Fields v. Owens

186 So. 849
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 5807.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 186 So. 849 (Fields v. Owens) 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
Fields v. Owens, 186 So. 849 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

A Chevrolet truck with attached trailer, of five ton capacity, crashed into a Ford sedan at the intersection of Cypress and Slack streets in the City of West Monroe, Louisiana, on March 18, 1937. The truck belonged to Raymond Heard, Inc., and was operated at the time by an employee of that company, J. D. Owens. Its insurer was the Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd. Plaintiff, Howard M. Fields, owned and was driving the above *850 mentioned Ford sedan. With him on the front seat was his minor daughter, Lela Fields, while one Charles Feazel, another minor, occupied the rear seat.

The defendants in this proceeding are J. D. Owens, Raymond Heard, Inc., and the above named insurer. Plaintiff sues in his individual capacity and for the use and benefit of his said minor daughter, seeking recovery for damages allegedly sustained by each in the collision.

The individual claim covers personal injuries, property loss, and medical, hospital and other expenses, while that on behalf of his daughter is for personal injuries which are itemized as follows:

Shock, mental pain and anguish.. $2,000.00 Pain and suffering. 2,000.00 Cuts and injuries to her right leg,
knee, left hip, face, chin and head and disfigurement of her face and head and mortification and embarrassment resulting from the marks and scars re-
sulting from said injuries. 2,000.00
Total . $6,000.00

Negligence on the part of the truck driver, Owens, is charged by plaintiff as the sole and proximate cause of the accident.

Defendants admit that Owens was acting within the scope and course of his employment but deny that, he was in any manner negligent in the operation of the truck. They attribute negligence to plaintiff and assert that he was solely responsible for the mishap. Alternatively, they plead contributory negligence of plaintiff and his daughter.

A solidary judgment against defendants was rendered in favor of plaintiff for and on behalf of his minor daughter in the sum of $1,000. His individual demands were rejected.

Appeals were perfected by plaintiff and defendants.

Cypress -street, in the vicinity of the scene of the accident, extends in a northwesterly and southwesterly direction, is straight, and forms a part of U. S. Highway 80. For the purpose of this discussion we shall treat it as running north and south. It is a main arterial thoroughfare and possesses a paved surface 18 feet in width. Slack street intersects Cypress at approximately right angles and runs in an easterly and westerly direction.

A building used by one C. E. Feazel as a combination grocery store and filling station, is situated on the northwest corner of the intersection. Attached to this building on its east or Cypress street side is a 14-foot shed. The eastern edge of this shed is approximately 17 feet west of the west line of Cypress street. The south side of the building is about 27 feet north of the north line of Slack street.

During the late afternoon of the aforementioned date, estimated at about five o’clock, plaintiff was driving his Ford sedan along Cypress street in a northerly direction at a speed of approximately 20 miles an hour. He lived on Slack street, west of Cypress, and his immediate destination was his home. On nearing that street he slowed his machine to ten or twelve miles per hour, with the view and purpose of making a left turn thereon.

In the rear of the sedan, and likewise proceeding towards the north, was the five-ton- Chevrolet truck and trailer. It was loaded with SO sacks of sugar weighing 100 pounds each, and 50 sacks of lima beans. The cargo was being transported from West Monroe to the warehouse of Raymond Heard, Inc., in Ruston. The truck, previous to the accident, was employing a speed exceeding that of the sedan and was gaining on it.

At or about the south line of Slack street where it crosses Cypress, the truck ran into plaintiff’s car. The latter was turned on its right side with its front pointing almost in the direction from which it came, and, while lying in that position, was pushed by the truck in a northwester-ly direction, at an angle of about 45 degrees to the highway, to and into the afore-described filling station and grocery store. The station’s gasoline pump and one of the posts supporting the shed were knocked down by the sedan, and the latter’s top was crushed as it struck said post or pump. A distance of from 60 to 70 feet was traveled by the vehicles after the impact occurred.

Plaintiff’s version of the accident is given in the following paragraph of his counsel’s brief: “Plaintiff drove his ford car north along Cypress street at about twenty miles per hour until he reached a point about one hundred forty feet south of the south edge of the intersection. He then slowed his car down to approximately twelve miles per hour and gave a signal for a left turn into Slack street and pro *851 ceeded to the intersection with his hand extending horizontally until the intersection had been reached and just as he withdrew his hand with a view to making the left turn into Slack street he was hit by the grocery truck.”

It is his further contention that the front end of the truck struck his car directly and squarely in its rear while both machines were on the right side of the street and before a left turn was commenced by him.

Owens, the truck driver, gives the following testimony:

“Q. After unloading, you went to the Commercial Transportation Company and got a load? A. Yes, sir; fifty sacks of sugar, 100 pound sacks, and SO sacks of baby lima beans, and I went out Cypress street, heading out of West Monroe, going to Ruston and some few blocks before I got to where the accident happened I noticed a model A Ford sedan in front of me; we were gradually gaining on it. I was driving about twenty five miles an hour and had gotten up in about seventy five or eighty feet of it and I noticed the stop light come on. I got up a little closer and saw the stop light was still on but he wasn’t giving any signal at that time that he was going to turn so I started to blowing my horn * * * and they hadn’t given any signal and were bearing over to the extreme right of the drive * * the drive over here rather that is the right hand side of the road * * * I drove , over to the left still blowing my horn and started around and just as I got almost even with my front wheels even with his rear wheels, he pulled to the left at an angle in front of me.”

He, Owens, further testifies that the impact occurred at a point just left of the center of the pavement, and that the front part of his vehicle struck the sedan on or about its left rear fender.

The oral proof relating to many of the important details connected with the collision is exceedingly conflicting; so much so that if we were compelled to rely entirely on it our conclusions of fact would be attended with much doubt on our part. However, when the physical facts that the record discloses are considered in connection therewith; we are satisfied that the accident happened in the manner which we shall now describe.

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fields-v-owens-lactapp-1939.