Goodwin v. Department of Highways
This text of 53 So. 2d 161 (Goodwin v. Department of Highways) 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
GOODWIN
v.
DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*162 Jack L. Simms, D. Ross Banister, W. Crosby Pegues, Jr. and Joseph A. Loret, all of Baton Rouge, for appellant.
J. B. Nachman, Alexandria, for appellee.
KENNON, Judge.
This is a suit by Hazel D. Goodwin against the Department of Highways of the State of Louisiana to recover damages as the result of the violent death by drowning in Red River of her then husband, Noel E. Duling, on the night of December 23, 1946. Her petition sets forth that the State of Louisiana by Act 332 of the 1948 legislature had waived its immunity and authorized plaintiff to institute suit against the Department of Highways.
The petition recited that the Louisiana Highway 57 running northward from Marksville in Avoyelles Parish to Alexandria, Louisiana, is a modern concrete highway, eighteen feet in width; that in April, 1945, the Moncla Bridge, over which this highway crosses Red River, was destroyed by high water so that the entire span on the south end of the bridge was washed away; that as a result Louisiana Highway 57, on the night of December 23, 1946, and for many months prior thereto, ended abruptly at the bank of Red River, with an almost perpendicular drop of twenty feet or more to the deep and swift waters of the Red River below. The negligence charged was that there was no sign, warning or barricade of any nature, except a barricade only twenty-one feet nine inches from where the concrete slab ended with the twenty foot perpendicular drop into the waters of Red River below. The petition recited that *163 a concrete block three by three by four feet was in the left-hand traffic lane, but no warning other than the above mentioned fence-barricade on the brink of the river existed on the right side, and that plaintiff's husband, rounding the leftward curve and traveling on the other lane of traffic, could not see the concrete block in the left traffic lane. Alleging that the lone fence-barricade was black in color and was not visible at night, and that the highway curved perceptibly from a point three hundred thirty yards back from this fence, plaintiff asserted that the driver of an automobile on this public highway would approach the point where the highway ended at the river's bank without timely knowledge of the existence of the abrupt ending or the black fence barricade. The petition recited that it was gross negligence on the part of the defendant, and utter disregard of the safety of the traveling public using the modern concrete highway, for defendant to fail to erect and keep in a proper state of repair barricades and signs warning users of the road that the Moncla Bridge was out and of the existence of the abrupt highway ending over the deep waters of Red River.
The petition further recited that after the death of plaintiff's husband, the defendant recognized the hazard and placed proper barricades, three in number, one three quarters of a mile from the banks of the river, the second a half mile, and the third nearer to the end of the concrete slab.
Defendant, after its exception to the jurisdiction, its exception of immunity from suit, and its exception of immateriality had been overruled, filed an answer admitting that the bridge in question was destroyed, and setting forth that traffic on the highway in question had been crossing Red River at this point by means of a ferry. The answer recited that the condition of the highway for more than one thousand feet from the river was such as to indicate to an approaching motorist that the road was not in use. The answer admitted the existence of a curve in the highway on the Moncla side of the river. The answer stated that defendant had placed signs "some distance back" from the river notifying the public that the bridge had been destroyed, that the road was closed, and that "all of said signs remained along said highway as so placed from the time they were so placed along said highway until after the said alleged time of said alleged accident." In addition to the signs, the answer recited that the joint of concrete pipe with headwall had been placed in the left lane as a warning to the public.
The answer admitted that after the "alleged time of said alleged accident" defendant placed an additional barricade across the road. The answer denied the existence of any person by the name of Noel E. Duling; denied that the alleged accident ever happened and denied that any person by that name was ever killed, but pleaded in the alternative, and in the event the Court should find that there was actually a person by that name, and that he was killed as alleged, that such person was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to keep a proper lookout; in failing to notice and heed the barricade; in failing to note the unused condition of the road, and in driving his automobile into Red River.
The District Judge, in a written opinion, after noting that a state trooper and the sheriff, both of whom investigated the accident immediately after its occurrence and remained in the locality until after the car was dragged from the river and the bodies were removed at approximately 10:30 the next morning, had each testified that the only barricade or warning in the right lane was the barricade of creosoted planks built to resemble a fence across the highway at a point twenty-one feet nine inches from the end of the concrete slab which projected over the banks of the river, and that there were no other visible signs or warning on the road except this fence and the concrete slab on the left side, concluded that the preponderance of the testimony showed that there were not sufficient warnings to the traveling public and described the situation on the brink of Red River on the winter night in question as a "veritable death trap." From the *164 District Court's judgment in favor of plaintiff for $5,600, defendant prosecutes the present appeal.
Act 332 of 1948 specifically authorized the present plaintiff to institute suit against the State of Louisiana through the Department of Highways for damages resulting from the death of her then husband on December 23, 1946 "by the negligence of a person, or persons in the employ of the Department of Highways of the State of Louisiana, in failing to erect and maintain a proper barricade as notice to the public that the highway abruptly ended at the banks of Red River, after the destruction of the Moncla Bridge." The act further authorizes the suit either before the District Court at the state capitol or of the Parish of Avoyelles. Consequently, the District Court correctly overruled the defendant's exception of immunity from suit and its exception to the jurisdiction of the court.
Louisiana Highway No. 57 from Marksville to Alexandria, on the south side of Red River, consists of an eighteen foot slab of concrete with the usual shoulders. In April, 1945, the Moncla Bridge over which this highway traversed Red River was destroyed by high water, the entire span on the south side being washed away. The current continued to eat away the bridge approach so that on the night in question the concrete slab projected over the bank of Red River with a perpendicular drop of some twenty feet to deep and swift waters below. As this concrete highway approaches this washed out bridge site, there is a five and one-half degree curve to the left and a slight upgrade.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
53 So. 2d 161, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-department-of-highways-lactapp-1951.