Fontenot v. Fontenot

150 So. 40
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1933
DocketNo. 1158.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 150 So. 40 (Fontenot v. Fontenot) 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
Fontenot v. Fontenot, 150 So. 40 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

Defendant’s father was very ill at Ville Platte, had to take some medicine for his illness, which required an analysis in New Orleans before it was administered to him. Mr. Jos. Hardy agreed.to take the medicine to New Orleans for the purpose above stated. Plaintiff, at the request of defendant, agreed to drive Mr. Hardy in, defendant’s car to Opelousas to board an early train for New Orleans that he might get an early analysis and return of the medicine. On the way to Opelousas, an automobile accident occurred at the end of the Ville Platte-Opelousas highway, which resulted in injuries to plaintiff for which he is claiming damages for $1,300 in this suit.

The demand was dismissed.

Plaintiff appeals.

Rule.

The district court issued an order permitting plaintiff to proceed as a pauper. The defendant filed a rule to rescind that order. The evidence shows that plaintiff had no regular employment and none in sight when he filed his suit., and nothing indicates that he had any property.

A bill of $75 was sent to him by Dr. Ardoin, who had given him medical attention after he was injured in the automobile accident, the basis of the demand herein.

This bill, he says, appeared “big to him,” and this statement, we have no doubt, was not an exaggeration on his part. We are satisfied from the evidence that plaintiff was too poor to advance the necessary costs to carry on his suit and could not furnish bond for their payment. As such was the situation, he was properly allowed to proceed as a pauper under the provisions of Act No. 156 of 1912, p. 223, as amended by Act No. 260 of 1918, p. 481.

The rule was correctly dismissed.

Merits.

The accident happened about 1 o’clock in the morning of May 25,1932.

• Plaintiff alleges in his original petition, and reiterates the allegations in his amended petition, that, when he reached the end of the Ville Platte-Opelousas paved highway, and was in the act of preparing to make the curve with the highway, the accelerator was stuck or caught in such a manner that he could not regulate the speed of the auto of which he lost control, and the result was that he could not turn it with the curve in the highway, although he was traveling at a moderate rate of speed, and, oh account ofl his inability to make the turn, the auto ran off the highway into a large ditch or canal and fell on its side, from which he suffered the damages he is claiming herein.

It is eleár from the foregoing allegations that the cause of the accident was due to the alleged fact that the accelerator was caught and stuck in such a way that plaintiff lost management of his car, which got beyond his control and was turned over in the ditch or canal along the highway. It is shown that the auto when heated and going over 30 or 35 miles an hour, the accelerator would at times get stuck or caught; and it is admitted by defendant that, when he turned the auto over to plaintiff for the projected trip to Opelousas, he did not apprise plaintiff of this defect in the accelerator. The cause of the accident, defendant alleges, was due to the excessive speed at which plaintiff was driving when he reached the curve and to his unfamiliarity with the roadway.

In the alternative, defendant pleads if it be shown that the accelerator was stuck when plaintiff was making the curve, which defendant denies, and that he was negligent in not informing plaintiff that the accelerator might-stick, then defendant pleads contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff. The plea of contributory negligence shows that defendant does not deny his liability for damages if the accident was caused by the catching or sticking of the accelerator, as is alleged by plaintiff.

It was incumbent on plaintiff to show that, as alleged by him, the cause of the accident was due to the fact that the accelerator stuck or was caught, which defendant denies. The solution of this question, one of fact, is the sole issue in this case.

After the accident, plaintiff was taken to the sanitarium at Ville Platte. He was unconscious immediately after the accident and says on his way to the sanitarium he realized he had been in a wreck but knew what he was saying. He says that after that night he was never out of his mind. Hei testifies that the day following the accident, and the second day, being sick, he did not talk about the accident, but that two or three days thereafter he explained how the accident happened to “everybody who came in” and “told them about the accelerator sticking.” Further on in his testimony, he says that was the “thing that made an impression on him,” as it was the cause of the accident, and that he had so stated to “lots of people” from the beginning. No witness was, however, produced by plaintiff to show he had made such a statement except a considerable time after the accident between July 21 and 27, when he toid his attorney that the accelerator had stuck and that it was the cause of the accident. It is shown, by the testimony of plaintiff that on his first visit to his attorney he did not tell him any *42 thing about the accelerator. He says, alter he had spoken to Ms attorney about the wreck, he was advised 'by his attorney to find ■out “what was the matter”; that he then called on Vidrine, who told him the “accelerator had been stuck.” This Mr. Vidrine, he says, had'brought the car back, and, after consulting with) him, he found out there was something wrong with it and transmitted the knowledge of this fact to his attorney.

The record shows that on the 31st of May, 3932, about six days' after the accident, Mr. Olay, in company with Mr. Ellis Dupre, interviewed plaintiff at his home in reference to the accident. Mr. Clay is the adjuster for the Travelers’ Insurance Company, and in the interview took a written statement about the accident. He says that plaintiff did not say anything about the accelerator sticking when he took that statement.

Mr.- Dupre, who was present at the time, also says that no reference was made by plaintiff about the accelerator catching or sticking when the accident occurred.

Plaintiff says he did not tell Mr. Clay, the adjuster, that the accelerator had stuck, but says he told him to come back, he had “something to tell him.”

In the written statement of the plaintiff, voluntarily given and signed 'by him after it was read by Mr. Clay, as to which there is no contradiction, plaintiff makes no reference to the fact that the accelerator was stuck or caught at the time of the accident. In that statement, he says, the lights and brakes on the auto were good, that he had not traveled over this new pavement to Opelousas, was going about 30 miles an hour, and suddenly came upon a sharp angle turn, and was about in the curve when he realized the danger, that he applied his brakes, turned his wheel to the right, and, when he did that, “the rear part of my car swerved into the left side of the road and the car turned over. Just as we were reaching the curve Mr. Hardy yelled ‘watch out’ but it was too late.”

In his testimony plaintiff said, as above referred to, that the sticking of the accelerator was the “thing that impressed Mm” the most. There can be no doubt that it would so have impressed him, if in reality it had caught or stuck.

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Related

Mudd v. Travelers Indemnity Company
295 So. 2d 540 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
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180 So. 2d 434 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontenot-v-fontenot-lactapp-1933.