Fernandez v. Tri-State Transit Co. of Louisiana, Inc.

194 So. 84
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 1939
DocketNo. 6025.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 So. 84 (Fernandez v. Tri-State Transit Co. of Louisiana, Inc.) 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
Fernandez v. Tri-State Transit Co. of Louisiana, Inc., 194 So. 84 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

A motor bus belonging to and operated by the Tri-State Transit Company of Louisiana, Inc., skidded on the wet, slip *85 pery asphalt surface of the Shreveport-Lake Charles highway about 7:30 o’clock of the morning of August 15, 1938, and crashed into a guard rail of a bridge. It was being driven by an employee, Garland E. Cameron. Aboard the vehicle were seventeen paid passengers, including Mrs. Charles E. Fernandez who was seriously injured. The accident occurred at a point approximately sixteen miles south of the City of Shreveport.

This suit was later»instituted by Mrs. Fernandez and her husband, Charles E. Fernandez, the latter being an attorney at law of Franklin, Louisiana, who seek to recover damages for personal injuries, loss of personal effects and medical and other expenses, allegedly resulting from the mishap. Impleaded as defendants, and against whom a solidary judgment was asked, were the owner of the bus, its insurer, and the driver. The insurer and driver are not now parties litigant in the cause, the former having been released through a motion to dismiss the suit as of nonsuit, while service of process was never made on the latter. Only the Tri-State Transit Company of Louisiana, Inc., therefore, remains as a defendant.

Plaintiffs declare that the accident was caused solely by the gross negligence of the driver. Specifically, they aver that he was negligent in the following particulars:

“(a) Failure on the part of the driver, Garland E. Cameron, to keep and maintain a proper lookout at all times.
“(b) Failure on the part of the driver, Garland E. Cameron, to keep the Passenger Motor Transfer or Passenger Motor Bus which he was driving or operating under proper control at all times.
“(c) Driving the Passenger Motor Transfer or Passenger Motor Bus at an excessive rate of speed when he approached the Cypress Bayou Bridge where the accident occurred.
“(d) Failure on the part of the driver to retard the speed of the Passenger Motor Transfer or Passenger Motor Bus which he was driving or operating, when he was well aware of the fact that the asphalt or ‘hard-surfaced’ turtle back road over which he was traveling was very slick and slippery, due to the fact that it had been raining and was still raining at the time of the accident.”

Defendant denies that Mrs. Fernandez was injured as alleged, that the claimed medical and other expenses for her treatment were necessary, that her personal effects were lost or destroyed, and that there was any negligence whatever in the operation of the bus. It avers, as the answer discloses, that:

“ * * * the accident in which plaintiff Mrs. Charles E. Fernandez claims to have been injured, was inevitable, having been directly and proximately caused by conditions beyond its control and which human prudence, foresight, care and skill could not foresee and guard against; that it had been raining prior to said accident, thus causing the highway to be wet and slippery; that the bus in which.plaintiff Mrs. Charles E. Fernandez was riding skidded upon the wet and slippery pavement of the highway, striking the concrete bridge described in plaintiffs’ petition; that said bus approached the scene of the accident at a reasonable rate of speed, 12 miles or less per hour, the operator keeping a proper lookout and having perfect control thereof until it began skidding; * * * ”

After the joining of issue, the Tri-State Transit Company of Louisiana, Inc., moved for a trial by jury. No objection was urged by plaintiffs and a jury trial was ordered.

A jury regularly considered the case and returned a verdict awarding Mrs. Fernandez $3,000, and Mr. Fernandez $325. The judgment of the trial court was rendered in accordance with that verdict. From it defendant appealed suspensively and devol-utively.

The appeal has been answered. Mrs. Fernandez asks that the judgment be amended by increasing the award in her favor to $15,250, the amount for which she sued, and as amended, that it be affirmed. Mr. Fernandez requests only an affirmance of the judgment in so far as he is concerned.

In the vicinity of the scene of the accident, on the Shreveport-Lakc Charles highway that runs generally north and south, are three concrete bridges. The one struck by the bus is the center bridge, and will be so designatéd hereinafter. It is approximately 140 teet long, 15 feet, 10 inches in width, and has iron guard rails on its north end which angle outwardly a distance of 8 feet, 1 inch. The highway north of this center bridge has an asphalt or black-top surface, which slopes gradually from center to sides, varying in width from 14 feet to *86 16 feet, has dirt shoulders extending from two to five feet, and is located on an embankment or fill estimated to be ten feet in height.

Regarding the two remaining bridges, one is located approximately 1,800 feet north of the point of collision, and will be hereinafter referred to as the first bridge, while the other, which we shall call the third, is 600 feet south of such point.

The first and center bridges are shown to be narrow or one-way passageways, while the third provides two traffic lanes.

The bus left the Shreveport station on the morning of August 15, 1938, about ten minutes after its scheduled departing time of 6:45 o’clock, for its regular daily trip south to Lake Charles. Cameron, the driver, was thoroughly familiar with the route, for he had traveled it more than fifty times. After making several stops for the purpose of heeding traffic signals and permitting passengers to enter and depart from his vehicle, he approached the first bridge. The speed of the bus was then 45 miles per hour. Previously it had varied, but had never exceeded that rate. It is. testified by said driver that while negotiating a crossing of this first bridge, the speed was reduced to 30 miles per hour. Immediately thereafter, however, it was increased to 38 miles. This rate was continued until he was approximately 300 feet from an automobile that was parked on the east or left side of the highway at a point 90 feet north of the center bridge, at which time a gradual reduction was commenced. The bus passed the parked vehicle while traveling 15 miles per Hour and then its motor was again accelerated to 20 miles. Shortly following this last acceleration, and while he was about 75 feet from the north end of the center bridge, another automobile, traveling toward the north, entered the south end of said bridge. Thereupon he, the bus driver, sought to bring his machine to a stop. A light' application of the brakes was made, causing a skidding of the bus to its right and onto the dirt shoulder. By releasing the brake pedal and accelerating the motor he successfully returned it to the asphalted surface. Again the brakes were similarly engaged and the right wheels again proceeded off the paved portion of the highway and coursed along the dirt shoulder, a distance of approximately 30 feet. The bus was then steered slightly to the left and into the iron guard rail on the northwest corner of the bridge. As the result of the impact, which occurred with great force, its front wheels were knocked completely loose and the right side thereof was badly bent. It came to rest on the bridge.

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Related

Tri-State Transit Co. of Louisiana, Inc. v. Grier
127 F.2d 719 (Fifth Circuit, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
194 So. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernandez-v-tri-state-transit-co-of-louisiana-inc-lactapp-1939.