Gartman v. Traylor

164 So. 660
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 13, 1935
DocketNo. 5109.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 164 So. 660 (Gartman v. Traylor) 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
Gartman v. Traylor, 164 So. 660 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

' DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit individually, and also for the use and benefit of his minor son who was injured in an automobile accident. The defendants are the father of the minor who was driving the car in which plaintiff’s son was a guest, and the owner and driver of the car which collided with that in which plaintiff’s son was riding.

The defense set up by the two defendants, in separate answers, is a denial of any negligence on their part. Defendant Traylor pleaded, in the alternative, contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s son. Defendant Houck did not plead contributory negligence, and the pleadings in this respect as to him were not enlarged, due to timely objection on the part of plaintiff.

The lower court, in a well written opinion, awarded judgment to plaintiff against the defendant Houck, and rejected plaintiff’s demand against Mrs. Traylor. The opinion of the lower court correctly states the pleadings and facts and applied the law applicable. It is as follows:

“This suit arose out of an automobile collision which occurred in the corporate limits of the town of Columbia on the 8th of September, 1934, and in which the minor son of the plaintiff received certain personal injuries. The plaintiff brings this suit individually and also for the use and benefit of his minor son, David Gartman, for the personal injuries sustained by his son in said accident and for dental work that was necessary to restore teeth that were lost by his son in the accident.
“The plaintiff has brought this action against both the defendant J. N. Houck and defendant Mrs. Lizzie Traylor as joint tort-feasors in the amount of eight thousand five hundred ($8,500.00) dollars.
“J. N. Houck owned and operated a picture show in the town of Columbia, and same was managed and operated by Elton Houck, a young man sixteen years of age. In the management of this show it was his duty to distribute advertising matter, notices and stick up posters advertising the various pictures that would be on display at his theater. In the afternoon of September 8, 1934, when Elton Houck placed certain advertising material in his Dodge coupé preparing to go to a nearby town in the vicinity of Columbia for the purpose of advertising the coming show, young Gartman inquired of Houck whether he wanted him to go with him in the distributing of the advertising matter. He was informed by young Houck that he did not need him but if he so desired he might accompany him. These two boys, after placing their advertising matter in the Dodge coupé, proceeded south from Columbia on *661 route No. 165 to the town of Grayson, a distance of about 5 miles from Columbia. On their route they stuck up posters and in Grayson they distributed certain advertising matter. After distributing the advertising material, they returned north towards Columbia over route No. 165, and, according to Houck’s testimony, they traveled at a speed ranging from 40 to 70 miles until they reached within 125 feet of the place of the collision of Houck’s car with that of the defendant Mrs. Traylor. Mrs. Traylor had left the business section of the town of Columbia accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. Wooten, who was riding in the front seat with her mother; their intentions being to go to Grayson. In going to Grayson they would travel in a southern direction along Kentucky street, which is known as Louisiana Highway Route No. 165, with the intention of turning off at Church street for the purpose of taking a daughter-in-law with them to Grayson. Mrs. Traylor and her daughter both testified that as they passed out of the business section of the town of Columbia going south along Kentucky street and route No. 165, and just as they approached the intersection of Church street with Kentucky street a truck blew for the purpose of passing. Defendant Traylor turned her car to the extreme right, probably with her right wheels off the pavement, and stopped a short distance beyond the place to make the turn to go into Church street. In making this turn she would necessarily have to turn to the left, as the west end of Church street comes into Kentucky street at this point. Immediately after the truck passed she backed her car up a few feet and stopped and then looked, as both witnesses say, both to the north and to the south to see if there were any cars approaching, and seeing no cars, she turned to the left and drove across from the right hand side of Kentucky street going south to the left hand side of the street, and as the front wheels of her Ford car passed off the left hand side or east side of Kentucky street her car was hit at the front wheels by the oncoming Dodge coupé from the south. She further testifies that when she started to make the turn that she not only looked in both directions but held her hand out to show that she was making a turn to the left.
“Coming from the south along Kentucky street or highway No. 165, before you reach the intersection of Kentucky and ■Church streets is a sharp curve in Kentucky street or highway No. 165. This curve is very pronounced, and the highway commission has caused to be placed on the right hand side of the road along this bend coming from the south a wire fence as a guard rail, which is 272 feet long. The intersection of Kentucky street and Church street is 115 feet north of the north end of the guard rail around this curve. This would make a distance from the intersection of the two streets to the southern end of the guard rail fence of 387 feet.
“According to the testimony of Elton Houck and David Gartman they were returning from Grayson along highway route No. 165, and had traveled route No. 165 or Kentucky street in the town of Columbia more than a quarter of a mile at the time of the collision. Houck and Gart-man both say that they saw defendant Traylor’s car in the road when their car was about the middle of the guard rail and that the defendant Traylor’s car was making the turn. At the north end of this guard rail, which is 115 feet from the collision, Houck applied his brakes and skidded his car for 25 or 30 feet, and at this point defendant Traylor’s car stopped in the street; that Houck, thinking that the Traylor car had stopped to permit the Houck car to pass, then released his brakes from 30 to 40 feet. After this the Traylor car proceeded its left hand turn, going east into Church street, a‘nd when young Houck noticed this he applied his brakes and skidded his car for 30 feet, but was unable to stop his car until the collision happened.
“There were other witnesses around plaintiff’s garage who were either working for the plaintiff or had been working for him. Young Lovett saw the Traylor car come from the north and stop opposite Church street to permit a truck to pass, and immediately after the truck passed the Traylor car began to make the left hand turn and his attention was then directed to the Houck car by hearing the screeching of the brakes and the blow of the horn from the south. He and the other witnesses said that Houck blew his horn and applied his brakes about the north end of the guard rail, and then apparently released the brakes for a short time and then again reapplied the brakes.
“The plaintiff was not present, but he inspected the scene immediately after the accident and he found that a car, coming from the south, at the time it reached the north end of the guard rail had applied *662

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Bluebook (online)
164 So. 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gartman-v-traylor-lactapp-1935.