Galiano v. Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation
This text of 55 So. 2d 641 (Galiano v. Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation) 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.
Opinion
GALIANO
v.
OCEAN ACCIDENT & GUARANTEE CORPORATION, Ltd.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*642 Frank T. Doyle, Robert G. Hughes, and Maurice D. Armagnac, all of New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellant.
Gordon Boswell and Stanley E. Loeb, New Orleans, for defendant and appellee.
McBRIDE, Judge.
This suit, which involves the claim of Joseph Galiano against The Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, Ltd., the automobile liability insurer of Enest Buquet, is for the sum of $46,345.00, for personal injuries together with resultant expenses and loss, arising out of an automobile accident. This and three other suits, involving claims growing out of the same accident, all originated in the Twenty-fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, and were consolidated for trial, the hearing thereon consuming two full days.
Galiano has appealed from the judgment of the trial court dismissing his suit.
The accident in question happened about one o'clock, p. m., on Christmas Day, 1949, which was warm, dry, and clear, when two automobiles moving in opposite directions collided head-on in a curve in the Marrero-Barataria road (State Highway 30), which runs east and west between the Town of Marrero on the east and the Town of Barataria on the west. The collision occurred near Crown Point Village, which is about midway between the two towns. The road at the point of collision is a twenty-foot wide black-topped strip, flanked by a five and one-half foot shoulder on its north side and an eight and three-quarter foot shoulder on its south side; the road has no delineating stripe in the center. The apex of the curve in which the accident occurred is southward from the east-west course of the road.
The west-bound automobile was a 1950 Ford sedan, driven by Galiano on the inside of the curve. The owner of the car, Jesse J. St. Amant, was riding alongside Galiano in the front seat. The east-bound automobile, a 1941 Ford coupe, was owned by Enest Buquet, and at the time of the collision it was being driven by his minor son, Henry, age nineteen, along the outside of the curve; four young men, aged from sixteen to twenty-two, were passengers in the Buquet car, two riding on the front seat with Buquet and two on the rumble seat.
The petition charges that young Buquet was driving to the left of the center of the highway at an excessive rate of speed. The defense is that Buquet was free from negligence, and in the alternative the plea is made that Galiano, St. Amant's driver, was guilty of contributory negligence in several respects, more particularly because he drove his car diagonally across the highway into the Buquet car.
The controlling question presented is whether Galiano or Buquet was driving in the wrong lane, in broad daylight, on the twenty-foot wide roadway. There is not even a remote suggestion of contention that both vehicles overlapped the center of the roadway. Galiano accuses Buquet of being on his side of the roadway, while the defendant contends that the St. Amant car was the offender.
Our attention is at first attracted to the testimony given by seven disinterested witnesses, who appeared at the scene before the wrecked automobiles had been moved, which shows that the fronts of the vehicles were locked or joined together on Buquet's side of the road. They were finally disentangled through the media of a wrecker and a truck, which pulled them apart.
Divested of minor unimportant inconsistencies, the testimony of Henry Buquet *643 and his four passengers is in harmony, and to the effect that the Buquet automobile, when struck, was traveling on its right-hand side of the road at not more than twenty-five miles an hour, and that the St. Amant car came diagonally across the road and crashed into it.
Buquet says that the St. Amant car was swerving, and that it came over to the left side, then went over to the right, and then again came to the left side of the road, striking the Buquet car. Bruce also told of seeing the St. Amant car zigzagging. The other two passengers did not sight the St. Amant car until just before the impact, but they are in accord that it ran diagonally across the road, and its driver apparently made no effort to avoid striking the Buquet car.
In argument, appellant's counsel dwelt at some length on what he considers glaring inconsistencies in the testimony of the five young men, and points out that they are in disagreement as to the exact spot in the curve at which the accident occurred. We attach no importance to counsel's argument, being satisfied that the cars crashed somewhere near the peak of the curve. Our attention is also called to the fact that young Buquet gave conflicting estimates as to how far away the St. Amant car was when he first saw it, and counsel reasons that had Buquet timely applied his brakes when he first observed the St. Amant car the accident would have been averted. Buquet, however, made reasonable explanation when he stated that he applied his brakes only when Galiano came back to the left side of the road the second time. The automobiles were then undoubtedly in close proximity.
It is also claimed that Buquet and his passengers had been drinking before the accident. Although each denied having partaken of anything but a soft drink, a deputy sheriff, who appeared on the scene after the collision, sensed the odor of liquor on them. However, be that as it may, there is not a syllable of evidence in the record which would warrant a conclusion that any of these young men were under the influence of liquor.
On the date of the occurrence, Galiano and St. Amant, after eating dinner at the home of a relative of the latter, drove to a store in St. Amant's automobile, which was but a few weeks old, and the wreck occurred whilst they were returning to the relative's residence. St. Amant permitted Galiano to drive the car, as Galiano had never operated an automobile equipped with overdrive and "he wanted to see how it handled."
According to St. Amant, when they entered the curve he "was looking down toward the floor at the speedometer" discussing with Galiano the overdrive, which had been set to become effective at thirty-eight miles an hour. Although maintaining that the car was on its right side of the road, he could relate nothing regarding the accident.
The only testimony challenging that of the occupants of the Buquet automobile emanates from Galiano himself. He asserts that he saw the Buquet car about fifty or sixty feet away when "I made the curve," and that it was in the center of the road angling toward him. He insisted that he was on the right-hand side of the road.
To say the least, Galiano's testimony is materially weakened, if not entirely destroyed, by the recitals of a written statement allegedly signed by him in Charity Hospital on December 26 or 27, 1949. On cross examination, Galiano was confronted with the statement, which in part recites: "* * * I was traveling at about 35 to 40 m. p. h. in a curve in my lane when I momentarily turned to say something to Stamand (St. Amant). When I turned around I saw another car coming towards me at a very short distance. As far as I remember I wasn't exactly on my side of the road, but instead a little towards the center, I swerved to the right, but in the next fraction of the second I felt a terrific impact. Our car hit head on mostly on my left front. * * *"
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55 So. 2d 641, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galiano-v-ocean-accident-guarantee-corporation-lactapp-1951.