Fisher v. Elam

138 So. 201
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1931
DocketNo. 4162
StatusPublished

This text of 138 So. 201 (Fisher v. Elam) 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
Fisher v. Elam, 138 So. 201 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

DREW, J.

Plaintiff instituted this suit for damages alleged to have been caused her in an automobile accident, alleging that her car was run into by the car of defendant which was driven by defendant’s minor son.

The defense to the suit is a denial that defendant’s car ran into or struck the car of plaintiff.

The case evolves into a question of fact, and the only question to determine is: Did defendant’s car strike plaintiff’s car? If it did, defendant is liable; otherwise not. The learned judge of the lower court in a well-written opinion held that plaintiff failed to prove that her car was struck by defendant’s car, and rejected her demands. The opinion of the lower court is as follows:

“Plaintiff was driving her Chevrolet Sedan south on the Natehitoehes-Leesville Highway, and when she arrived at a point about one-half mile north of Provencal, she had a wreck, her car swerving in loose gravel, and partially going into a ditch, hitting a stump and injuring her severely and permanently.

“It is claimed that she was struck by a Dodge Coupe, going north, driven by J. B. Elam, Jr., in which C. B. Huson and Willis Johnson were riding with the driver.

“It is not denied that the Dodge so occupied was in that immediate neighborhood at about the time of the wreck.

“The plaintiff testified that she was struck by a Dodge Coupe occupied by three men; the three occupants of the Dodge denying that they struck plaintiff’s car, or came anywhere near doing so; that they remember meeting a Chevrolet driven by a lady about a mile or so away from the scene of the wreck, but did not strike her.

“The evidence in behalf of plaintiff is purely circumstantial. Besides herself, there were two eye-witnesses to the wreck, a Mrs. Bell and her sister, Miss Dowden, both of whom testified on behalf of plaintiff. The accident happened 565 yards from a small bridge in front of the Hawthorne home, the road from there to the scene of the wreck being straight, and being straight beyond that point for a distance of 150 or 200 yards. Mrs. Bell and her sister were in the yard of the Hawthorne home preparing to get in their truck when they saw a coupe going north and occupied by three men, traveling at an ordinary rate of speed, estimated at 35 or 40 miles per hour. They then got into the truck, started the motor, and drove out to the road. When they reached the little bridge, they saw plaintiff’s car just as it turned around and headed into the ditch. Mrs. Bell said that it had been about five minutes since she had seen the coupe pass. We hardly think it had been anything like that long, but it certainly took some appreciable time to get in the truck, settle themselves, start the motor, and drive the truck, changing gears, out to the road. Miss Dowden testified that while she saw plaintiff going into the ditch, she did not see any other car at that time. Mrs. Bell was not asked this question. This testimony would have a very strong tendency toward showing that plaintiff’s car was not struck by any other car at all. Of course, if anything like five minutes elapsed between the time these parties saw the coupe pass and the time they saw the accident occur, then the coupe would have been at least three or four miles away at the time of the accident, for they say the coupe was going 35 or 40 miles per hour. If the coupe was going 40 miles per hour, then it took 28 seconds for it to go from the Hawthorne home to the place of accident and at least 36 seconds to pass beyond the- curve; it took 8 seconds to go from place of accident to the curve. If it took the coupe 8 seconds to make 450 feet at 40 miles per hour (and it was out of sight at the time of the accident), then the Chevrolet traveled at an average speed of only three miles peí; hour° from the time it started on its skidding course, for it went 35 feet. Of course, such a slow speed was impossible. It is not ¿t all likely that such a small fraction of time as 36 seconds elapsed from the time these parties started to get into their truck until they reached the bridge. If more than that time elapsed, the accident could not have been caused by the car they saw pass. If they reached the bridge within that time, the coupe is bound to have been in sight, yet Miss Dowden saw no car. If the car was in sight, and she did not see it, then her power of observation was not very keen and her testimony that no other car passed (while- given truthfully) is not entitled to much weight.

“If the Chevrolet was struck by another car, the only place it was hit was on the hub cap of the left rear wheel; the broken hub cap was found at the supposed place of collision. No passing car could have side-swiped the Chevrolet without leaving some other marks on both the Chevrolet and the other car, yet none were found. If a car had passed exactly in the manner indicated by the tracks, it is possible for the left end of the rear bumper to have struck only the hub cap. But there is only one part of the bumper which would have made the particular in[203]*203dentation found in the Fob cap, and that is the round head of a bolt running through the bumper- from top to bottom, this bolt having either a hexagonal or octagonal nut on the other end. The hub cap was not struct by 'such a nut. The testimony shows that if the round head of the bolt was on the bottom part of the bumper, it might have struck the hub cap and left such a mark, but the testimony shows that the round head of the bolt on the Elam car was on top (and we have no right to disregard such testimony) and we do not see how it was humanly possible for this bolt head on the Elam car to have left such a mark on the hub cap. The spring action might permit such if the found head was on the bottom; but with the round head on top, the axle-housing would prevent the springs from compressing enough to allow the top of the bumper to hit the hub cap.

“The Elam car admittedly stopped at a filling station in Provencal, and we have the testimony of quite a number of men there that no other car went north from the time it left until the accident was reported. This is not absolutely convincing at all. Mr. Dwyer is one of those who so testified, yet Mr. Babbitt who went to Provencal with Mr. Dwyer and was with him when he saw the Elam car, testified that he did not see the Elam car. Mr. Dwyer in his testimony given at Natchitoches, stated that Mrs. Bell (p. 96), said (to him), that a big ear passed them up on the hill, and by the time that Mrs. Bell got to the top of the hill, she saw Mrs. Fisher’s car swerve.’ And again on page 100, he testified:

“ ‘Q. Was there any other car that went down that way before Mrs. Bell came up? A. No, sir. Mrs. Bell’s truck was the only one that left there from where we were, and a minute or two afterwards the big ear left, headed out from the filling station and I saw it. They evidently passed Mrs. Bell’s car around the curve out of my sight, going up the hill, the Dodge coupe did.’

“The above is not in accord with the testimony given by Mrs. Bell.

“Mr. Dwyer likewise testified in regard to a statement made by Mrs. Fisher as she regained consciousness while being moved from her car. Mrs. Fisher says she was unconscious until after she reached Natchitoches, and many others were in just as good a position to hear what she said (if anything) and yet none of them so testify.

“We do not attach much weight to the testimony of Lawrence Fox as to the car traveling a back way from Robeline. We have no reason to doubt that he saw a car so going, but we do doubt his identification. He says, on page 62:

“ ‘A. Mr.

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138 So. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-elam-lactapp-1931.