front of the Rudisill truck had traveled more than one-half the distance through the intersection, and the front of the Hunt automobile had travelled a distance of only about six feet into the crossing, before the collision occurred.

There were no eye witnesses to the accident other than the drivers of the two vehicles which were involved. Plaintiff Rudisill testified that he did not see the Hunt vehicle until “a second or two” or “a split second” before the impact, that he was “right at the intersection” when he first saw Hunt, and that he did not have time to “whip” his truck to the left or to apply his brakes before the collision occurred. He stated that he had lived in that area for almost SO years, that he drove through that intersection daily, that he was thoroughly familiar with it, that he knew that there were no traffic signs at that junction, and that he considered the intersection to be a dangerous one. He explained, however, that he is used to seeing motorists on the Hoyt Road stop before they proceeded into the intersection, and that “we never think of anybody not stopping.”

Defendant Hunt testified originally that he did not see the Rudisill truck “until the accident.” Later in his testimony he stated that he first saw the truck when he was about 20 feet from the point where the vehicles collided, and that the Rudisill vehicle at that time was 125 to 150 feet from that point. He stated that he tried to bring his automobile to a stop in time to avoid a collision, but that he was unable to do so. Hunt also acknowledged that he had been driving through that intersection for four or five years, and that he was thoroughly familiar with it. He stated that there is “no law or nothing” at that junction, and that he relied on the assumption that every other motorist would “yield to the man on the right.”

The trial judge found that “by custom” Highway 1200 had become the preferred thoroughfare at that intersection, and that plaintiff thus had the right of way. He concluded that defendant Hunt was negligent and that plaintiff Rudisill was free from contributory negligence.

In holding that the highway had become a preferred thoroughfare by custom, the trial judge cited and relied on the case of Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York v. McCasland, 203 So.2d 756 (La.App.3d Cir. 1967). In that case we quoted some language which had been used by the trial court to the effect that even if no stop signs had been used at the intersection involved there, one of the streets nevertheless would have become a preferred thoroughfare “by custom and usage.” The language so used was dictum, because the trial court found, and we agreed, that actually there were stop signs at the intersection where the accident occurred.

The road which was found to be preferred in the McCasland case, however, was a service road for, and it ran parallel to, a heavily travelled four lane divided highway which bypasses the City of Alexandria. The speed limit on the service road, as well as on the main four lane highway, was 60 miles per hour. The intersecting street, which we found to be inferior, was a “cross over road,” which crossed the main four lane highway and the service roads. We think the marked difference in the purpose of and the traffic on those two intersecting streets should indicate to a motorist on either that the service road, on which high speed traffic was allowed, was the preferred route.

The facts in the instant suit are different from those in the McCasland case. Here, the evidence shows that the Roy Hoyt Road was a substantial thoroughfare, of about the same width and type of construction as was the Thomas Gravel Pit Road. The state trooper who investigated the accident testified that there was “quite a bit of traffic” on the Hoyt Road. The photographs which were filed in evidence show that a motorist approaching the crossing while travelling west on Highway 1200 would be confronted with a fork in the [69]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 So. 2d 65, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excel-insurance-v-hunt-lactapp-1969.