Gambino v. Lubel

190 So. 2d 152
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1966
Docket2221, 2247
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 190 So. 2d 152 (Gambino v. Lubel) 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
Gambino v. Lubel, 190 So. 2d 152 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

190 So.2d 152 (1966)

Frank A. GAMBINO
v.
William LUBEL.
William LUBEL
v.
Frank A. GAMBINO, Government Employees Ins. Co., City of New Orleans, the Travelers Ins. Co., and Maryland Casualty Co., in Solido.

Nos. 2221, 2247.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 15, 1966.
Rehearings Denied October 5, 1966.
Writs Refused November 18, 1966.

*153 Steven R. Plotkin and Owen J. Bradley, New Orleans, for Frank A. Gambino, defendant, appellee.

Francis G. Weller, Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, New Orleans, for Maryland Casualty Co., defendant, appellee, intervenor-appellant.

Herman & Herman, David L. Herman and A. I. Kleinfeldt, New Orleans, for William Lubel, plaintiff, appellant.

Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre and Ashton Hardy, New Orleans, for Travelers Ins. Co., defendant-appellant.

Donald Hammett, Hammett, Leake & Hammett, New Orleans, for Government Employees Ins. Co., defendant-appellee.

John V. Baus and Ashton Hardy, New Orleans, for City of New Orleans, defendant-appellee.

Francis J. Mooney, Jr., New Orleans, for National Surety Corp., intervenor.

Before REGAN, CHASEZ, and BARNETTE, JJ.

CHASEZ, Judge.

These cases arose out of a single accident involving one automobile in which the driver, William Lubel, and a police officer, Frank A. Gambino, were both seriously injured. The accident occurred on South Claiborne Avenue, a major thoroughfare in the City of New Orleans, at a point where the avenue consists of two traffic lanes and a parking lane on each side of a very wide and very deep open drainage canal. The events immediately preceding the accident *154 which require our attention occurred in the outbound lanes directly across from the Sewerage and Water Board Plant between General Ogden and Eagle Streets, at about 7:00 P.M. on November 29, 1962.

The actual facts of the occurrence are not in great dispute; the ultimate conclusions to be drawn from those facts is of course the paramount issue.

William Lubel, an executive and part owner of the Excel Manufacturing Company, was returning to the City from a business trip, which had taken him to Covington, in a new Cadillac owned by the company. He had crossed the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway and continued on Causeway Boulevard to the Jefferson Highway, (which becomes Claiborne Avenue at the City limits). Mr. Lubel was a long-time diabetic and as he left the Causeway Bridge he realized that he was beginning to have an insulin reaction, to ward off which he had only to eat a candy bar or drink a coke, both of which he had in the back seat of the car. However, he did not stop as he felt that he could make it to his home on Octavia Street in uptown New Orleans without difficulty, and continued to drive toward the City. It seems that at some point on this drive he blacked out, for he has absolutely no recollection of anything after he left the Causeway. Apparently he drove down Jefferson Highway and into the City. For some unknown reason he turned his vehicle back toward Jefferson Parish on South Claiborne Avenue, in a direction away from his home. He brought it to a stop in the left hand traffic lane of the roadway outbound to Jefferson Parish, next to the open drainage canal, at a barricade placed there for construction work being performed in that lane, between General Ogden and Eagle Streets, on South Claiborne Avenue.

Several witnesses saw him slumped over the wheel of his car; this was reported to the New Orleans Police Department at 6:55 P.M. and the complaint was relayed by radio to a patrol car occupied by officers Frank A. Gambino and Lawrence Michel. These officers arrived minutes later, approached the car, and attempted to question Lubel to determine his condition. They were unable to elicit any intelligible information, but became aware of the fact that he was not intoxicated. Officer Gambino walked around the rear of the car and attempted to enter the passenger side of the front seat; on finding the door locked, he walked back around the rear of the vehicle, reached in through the driver's door, unlocked the back door on the driver's side, got in the car and reached over the seat and unlocked the front door on the passenger's side, walked back around the rear of the car and got into the right hand front seat. He pulled down the sun visor and looked through the glove compartment in an effort to determine Lubel's identification and the cause of his condition.

Mr. Lubel began to exhibit signs of returning consciousness and Officer Gambino inquired for his driver's license. The trial Judge relates the following:

"When Officer Gambino questioned Mr. Lubel concerning his driver's license, Mr. Lubel turned his head to the right, reached for something, uncrossed his legs and his right foot hit the accelerator. The car `shot forward'. (Mr. Armand Serpas testified that `he moved his leg and hit the accelerator'. Question—'How fast did the car start?' Answer—'It was to the floor'. Miss Joyce Musacchia testified that `Mr. Lubel uncrossed his legs and his feet hit the floor.' Mr. Henry Brokmier testified that when he said `Let me see your driver's license. I saw his leg move. The right leg. It was all one motion. When the car "shot forward" Officer Gambino was seated on the front seat, well over on the passenger's side, with his left arm on the back of the seat, leaning slightly forward * * *.'
* * * * *
"At 7:08 P.M. Police Headquarters received `Signal 30' `Officer needs assistance'.
*155 "(12 minutes had expired from the time that the original complaint had been received at Headquarters at 6:56 P.M.)"

The police officers were at the scene not more than six minutes before the occurrence of the accident.

These multiple claims and counter claims followed.

Mr. Lubel filed the first suit, No. 417,700, against (1) his own liability insurer, Maryland Casualty Company, alleging in effect that he was a guest passenger in his own vehicle and that Gambino was the negligent driver thereof; (2) Frank A. Gambino individually; (3) Government Employees Insurance Company, the insurer of Gambino's personal automobile; (4) the City of New Orleans as Gambino's employer; and (5) The Travelers Insurance Company, as liability insurer of the City.

Into this suit an intervention was filed against all defendants by the National Surety Corporation to recover workmen's compensation benefits paid to Mr. Lubel, and a third-party petition was filed by Travelers Insurance Company and the City of New Orleans against Maryland Casualty Company and Government Employees Insurance Company, alleging that one of these insurers was the primary insurer of Gambino and owed Travelers a defense against this suit, the cost of which they seek to recover, and further, that if they were liable at all, it is only vicariously and ask for recovery over against Gambino for any amount they may be found liable.

Mr. Gambino filed the second suit, No. 419,493, naming only Lubel as defendant. Into this suit an intervention was filed by Maryland Casualty Company, seeking to recover $3,850 from Gambino representing the amount paid out for damage to the Cadillac automobile.

All pleadings were answered and all issues were joined, after which the cases were consolidated for trial on the merits.

The trial court rendered judgments, in No. 419,493 in favor of Gambino against Lubel, in the sum of $27,672.65, and dismissing Maryland Casualty Company's intervention; and in No.

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 2d 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gambino-v-lubel-lactapp-1966.