Gordon v. Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Co.

158 So. 223
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1935
DocketNo. 4932.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 158 So. 223 (Gordon v. Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Co.) 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
Gordon v. Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Co., 158 So. 223 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The Chevrolet Motor Company, a New Jersey corporation, in the year 1933, sold and delivered to its dealer and distributor, the Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Company, Incorporated, of Shreveport, La., a new Chevrolet sedan automobile, which the dealer company, on September 30, 1933, sold and delivered to Mrs. E. G. Anderson, one of the plaintiffs in this case. After the car had been driven by Mrs. Anderson in and about the city of Shreveport for approximately 600 miles, she, pursuant to the service policy of the manufacturer and dealer, returned the car to the Bates-Crumley Company on October 9, 1933, for a check-up and inspection. At that time she informed the representatives of this company that she contemplated driving the car to Memphis, Tenn., several hundred miles distant, and, naturally, wished to know that it was in first-rate mechanical condition. It remained in the possession of this company for several hours and was given the customary tests and inspections to.ascertain its mechanical condition, with especial reference to brakes and steering apparatus, and, when restored to Mrs. Anderson, she was assured that its condition was all she desired and such as' might be expected of a new automobile. In other words, it was pronounced as being in first-rate mechanical condition. However, it is not specifically shown that the mechanic making the tests and inspections scrutinized the bail and socket assembly in the forward end of the drag link.

On October 10th, Mrs. Anderson, accompanied by her daughter, Miss Thelma Burroughs, and Miss Sarah Bond, in said car, began the trip to Memphis. They arrived there without mishap and, after remaining there four days, they, with Mrs. J. C. Gordon (who is Mrs. Anderson’s mother), began the journey back to Shreveport. Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Gordon occupied the front seat of the car, the former doing the driving. The road was surfaced with gravel. The car was going at a rate not in excess of 39 miles per hour when, on a long tangent, 50 mile's south of Memphis and 3 miles north of the village of Oomo, Miss., suddenly its direction could not be controlled from the steering wheel. It began to zigzag, first to the right, then to the left, again to the right, and lastly to the left, leaving the road and ramming its left front end into an embankment where.it rested in a damaged condition. It had then been driv *225 en 1,400 miles. Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Gordon sustained several injuries, the former the more serious. Each instituted suit against the Chevrolet Motor Company and the Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Company, Incorporated, to recover a large amount of damages for their injuries and medical, doctor’s, and hospital bills. Mrs. Anderson also sued-for the cost of repairing the damages to her automobile. They each pray for judgment, in solido, against the two defendants.

We here quote the salient parts of Mrs. Anderson’s original petition which reflect her theory of the ease and the cause of the car’s sudden and unexpected action immediately prior to the running into the embankment on the roadside, to wit:

“IX. Your petitioner avers that at the time of the occurrence aforesaid there was no apparent reason or cause for said automobile to have performed in the manner above set forth.

“X. Petitioner further avers that the condition of the highway was excellent, the road being smooth and hard, and that the car did not strike any obstruction or depression in the road, or, in fact, any object that could have caused the driver to lose control of the car.

“XI. Petitioner now avers that at the time, above set forth, there were no vehicles approaching in close proximity,- nor were there any overtaking vehicles, thus no reason for the driver of the car to have suddenly changed the course of said automobile, and that consequently said automobile was proceeding at the time of the accident in a straight parallel course down said highway. * * *

“XIV. That on inspection of said automobile by the mechanics, employees, agents and owner of the Gammon Motor Company, of Como, Mississippi, it was discovered that the front drag link had become detached from the spindle arm, which had caused the drag link seat, springs and socket to become detached, which parts and attachments were integral and important parts of the steering apparatus of said automobile.

“XV. Your petitioner now avers that the absence of the attachments to the spindle arm directly affects the steering mechanism to the extent that the driver cannot maintain any control whatsoever over the automobile.

“XVI. Your petitioner believes, and therefore avers, that said attachments to the spindle arm became dislodged from their proper position in the mechanism of said automobile just prior to the accident, due to either the fault and negligence of the Bates-Crumley Company, Inc., or to the manufacturer, Chevrolet Motor Company, of Detroit, Michigan, as hereinafter set forth.

“XVII. That the proximate cause of said accident was due to either the negligence and faulty assembling of said automobile by the manufacturer, Chevrolet Motor Company, or the Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Company, Inc., the latter having inspected and serviced said automobile just prior to the accident; or the use of faulty materials or parts placed in said automobile by one, or both, of the defendants, ' with the result that it could not be controlled and ran into an embankment, causing the damage hereinafter set forth.

“XVIII. Your petitioner further avers that the Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Company, Inc., was further negligent at the time they inspected and serviced said automobile in not having discovered, upon said inspection, that said spindle arm attachments were defective or unstable, or were further negligent in delivering said automobile to your petitioner after its inspection and servicing without having firmly secured said attachments to the steering mechanism of said automobile, for any or all of which reasons the defendants were guilty of gross negligence, causing the loss and damage to your petitioner hereinafter set forth.

“XIX. Your petitioner avers that she was without fault in any way, since said automobile was at all times from the day it was delivered to her by the Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Company, Inc., and after its inspection and servicing, under petitioner, Mrs. Elizabeth G. Anderson’s, control and supervision; that said car was not driven or tampered with by any person, nor had it been involved in any accident or any character which could have accounted for the detachment of said spindle arm attachments.

“XX. Your petitioner now avers that the type of automobile purchased by her from the Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Company, Inc., was designed to go sixty miles an hour or better, and that said vendor company and the manufacturer of. said automobile knew, or should have known, that a defective, unstable or weak front drag link or attachments to the spindle arm and drag link or their improper assemblage, could be calculated to have caused the very accident that occurred in this case.

“XXI. Your petitioner further avers that had the Bates-Crumley Chevrolet Company, Inc., made a reasonable and proper inspection of said automobile on or about October *226

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Bluebook (online)
158 So. 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-bates-crumley-chevrolet-co-lactapp-1935.