Farnet v. Decuers

195 So. 797, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 43
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1940
DocketNo. 17397.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 195 So. 797 (Farnet v. Decuers) 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
Farnet v. Decuers, 195 So. 797, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 43 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

At about 11:40 o’clock on the night of August 17, 1939, Edwin L. Farnet, the plaintiff, sustained personal injuries in an automobile collision at the intersection of Bayou Road with North Claiborne Avenue in New Orleans. He was a guest passenger in a Plymouth coupe which belonged to the Louisiana State Board of Health and which had been assigned to one of the defendants, Donald DeCuers, an inspector employed by the said Board. The Plymouth was on its way across North Claiborne Avenue from the river towards Lake Pont-, chartrain when it came into collision with a Ford sedan owned by Miss Carrie Vead and operated at the time by her brother, Ardoin Vead. The Ford was being driven up the lake side roadway of Claiborne Avenue towards Canal Street. In it with Vead were Miss Annabella Coupel, on the front ■ seat, and Miss Laura Mae Darce, Miss Carrie Vead, the owner of the automobile, and Ernest Roy. The Plymouth was driven by DeCuers. Farnet was sitting on the right side and between him and DeCuers was Mrs. DeCuers.

Farnet claims that the collision was due to fault on the part of DeCuers in attempting to cross Claiborne Avenue, a boulevard, without coming to a complete stop before entering the intersection of the first roadway, in continuing across the neutral ground, and in failing to stop at the lake side roadway to yield to the Ford the right of way to which it was entitled, and in attempting to cross in front of it when it was too near to the intersection.

Farnet avers that the said DeCuers is liable for the results of his carelessness and that, since he was operating the car with *799 the permission of the owner, to-wit, the Louisiana State Board of Health, the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, liability insurance carrier of the said, Board, is' also solidarily liable because of the fact that the insurance policy contained what is generally termed an “omnibus clause”, under which the insurer agrees to extend the protection of the policy to any person operating the car with the permission of the named assured. It is asserted that, because of this stipulation and because of the provisions of Act 55 of 1930, plaintiff may proceed directly against the said liability insurance carrier of the said Board.

The insurance company, under protest, first filed an exception of lis pendens, averring that it had already filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana a suit in which it had made all interested persons parties and in which it had sought to have that court render a declaratory judgment sustaining its contention that, under the circumstances, the protection of the policy was not extended to DeCuers. This plea was overruled and the insurance company and De-Cuers filed separate answers in which both denied that DeCuers had been in any way at fault and in which both maintained that the negligence of Ardoin Vead had caused the collision. The insurer also asserted its freedom from liability in any event because of the alleged fact that DeCuers, at the time of the accident, had not been operating the Plymouth with the permission of the assured, the Louisiana State Board of Health.

There was solidary judgment against both defendants in the sum of $7,704.64 and from this judgment the insurer has appealed suspensively and DeCuers has appealed devolutively.

The first inquiry must, of course, be intq the question of whether DeCuers was guilty of any fault which had causal connection with the accident, for, if he committed no such fault, then neither he nor defendant insurer is liable, whereas if he was at fault and that fault contributed to the occurrence, then DeCuers, at least, is liable, and there will remain only the question of whether the insurer, under the facts shown, is liable under the so-called “omnibus clause” of the policy.

Claiborne Avenue and Bayou Road intersect almost at a right angle. . The former is one of the widest streets in New Orleans, running in an uptown-downtown direction, and having in its center a neutral ground 111 feet in width and a paved roadway on each side. Bayou Road is a much narrower street — 26 'feet in width — and with no neutral ground. By the city traffic ordinance, No. 13,702 C. C. S., vehicles on Claiborne Avenue are given the right of way over those on intersecting streets, and the Ford, approaching from the right of the Plymouth, because of another provision in the ordinance, would have been entitled to the right of way even if the streets had been of equal rank.

DeCuers states that, as he reached a point a little beyond the center of the neutral ground, he saw the Ford on its way up Claiborne Avenue and that it was then about 160 to 190 feet below the intersection. He says that he was driving his car at about fifteen miles per hour and that, though he could not accurately judge the speed of the Ford, he realized that, if it was going at a reasonable rate, he could cross that side of Claiborne Avenue before it could reach Bayou Road. He claims that, in fact, he did almost cross the roadway on which the Ford was approaching and that it struck his Plymouth near its rear, after its front had crossed the curb line on the right-hand side of Claiborne Avenue.

Vead, on the other hand, says that as the Ford, under his control, approached the intersection, he did not see the Plymouth because, between him and it were other cars which were parked along the end of the Claiborne Avenue neutral ground, between the two roadways and to the right of the Plymouth. He says that just as he was about to enter the intersection the Plymouth, at a speed of about 22 miles per hour, emerged into Claiborne Avenue in front of the Ford, when it was no longer possible for him to stop.

After the impact the Plymouth continued into Bayou Road, almost crossed that street, and turned partially around, whereas the-Ford came to a stop only a foot or so beyond the point at which its front had struck the Plymouth.

There is considerable conflict in the evidence concerning the exact spot in the-street at which the collision occurred, plaintiff maintaining that it was rather near to the neutral ground and defendants declaring that it was near the other curb. There are pointed out by some of the wit *800 nesses several facts which lead us to believe that the Plymouth, when it was struck, was crossing in front of the Ford at a rather fast rate. First, it is significant that it proceeded for a considerable distance after the collision, and, second, it is an interesting fact that the right door of the Plymouth was swung open as a result of the impact. If the Ford had struck the side of the door of the Plymouth with any great force, it seems certain that that door would have been crushed in and that it would not have swung open. This phenomenon seems to be explained by the fact that at the rear of the door, which opened towards the front of the car, are hinges, the lower of which extends some 2 or 3 inches beyond the side of the car. A photograph shows the mark of the impact and it seems .rather certain that the Ford struck this rear hinge just as the Plymouth was crossing in front of it. The forward movement of the Plymouth had the effect of exerting a leverage on the end of the hinge and this, after pulling the latch away from the front end of the car, threw the front end of the door out and opened it.

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 797, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farnet-v-decuers-lactapp-1940.