Frey v. Central Mutual Insurance

150 So. 2d 822, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1414
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 1963
DocketNo. 791
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 150 So. 2d 822 (Frey v. Central Mutual Insurance) 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
Frey v. Central Mutual Insurance, 150 So. 2d 822, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1414 (La. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinions

CULPEPPER, Judge.

This damage suit arises out of an in-tersectional collision in the city of Crowley, Louisiana. From an adverse judgment plaintiff appeals.

The primary issue is whether the street on which defendant’s insured was traveling had the right of way,'where a city ordinance gave it superiority but no stop signs or other traffic control devices had been erected. If defendant did not have the right of way under the ordinance, then the vehicle in which the injured minor was a passenger had preference under the state statute favoring vehicles approaching from the right, LSA-R.S. 32:237. The next issue is whether defendant’s insured was negligent. A third issue is whether any negligence by the driver of the Frey automobile, is imputed, to the injured minor passenger.

The accident occurred at the intersection! of Weston Avenue, running generally north and south, and Fifteenth Street, running generally east and west, in the city of Crowley, Louisiana. The intersection itself, as well as that portion of Fifteenth Street east of the intersection and that portion of Weston Avenue south of the intersection, are paved, but Fifteenth Street west of the intersection and Weston Avenue north of the intersection are graveled. Although there is some contradictory testimony in the record on the question, we believe the evidence shows the two streets sustained about the same amount of vehicular traffic. As stated above, there were no stop signs or other traffic control devices near the intersection, but a city ordinance gave Weston Avenue the right of way.

On December 12,1959, at about 6:00 p. m., during the hours of darkness, defendant’s, insured, Mrs. Alice Foreman, was driving' south on Weston Avenue at a speed of about. 20 miles per hour approaching the intersection. The evidence shows that when she reached a point 100 to 150 feet from the intersection, she saw a third vehicle approaching the intersection on Fifteenth Street from the east, which vehicle stopped at the intersection. When Mrs. Foreman-reached a point about 100 feet from the intersection she also saw, through a row of trees and bushes along the west side of' Weston Avenue, the headlights of the-Frey automobile approaching the intersection on Fifteenth Street from the west. Mrs. Foreman stated that she had traveled' that way many times before and knew Weston Avenue had the right of way by city ordinance. She also knew there were-no stop or yield signs at the intersection facing the Frey vehicle, but she assumed' that it would stop and yield the right of way to her. She stated she could not estimate-[825]*825the speed at which the Frey vehicle was approaching but she saw nothing about its speed or other actions which caused her to think that it would not yield the right of way. Accordingly, Mrs. Foreman proceeded at her speed of about 20 miles per hour into the intersection. Then she suddenly saw the Frey automobile also entering the intersection. Mrs. Foreman applied her brakes and cut to the left but was unable to avoid a collision. The point of impact was in the southwest quadrant of the intersection. The front of the Frey vehicle struck the right side of the Foreman automobile near the front. After the impact, Mrs. Foreman’s car went a distance of about 115 feet down through a shallow drain and into the yard of a residence on the southeast corner of the intersection. The Frey vehicle stopped very near the point of impact.

Mrs. Rita Frey, driver of the vehicle in which the injured minor was a passenger, was not a resident of Crowley but frequently visited relatives there. She testified that as she approached the intersection on Fifteenth Street from the west, she could not see any automobiles on Weston Avenue north of the intersection because of the 8 to 10 foot high row of trees and bushes along the west side of Weston Avenue. She stated that this was a blind corner and she knew there were no stop signs. She thought it was a “four way stop”. She testified that she stopped, looked to her right and to her left and, on seeing no approaching vehicles, proceeded into the intersection and struck the Foreman vehicle after going about 10 feet. We find no manifest error in the district judge’s finding that despite Mrs. Frey’s testimony to the contrary, the evidence shows she did not stop for the intersection, but proceeded into it at a slow rate of speed.

The record reflects that the claim of the injured minor against the insured driver of the Frey vehicle was settled for the sum of $2,826. On appeal the sole issue as regards liability is whether the defendant’s insured, Mrs. Foreman, was guilty of any negligence constituting a legal cause of the accident.

The district judge found that under the city ordinance Mrs. Foreman had the right of way and was free of negligence. The lower court found further that regardless of the ordinance, Mrs. Foreman had the right of way by virtue of her pre-emption of the intersection.

We must first decide whether Mrs. Foreman actually had the right of way under the city ordinance. This presents the very interesting problem of whether, in the absence of stop signs, a city right of way ordinance prevails over the state statute giving the right of way to the driver approaching from the right. LSA-R.S. 32:237. We find only one Louisiana appellate court opinion, Murphy v. McHughes, 66 So.2d 525 (2nd Cir. La.App.1953) on the issue. There the court held squarely, but without citation of authority, that a city ordinance establishing a right of way street is ineffective where no stop signs are erected to give notice of the ordinance.

The case of Burden v. Capitol Stores, 200 La. 329, 8 So.2d 45 (La.Sup.Ct.1942) cited by counsel for the plaintiff, mentioned the question but found it unnecessary to decide whether the ordinance or the state statute prevailed because the court held that regardless of the right of way, both drivers were negligent.

For a discussion of the general problem of statute versus ordinance, see the case note on Burden v. Capitol Stores, supra, found in 5 La.Law Review 349. This case note addresses itself to the fundamental question of whether a state statute supersedes any conflicting city traffic ordinance, (rather than the necessity of signs to effectuate such an ordinance) and states that the majority of the appellate courts of other states have concluded that the state statute prevails. The author opines that this should be the result under our statute. LSA-R.S. 32:247.

In Blashfield, Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Permanent Edition, Vol. [826]*8262, page 330 it is stated that state statutes' giving a right of way are effective, even though no stop signs are erected, but that “in the case on ordinance, however, the rule is otherwise, and a motorist’s failure to stop at an intersection as required by an ordinance is not negligence, in the absence of a stop sign at that point. Under some statutes erection of stop signs is necessary to give the highway preference.” The cited case of Brown Hauling Company v. Newsome, 241 Ala. 300, 2 So.2d 782 involved an Alabama statute which provided that an ordinance granting a right of way was not effective unless stop signs were erected.

We think our legislature has settled the problem in Louisiana by the enactment of LSA-R.S. 32:247 which was in effect at the time of this accident and reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 2d 822, 1963 La. App. LEXIS 1414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frey-v-central-mutual-insurance-lactapp-1963.