Goodwin v. Theriot

165 So. 342
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1936
DocketNo. 1549.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 165 So. 342 (Goodwin v. Theriot) 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
Goodwin v. Theriot, 165 So. 342 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries and for other damages arising out of an automobile accident which occurred on the Old Spanish Trail on the night of February 9, 1933, at a point about three miles east of the town of Sulphur in the-parish of Calcasieu.

The demand made was for the sum of $35,000 against Gaston Theriot, owner of the truck which was involved in the accident, and Commercial Standard Insurance-Company, which carried public liability insurance on the same. Judgment was prayed for against them both in solido.

The plaintiff, Edwin Goodwin, was employed by the Texas Iron Works Sales. Corporation, a corporation domiciled and doing business in the city of Houston, Tex. The Travelers Insurance Company carried that corporation’s workmen’s compensation insurance, and, under the terms of its contract, paid to the plaintiff herein various sums aggregating $2,710.30.

Upon issue being joined between the plaintiff and the defendants, the Travelers Insurance Company intervened in the present suit, and, alleging that it held a sub-rogation from the plaintiff- of all his rights of action against the defendants to recover any amount it may have been obliged' to pay as the compensation insurer of his¡. employer, asked for judgment against both defendants in the sum of $2,710.30, and prayed that it be decreed payment of that sum by preference and priority out of any judgment the plaintiff might recover against them.

After this intervention had been filed; and before trial, the plaintiff and defendants compromised their suit; plaintiff accepting the sum of $1,500 in settlement of his claim. He then moved to dismiss his suit. This motion brought on further controversy on the part of the intervener, which it is unnecessary for us to consider, as by an agreement subsequently entered into the suit was re-established with the Travelers Insurance Company as plaintiff and Gaston Theriot and Commercial'-. Standard Insurance Company as defendants.

The issue presented concerns the negligence of the driver of the defendant The-riot’s truck in leaving it on the highway at night without lights or any other signal to give warning of its presence and also the-contributory negligence of Edwin Goodwin, driver of the other car which ran into it.

The trial judge found that the truck driver was negligent and that Goodwin, was not guilty of contributory negligence.. *343 lie accordingly rendered judgment in favor of the Travelers Insurance Company to the extent of its demand, and both defendants have appealed.

The facts disclose one of the present day frequent accidents of an automobile .running into an unguarded truck obstructing part of the paved highway at night. There seems to be hardly no excuse for drivers to leave a truck occupying the main-traveled portion of the highway at night without at least observing the simple precaution the law imposes on them of having a front and tail light burning to warn the traveling public of the danger thereby created. The courts of this state have almost invariably held the driver who fails in this important duty guilty of gross and sometimes criminal negligence. There .are a few extraordinary cases where it was shown that the driver, having done all that could be expected of a reasonable man in the way of correcting the trouble with his lights after something had gone wrong with them, was held faultless in this respect, but even then he was held charged with the duty of _ giving some other warning or signal of the presence of his truck on the road. In this case there was no excuse whatever for any lack of precaution, as the truck had been stopped several minutes, the lights were working, and besides there was an extra person with the driver who could have assisted in giving warning to approaching traffic. The two men testify that they flashed the lights as they saw automobiles approaching them from either direction, but the proof is positive that just a few seconds before Goodwin ran into the truck from the rear another car which had passed by it coming from the opposite direction did not see any lights on it at all. Aside from the question of lights, there seems to be no reason, moreover, why the truck could not have been removed from the paved portion of the highway aad run on the shoulder by these two men. The only trouble they speak of having was with the motor. There was nothing wrong with the wheels, and therefore the. case is not of the class in which the excuse for not removing the vehicle from the traveled portion of the .road was because of a broken 'wheel. '

We have but little hesitancy in agreeing with the trial judge on the question of the negligence of the truck driver, and must then find the solution of the controversy on the plea of contributory negligence charged against Goodwin, the driver of the car which ran into the truck.

The truck was parked on the paved highway, facing east, and Goodwin, driving a new Buick coupé was going in the same direction. The highway at that point, according to Goodwin, is straight. His car was equipped with four-wheel mechanical brakes, which he says had been 'recently tested and were in good condition. His headlights, as well as he remembers, were “in good shape,” and under ordinary conditions when they ' were working well he says that he was able to see an object two or three hundred feet away. There was nothing unusual about the weather condition that night unless the cloudiness and cold which he refers to made it unusual. But cloudiness tends to make the night darker than usual, and we think it can safely be said that the experience' of automobile drivers is that the darker it is the clearer becomes the vision from the headlights of an automobile at night. Plaintiff speaks of the shadow on the road from trees along the highway, but it is somewhat difficult to understand how the trees could have thrown a shadow on a dark night, and especially when there was no moonlight, as he himself says there was not.

Notwithstanding the atmospheric and other conditions existing on the night of the accident and the fact that ordinarily the headlights of his automobile, which were “in good shape,” illuminated the road some two or three hundred feet ahead of him, it is Goodwin’s testimony that he did not see the parked truck on the road until he was within forty-five or fifty feet from it.

Our State Highway Regulatory Act, Act No. 21 of 1932, requires that every vehicle that is operated on the public highways of this state between one-half hour after sunset and one-half hour before sunrise shall be equipped with burning headlights of sufficient strength to render clearly discernable any person on the highway for a distance of two hundred feet ahead. Section 9(g) 1. The headlights on the Goodwin car, according to his own statement, were in “good shape,” which we take to mean that they complied with the requirements of the statute and projected a beam some two hundred feet or more ahead of him. Why, in the absence of any unusual conditions, Goodwin did not see *344 that truck, several times the size of an ordinary person, on the highway ahead of him, until he was within fifty feet of it, has not been satisfactorily explained.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Williams v. Cortney Co.
459 So. 2d 681 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1984)
Miller v. Kinney
213 So. 2d 124 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)
Phillips v. Stockman
351 S.W.2d 464 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1961)
James v. United States
151 F. Supp. 404 (W.D. Louisiana, 1957)
King v. Risdon & WE Holoman Lumber Company
76 So. 2d 548 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)
Monteleone v. Dularge Packing Co.
73 So. 2d 335 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. McCullough
202 F.2d 269 (Fifth Circuit, 1953)
Atkins v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co.
196 F.2d 876 (Fifth Circuit, 1952)
Planters Wholesale Grocery v. Kincade
50 So. 2d 578 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)
Thibaut v. Gibson
90 F. Supp. 222 (E.D. Louisiana, 1949)
Dodge v. Bituminous Casualty Corporation
39 So. 2d 720 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1949)
Paniagua v. Transportation Authority
69 P.R. 121 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1948)
Paniagua v. Autoridad de Transporte de Puerto Rico
69 P.R. Dec. 130 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1948)
Car & General Ins. v. Thibaut
161 F.2d 657 (Fifth Circuit, 1947)
Car & General Ins. Corporation v. Cheshire
159 F.2d 985 (Fifth Circuit, 1947)
New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Ledoux
159 F.2d 905 (Fifth Circuit, 1947)
Boland M. M. Co. v. Highway Ins. Underwriters
22 So. 2d 307 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1945)
Epps v. Standard Supply Hardware Co.
4 So. 2d 790 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)
General Exchange Ins. Corp. v. M. Romano & Son
190 So. 168 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 So. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-theriot-lactapp-1936.