Gaiennie v. Co-Operative Produce Co.

199 So. 610
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 14, 1941
DocketNo. 2117.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 So. 610 (Gaiennie v. Co-Operative Produce Co.) 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
Gaiennie v. Co-Operative Produce Co., 199 So. 610 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

LeBLANC, Judge.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries and for medical and other expenses in connection therewith, arising out of an accident which took place on the night of October 4, 1937, on Highway No. 71, at a point about ten miles west of Port Allen in the Parish of West Baton Rouge, in which an automobile being driven by the plaintiff, Charles S. Gaiennie and a truck belonging to the defendant, Co-Operative Produce Company, Inc., and being driven at the time by one of its employees, Frank Monte, were involved. The suit is directed against the Co-Operative Produce Co., Inc., and its public liability insurance, carrier, Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, to the extent of its liability under the policy of insurance which it carried.

After it had been argued and submitted to this court and we had made a finding of fact on which we readily reached the conclusion that the driver of the truck of the defendant Co-Operative Produce Company, Inc., was guilty of gross negligence, but were left with serious doubt, in view of the apparent conflict in some of the decisions of the various Courts of Appeal of this State, on the question of contributory negligence as pleaded against the plaintiff, we took the liberty of certifying the case to the Supreme Court of the State, under the provisions of Article VII,. Section 25 of the Constitution. After due consideration, the Supreme Court answered the questions propounded by us handing down a written opinion which has now become final. 199 So. 377. After stating the case in much the same manner as just outlined, the opinion continues as follows:

“The Court of Appeal states that it has no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that the driver of the truck of the defendant company was guilty of gross negligence, but entertains doubt, under the facts and circumstances, whether or not the plaintiff was guilty of such contributory negligence as to bar his recovery. The Court of Appeal desires answers to the following two questions: (1) What is the general rule that should be applied under the following and a similar state of facts; (2) Under the facts herein outlined, was the plaintiff guilty of such contributory negligence as to bar his recovery? The Court of Appeal in certifying the questions-has given its examination of and conclusions upon the matters submitted. After examining the discussion of the case by *612 the Court of Appeal, it is apparent that court is of the opinion that the judgment of the lower court should be affirmed.
“The statement of facts, as found by the Court of Appeal, is as follows: On the evening of Monday, October 4, 1937, between 8 and 8:30 o’clock, Frank Monte, employed by the Cooperative Produce Co., Inc., and driver of one of its trucks, was returning to Baton Rouge on Highway No. 71 after a day’s work which took him to Opelousas and other points as far north as Marksville, Louisiana. The truck he was driving that day was not the one he drove regularly but one which his employer used locally in Baton Rouge. It was a Chevrolet truck, 1937 Model, having a stake body painted blue. He had a regular helper to go on his delivery trips with him, but on that day this helper did not show up so he took a negro boy with him as his helper. This boy has since died and his version of what happened on the night of the accident has never been given.
“Highway No. 71 in this section of West Baton Rouge Parish is straight for a distance of several miles. On reaching a point approximately ten miles west of Port Allen, the truck which Monte was driving ran out of gasoline and it was necessary for him to stop. The entire width of the highway at that point is approximately 52 feet, measured as follows: 20 feet of paved slab, 26 feet of shoulder on the north side, and 6 feet of shoulder on the south side. As Monte was traveling east, the south was to his right and the north to his left. He made no attempt to park the truck on the wider shoulder on the north because of traffic moving on the . highway at that moment. He did park on the south side, but did not clear the paved portion of the highway, one of the front wheels of the truck resting on the right shoulder and the other on the paved portion of the road, and both rear wheels resting on the pavement. The body of the truck extended at an angle across the paved slab of the right traffic lane for some five feet from the south edge thereof.
“There is some doubt arising oiit of the testimony that Monte left the headlights of the truck on after stopping, but assuming that they were burning, they naturally projected a beam of light directly in front of the truck in the manner in which it was parked and afforded no warning of its presence on the highway to traffic that was approaching it from the rear. The preponderance of the testimony shows that the tail and side clearance lights were not burning, and admittedly, there were no flares placed on the highway and no flares were even in the truck. M!onte sent the helper to the nearest filling station for gasoline and he remained with the truck. Monte had a flash or searchlight with him but did not use it in trying to warn approaching traffic. Therefore, to traffic coming from the west, this truck, parked on a portion of the paved slab of the highway in the dark, was an object of peril placed and permitted to remain there through the negligence of Monte, who, it is admitted, was acting within the scope of his employment.
“Within a period of time which is not fixed, but which we estimate to be several minutes, during which Monte, the driver of this truck, occupied himself in a rather indefinite manner, as far as his testimony shows, in looking for flares in the truck, Charles S. Gaiennie, the plaintiff herein, approached the truck from the west in a Chevrolet coach belonging to his employer and which he was driving at a rate of speed estimated to be from 35 to 40 miles per hour. He kept his car in the south lane of travel on the paved portion of the highway which was to his right, and as he neared the point where the truck was parked he began meeting cars going west or in the opposite direction to that in which he was travelling. There were four or five cars following each other and all of them with the headlights burning so brightly as to dazzle his eyesight intermittently. He dimmed the headlights on his car and slowed down its speed to between 20 and 25 miles per hour.
“The effect of the dazzling lights from the cars he was meeting was that he was not blinded by them but his vision was momentarily and intermittently impaired to the extent that instead of having a full view of the paved highway ahead of him as he had without such impairment, his view of the pavement was limited to approximately 18 or 20 ft. within which distance he could, at the speed he was going, bring his car to a stop. As he had dimmed the headlights on his car, that had the effect of tilting the beam of light downward at an acute angle on the pavement in front of him, this also causing some restriction in his sight of the pavement as far as distance was concerned.
*613 “Plaintiff felt safe in proceeding on the highway under the circumstances, and he did.

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Bluebook (online)
199 So. 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaiennie-v-co-operative-produce-co-lactapp-1941.