Great American Ins. Co. v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.

15 So. 2d 241
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 6, 1943
DocketNos. 2555, 2556.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 15 So. 2d 241 (Great American Ins. Co. v. New Amsterdam Casualty 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
Great American Ins. Co. v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co., 15 So. 2d 241 (La. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

These suits grow out of the same accident, a three-wheeled motorbike-automobile collision which occurred about four o'clock on the afternoon of September 15, 1940, on the extension of Government Street, about one mile east of the City of Baton Rouge. The three-wheeled motorbike was owned by McVae R. Benton and Lorenzo A. Blouin and was operated and driven by a colored boy named Tommy McClendon. The automobile was a Ford owned by Robert Thibodeau, which was being driven by Robert Thibodeau, Jr., the minor son of the owner. The motorbike was so badly damaged that the Great American Insurance Company, the collision insurance carrier on the same, paid the sum of $405 to the owner under its collision policy. For its share of the damages to the Ford, New Amsterdam Casualty Co., the collision insurance carrier on the Ford, paid the sum of $131.40 to the owner. Each collision insurer obtained proper subrogation.

In the first suit filed, the Great American Insurance Company, the collision insurance carrier on the motorbike is the plaintiff and New Amsterdam Casualty Company, the liability insurance carrier of the Ford is the defendant, and the purpose of the suit is the recovery of $405 paid by it to the owner of the three-wheeled motor bike. In the second suit, the New Amsterdam Casualty Company is the plaintiff and the Great American Indemnity Company, the liability insurance carrier on the three-wheeled motor bike, McVae R. Benton and Lorenzo A. Blouin, the owners of the motorbike, are the defendants, in solido, and the purpose of the suit is the recovery of $131.40 paid by it to the owner of the Ford. It was agreed that these two suits should be consolidated for the purpose of taking evidence, with the understanding that a separate judgment would be rendered in each case. This agreement also governs the action of this court. There is no contest as to the amounts involved.

After a trial there was judgment dismissing the suit of the Great American Insurance Co., and in favor of New Amsterdam Casualty Co., and against Great American Indemnity Co., McVae Benton and Lorenzo A. Blouin, solidarily, for the sum of $131.40, with legal interest thereon from judicial demand until paid, with costs. Great American Insurance Company, plaintiff in first suit, Great American Indemnity Co., McVae Benton and Lorenzo A. Blouin, defendants in the second suit, have appealed.

The record shows that the accident occurred at about 4 o'clock on the afternoon, *Page 242 at a point about thirty feet west of the intersection of Government and Sanders Streets, about a mile from the corporation limits of the City of Baton Rouge. However, there are several residences and business establishments in the vicinity of the scene of the accident. There are signs along Government Street in that neighborhood stating that the speed limit was 25 miles per hour. Extension of Government Street was the main artery out of Baton Rouge to New Orleans and runs practically east and west. Sanders Street leads south from Government Street. The weather was clear and the street was dry. The motorbike and the Ford were travelling west. The Ford struck the motorbike from the rear, causing considerable damage to each vehicle.

For convenience, we will hereafter refer to the Great American Indemnity Company and the Great American Insurance Company as the Companies, and the New Amsterdam Casualty Company as the Casualty Company.

The Companies contend that the accident occurred solely through the negligence of the driver of the Ford in driving at a grossly excessive rate of speed; in not keeping a proper lookout, and in attempting to overtake another vehicle without passing a safe distance to the left thereof, in failing to give an audible and sufficient warning of his intention to do so, and in attempting to overtake and pass the motorbike at or near an intersection of the highway.

The contention of the Casualty Company is that the accident occurred through the sole negligence and fault of the driver of the motorbike in attempting "to turn his motorbike in the street in the middle of the block without looking in time and without signal or warning of any kind at a time when it was impossible for the said Robert Thibodeau, Jr., to avoid the collision."

There are four witnesses who testified in the case. Elridge Wright and Hazel McCardell for the Companies and D.B. Friday and Robert Thibodeau, Jr., for the Casualty Company.

We shall first consider the testimony of the witnesses for the Companies. Mr. Wright was in the northeast corner bedroom of a house which is on the southwest corner of Sanders and Government, sitting on a bed about four feet from the window facing east; this house faces Government Street, or north, and is about 25 feet from the street. He states that he had just arrived from work and was awaiting a friend and a package from the Golden Slipper, a night club and barroom operated by defendants Benton and Blouin and to whom the motorbike belonged. When he heard the motor of the motorbike, he rushed to the north window, and saw the motorbike about in the center of the intersection of Sanders and Government Street, travelling west, with its left rear wheel and its front wheel south of the center line and the right rear wheel north of the center line of Government Street, going very slowly; thereafter, the motorbike swung back to the right and picked up speed. He first saw the Ford before it entered the intersection and the Ford was travelling at a speed "somewhere between forty and sixty miles an hour." The motorbike travelled about thirty feet between the time he first saw it and the time of the actual impact. At the time of actual impact, the motorbike had its front and right rear wheels across and north of the center line of Government Street, and the left rear wheel remained possibly a foot on the south side of the center line. The Ford started skidding about five feet east of the intersection and skidded through the intersection and thirty feet past, until it collided with the motorbike. About one-third of the right front of the Ford collided with the left rear half of the motorbike and the Ford at the time of actual collision had its right front wheel about on the center line and its left wheel in the left (south) lane of the road, headed straight toward Baton Rouge. Due to the impact the driver of the motorbike "went straight up in the air and did a couple of flips and landed on the side of the road". The Ford "continued sliding a few feet". On cross-examination he states "the State police took measurements of that particular accident", and that the only skid marks were "just a few feet after the collision", and that the Ford stopped "shortly after the collision, three or four feet".

Miss McCardell, who lived near the scene of the accident and who was on the north side of Government at the northeast corner of the intersection of Sanders and Government Streets, preparing to cross from the north to the south side of Government Street, testified that she did not see all the details of the accident. Prior to the accident she saw the motorbike down near the Seven Up plant, a block east of Government and Sanders Streets, coming west towards Baton *Page 243 Rouge, at a moderate rate of speed, and at which time she did not see the Ford. She awaited the motorbike to pass before attempting to cross the street. In the meantime two of her cousins had already crossed the street, and she engaged them in conversation. While engaged in conversation with her young cousins, and after the motorbike had passed her, an automobile passed by her and the driver blew the horn, and when she turned around to look to see who it was, the driver waved at her. She did not recognize the driver on account of trouble with her eyes.

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Great American Ins. Co. v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.
15 So. 2d 246 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 So. 2d 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-american-ins-co-v-new-amsterdam-casualty-co-lactapp-1943.