Fenerty v. Culotta

80 So. 2d 537
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1955
Docket20385
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 80 So. 2d 537 (Fenerty v. Culotta) 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
Fenerty v. Culotta, 80 So. 2d 537 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

80 So.2d 537 (1955)

Norman FENERTY
v.
Marco CULOTTA, Angelina Conzonere, Widow of Charles Cosimo Culotta, Mother and Natural Tutrix of Marco Culotta, and Leonard Culotta.

No. 20385.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

May 23, 1955.
Rehearing Denied June 15, 1955.
Writ of Certiorari Granted July 1, 1955.

*538 Louis Fenner Claiborne and Eugene D. Brierre, New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellant.

Frank C. Moran, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants and appellees.

McBRIDE, Judge.

The accident which gave rise to this suit occurred on November 22, 1952, about 1:30 o'clock a. m., within the intersection formed by Freret and Adams Streets in the City of New Orleans, and involved a Chevrolet automobile owned by Norman Fenerty and driven by him in an uptown direction on Freret Street, and a Pontiac coupe traveling on Adams Street driven by Marco Culotta, an unemancipated minor 19 years old. There is some divergence of opinion as to which car hit the other, but our analysis of the evidence convinces us that the front of the Fenerty automobile struck the front portion of the right side of the other vehicle.

Fenerty sues Marco Culotta and his mother and natural tutrix, Mrs. Angelina C. Culotta, in solido. Plaintiff also impleaded a third defendant, Leonard Culotta, but as to said defendant plaintiff has abandoned all of his claims.

Plaintiff is seeking to recover the sum of $9,169.91, which consists of damages sustained by his automobile, plus towing charges, and also for personal injuries, medical costs, and loss of wages. After the matter was heard on its merits, the trial judge reopened the case for the purpose of permitting the plaintiff to produce additional evidence with reference to his damages; after such additional evidence was adduced there was judgment dismissing plaintiff's suit. Plaintiff has appealed.

Marco Culotta, among other things, is charged with having been negligent in failing to keep a proper lookout. Culotta, who was driving toward the lake, desired to make a crossing of Freret Street; he claims that upon reaching the intersection he brought his automobile to a complete stop in obedience to a stop sign which confronted him. He states that a number of automobiles parked along Freret Street to his right entirely obliterated his view in that direction and he could not determine from his stopped position just what were the traffic conditions on Freret Street. Culotta states that he then "eased" the nose of his automobile out into Freret Street in order that he might ascertain if there were oncoming vehicles to his right, and that as he emerged into Freret Street and traveled a short distance his automobile was struck by the Fenerty automobile. Under such circumstances as recited by young Culotta there is no question that he was grossly negligent. See Hardy v. M. W. Salomon & Son, La.App., 78 So.2d 73.

The only serious question in the case as regards plaintiff's right of recovery is whether he himself was negligent; he is charged by the defendants with having *539 been contributorily negligent in that he drove his automobile at an excessive rate of speed and failed to avert the collision notwithstanding that he had the last clear chance to do so.

Fenerty insists that he was driving at the rate of 20 miles per hour, which is the maximum permissible speed at that point on Freret Street. On the other hand, both Marco Culotta and Joseph Carambat, the latter being a young man who was riding as a passenger in the car driven by Culotta, testified that Fenerty's automobile was traveling at an excessive rate of speed, but their testimony fails to make any impression on us. Culotta's estimate of Fenerty's speed was 35 or 40 miles per hour, but this carries little weight for the reason that Culotta first saw the Fenerty car only a split second before the impact, and it is manifest that there was no ample opportunity for him to estimate with any degree of certainty what Fenerty's speed might have been. In telling how he arrived at his conclusion that Fenerty was speeding Culotta said:

"* * * by him throwing me around completely to South Carrollton Avenue, I should say he must have been moving over 20 miles an hour to do that; I figure it was about 40 miles an hour, 35 or 40."

Carambat's statement that Fenerty's speed was between 40 and 50 miles an hour can be given little consideration for the same reason. He did not see plaintiff's automobile until just before the impact and it was utterly impossible for him to have arrived at any intelligent estimate of how fast Fenerty came into the intersection.

Counsel for the defendants advances the argument that the behavior of the respective automobiles after the crash attests to the fact that Fenerty must have been driving at an excessive rate of speed. After striking the Culotta car, Fenerty's Chevrolet did travel for a distance of 44 feet and came to a stop only after striking a tree on Freret Street, but Fenerty has a complete and most plausible explanation for this. He asserts that the impact had the effect of throwing him off balance and his foot "jammed on the gas and I shot forward and hit the tree." Neither does the fact that the front portion of the Culotta automobile was knocked in a counterclockwise direction and to a ninety-degree angle tend in any way to indicate that the Fenerty automobile was traveling at more than the legal rate of speed. No one can say with any degree of accuracy what vehicles might do or what course they may take after colliding, and the positions at which the respective cars came to rest after the impact would shed little or no light on the question whether Fenerty was driving at an excessive speed. We fail to find anything in the testimony or in the physical facts sufficient to overcome the positive testimony of Fenerty that he was driving on Freret Street at not more than 20 miles per hour.

Defendants contend also that Fenerty had the last clear chance of averting the accident. Fenerty's statement, which is uncontradicted even by Culotta and his passenger, is that just as he entered into the intersection the Culotta automobile suddenly came out of Adams Street and into his path and that upon seeing the Culotta car he endeavored to apply his brakes in order to avoid striking it but that he was unable to successfully do so in such short stopping space. We do not believe that the doctrine of the last clear chance has any room at all for application in this case.

Our conclusion is that the accident was solely caused by virtue of the negligence of Marco Culotta, and under the law he and his mother and natural tutrix, Mrs. Angelina C. Culotta, are liable unto plaintiff jointly and in solido to the extent of his damage.

We are constrained to say in connection with the fixing of plaintiff's damages that we experienced considerable difficulty. Fenerty sustained the physical injuries not when the two vehicles crashed but as a result of his automobile striking the tree on Freret Street. He was taken to the Veterans Hospital and his testimony is that he *540 remained in the hospital under treatment for a period of thirty days. His medical expenses amounted to $639, which sum, of course, he is entitled to recover.

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 2d 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenerty-v-culotta-lactapp-1955.