Futrell v. Pacific Indemnity Company

79 So. 2d 903
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1955
Docket20459
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 79 So. 2d 903 (Futrell v. Pacific Indemnity Company) 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
Futrell v. Pacific Indemnity Company, 79 So. 2d 903 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

79 So.2d 903 (1955)

Mr. and Mrs. Walter FUTRELL
v.
PACIFIC INDEMNITY COMPANY, Selkirk J. Windolph, Ohio Casualty Insurance Company and Mrs. Leroy Harley.

No. 20459.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

May 9, 1955.

*904 Adams & Reese, New Orleans, for Pacific Indemnity Co., defendant-appellant.

Byrnes & Wallace, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.

D. E. Cooley, Baton Rouge, L. V. Cooley, Jr., Slidell, and Porteous & Johnson, New Orleans, for Sellmirl J. Windolph (erroneously *905 referred to in the title as Selkirk J. Windolph) and Ohio Cas. Ins. Co., defendants-appellees.

Louis M. Jones, New Orleans, for Mrs. Leroy Harley, defendant-appellee.

McBRIDE, Judge.

This is one of five cases which arose as the result of a head-on collision between two automobiles in which one of the drivers was killed and six persons injured.

The automobiles involved were a Plymouth car driven by Sellmirl J. Windolph and a Dodge car owned by Mrs. Leroy Harley and driven by her husband, Leroy Harley. The accident occurred about 3:00 a. m., on July 5, 1953, at a slight but exceedingly dangerous S curve on Highway 11 in the town of Slidell, Louisiana. The record shows that at this particular point many accidents have happened in the past, some with tragic results. The nature of the curve, which is graphically shown on photographs and diagrams which form part of the evidence, is such that the northbound traffic lane of Highway 11 if projected straight through and across the slight curve will enter and coincide with the southbound traffic lane on the other side of the curve. As between the two straightaways the curve amounts to an offset of about ten feet.

Five lawsuits in all resulted from the unfortunate accident, and in this opinion we will confine ourselves to the suit in which Mr. and Mrs. Walter Futrell are plaintiffs as that was the first of the suits docketed here. Said plaintiffs were riding as guest passengers and were stated in the rear of the Harley automobile; Mrs. Futrell occupied the middle portion of the rear seat and her husband sat to her left. Mr. and Mrs. Futrell direct their joint suit against Pacific Indemnity Company, Sellmirl J. Windolph, Ohio Casualty Insurance Company, and Leroy Harley, in solido. Mrs. Futrell claims $6,500 for her bodily injuries, disfigurement and loss of earnings; her husband claims $7,100 for his personal injuries.

Pacific Indemnity Company is the liability insurer of the Harley car; the policy stands in the name of Mrs. Harley. Ohio Casualty Insurance Company carries the liability coverage on the automobile which was driven by Sellmirl J. Windolph. The policies issued by the two insurers contain the standard provisions pertaining to automobile liability with limits of $5,000 for injuries to any one person and $10,000 for injuries to two or more persons sustained in one accident, and $5,000 property damage.

The five suits were consolidated for the purpose of facilitating a trial, which was had before a jury, and the evidence adduced was made applicable to all; the trial resulted in separate jury verdicts and judgments in the five suits in favor of the six plaintiffs and against Pacific Indemnity Company alone.

The award of the jury in favor of Walter Futrell was $300; the verdict in favor of Mrs. Futrell was for $250. Plaintiffs" suit as against all the other defendants was dismissed, and Pacific Indemnity Company prosecutes this appeal from the judgment insofar as it runs in plaintiffs' favor and also as "third party aggrieved" insofar as the judgment dismisses the suit against Ohio Casualty Insurance Company. See Reid v. Monticello, 215 La. 444, 40 So.2d 814. In an answer to the appeal, both plaintiffs pray that the judgment dismissing the suit as against Ohio Casualty Insurance Company be reversed and that the amounts of the judgment be increased so as to allow Walter Futrell $500 and Mrs. Futrell $750. Of course, the answer to the appeal would be insufficient to bring Ohio Casualty Insurance Company into this court. Where a plaintiff's suit is dismissed as to one defendant the plaintiff's answer to the appeal taken by another defendant cannot serve the purpose of an appeal with respect to bringing into court parties against whom the suit has been dismissed. Succession of Jackson, La.App., 77 So.2d 194.

At this point it would do well to state that the aggregate amount of the *906 judgments recovered by the plaintiffs in the five consolidated suits was $47,675 and the $10,000 maximum liability of Pacific Indemnity Company was prorated between the parties. The amount of Walter Futrell's judgment was $300, and in the proration the trial judge allowed him 300/47675 of $10,000 or $62.92; Mrs. Futrell's judgment was for $250, and the trial judge allowed her $52.44 or 250/47675 of $10,000. The formula used for the purpose of making the proration was the correct one. See Gaines v. Standard Acc. Ins. Co., La.App., 32 So.2d 633.

Five persons in all were riding in the Harley automobile; besides Mr. and Mrs. Walter Futrell, Mrs. Leroy Harley who owned the automobile was seated in the front of the car alongside her husband who did the driving, and John S. Futrell occupied a place on the right side of the rear seat. Harley was driving the automobile in the direction of New Orleans. The other automobile involved in the collision, the one driven by Windolph, was proceeding in the opposite direction, or, in other words, it was traveling away from New Orleans and toward Pearl River. There was also a passenger in Windolph's car, namely, Jerry Anthony Whitfield, who was seated alongside Windolph.

Exactly where the accident happened with respect to the curve in the road is a point which is controverted. It is argued by some counsel that the automobiles came into collision within the curve, but a careful reading and sifting of the evidence convinces us that the accident did not take place within the curve at all but that the vehicles came together a few feet from the curve and before the Windolph automobile had reached it.

The charges and countercharges of negligence leveled against both of the drivers are numerous and need not be detailed, but we may mention that the respective drivers are said to have been speeding and that they each failed to keep a proper lookout. It is also specifically alleged that both Harley and Windolph were under the influence of liquor.

The evidence shows that the Futrell brothers and Leroy Harley are merchant seamen, and that on July 4 Harley arrived in port at New Orleans. About 10 o'clock p.m., his wife and the three Futrells left New Orleans in the Harley car with the intention of driving to Pearl River. En route, the parties stopped off at Bosco's Place at Slidell and remained there for approximately an hour and a half, after which the journey to Pearl River was completed. Throughout the trial the witnesses were questioned closely as to whether Harley had been drinking prior to the accident. Mrs. Harley testified that the only liquid consumed by her husband was a certain well-known soft drink, but her testimony is sharply contradicted by the Town Marshal of Pearl River who stated in his direct examination that he saw Harley drinking in Jerry's Bar and that his opinion of Harley was that he was "feeling the effects of the alcohol." The Marshal based this opinion on the fact that Harley was boisterous, or as the Marshal stated, "was talking a little loud." John S. Futrell also contradicts Mrs. Harley for he states that at Bosco's, while he danced and had some food, the other persons ordered beer but that he did not know how many "rounds" were served. John S.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 2d 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/futrell-v-pacific-indemnity-company-lactapp-1955.