Guidry v. Crowther

96 So. 2d 71
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 4, 1957
Docket4416
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 96 So. 2d 71 (Guidry v. Crowther) 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
Guidry v. Crowther, 96 So. 2d 71 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

96 So.2d 71 (1957)

Gustave E. GUIDRY, Jr., for himself Individually and for and on behalf of minors, etc.
v.
Robert James CROWTHER et al.

No. 4416.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

June 4, 1957.
Rehearing Denied June 28, 1957.
Writ of Certiorari Denied October 8, 1957.

*72 Taylor, Porter, Brooks, Fuller & Phillips, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellant.

A. Deutsche O'Neal, Houma, for plaintiff-appellee.

Adams & Reese, New Orleans, Pugh, Lanier & Pugh, Thibodaux, for defendant-appellee.

TATE, Judge.

At about 1:00 P.M. on July 7, 1954, an Oldsmobile driven by Robert J. Crowther skidded into a Chevrolet driven by Gustave E. Guidry, Sr. Guidry and his wife, a front seat passenger, died as a result of injuries sustained in the accident; and Mrs. Crowther, a passenger in the car driven by her husband, was most seriously crippled. Two other passengers in the Guidry car suffered injuries of lesser severity.

In the five personal injury actions[1] based upon this tragic accident, the substantial *73 question is whether any negligence of Crowther constituted the sole or a concurrent proximate cause of the mishap; or whether, as the District Court held, the sole proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of Roy J. Hebert, driver of a station wagon following Guidry, in imprudently attempting to pass Guidry and pulling out into Crowther's lane and in Crowther's immediate path. It is conceded that no negligence on the part of Guidry contributed to the fatal incident.

The accident in question occurred on U.S. Highway 90 about 3½ miles west of Des Allemands in Lafourche Parish. The District Court aptly summarized its setting as follows:

"The testimony shows with unmistakable certainty that there were only three automobiles in the immediate vicinity of the accident at the time of its occurrence: (1) the Guidry Chevrolet travelling westerly in its own right lane (the south [north] lane of US 90) and driven by Guidry; (2) the Plymouth station wagon driven by Hebert in a westerly direction and approaching the Guidry car from the rear; (3) the Oldsmobile being driven by Crowther in an easterly direction. It is reasonably clear that the accident took place approximately at the foot of a long, gentle curve, that before the accident Guidry and Hebert were travelling westerly in the curve and Crowther was travelling easterly approaching the curve, and that at the point of impact Guidry was about to emerge from the curve and Crowther was about to enter it. In the general area of the accident (that is, at the place of impact and for some distance in either direction therefrom) the highway consisted of an eighteen-foot slab of undulant asphalt with exceptionally narrow shoulders, not more than a foot or two in width near the pavement, that sloped sharply down to the prairie or marsh at the side. * * * At the time of the accident the asphalt was wet as a result of a heavy shower shortly before its occurrence."

Guidry's car, driven at a speed variously estimated as from 30 to 50 mph, was struck and severely damaged in its own lane by Crowther's Oldsmobile. Crowther stated that his own vehicle had gone into a skid crossing the highway into Guidry's lane when, at a speed of from 45-55 mph, he had immediately applied his brakes when the oncoming Hebert station wagon suddenly pulled into his path and alongside Guidry in a rash attempt to pass Guidry as these latter two vehicles were about to emerge from the slight curve.

The principle factual question of this appeal is whether the District Court was manifestly wrong in accepting the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Crowther that Hebert impatiently pulled out into their path to pass the slower-moving Guidry and drew almost alongside Guidry when the Crowthers were just 150-200' distant; rather than that of Hebert (corroborated in general by the two passengers in his station wagon) that the Hebert vehicle had nosed out when about 300' behind Guidry and, seeing Crowther's Oldsmobile approaching at a terrific speed from the opposite direction about 800-1200' distant, had slipped back, noticing as he did so that Crowther went into a skid because of slipping off onto the shoulder. There were no other living witnesses to the accident, the surviving Guidry passengers having observed nothing thereof.

We see no compelling reason to enter into a detailed analysis of the evidence in this bulky record, so ably and *74 exhaustively analyzed by the lengthy briefs furnished to us by opposing counsel. The trial court's findings of fact will not be disturbed by a reviewing court unless manifestly erroneous, Jones v. Jones, 232 La. 102, 93 So.2d 917, especially when based upon an evaluation of the credibility of opposing witnesses, Fouquier v. Fouquier, 231 La. 430, 91 So.2d 591.

Counsel for appellants most ably argues that it is a mathematical and physical impossibility for the accident to have occurred as the District Court found, accepting the Crowthers' testimony, if the Hebert station wagon (as testified by the occupants thereof) was able to draw to a stop 30-40 feet behind the Guidry-Crowther wreck. Accepting this premise, counsel is able to demonstrate that Hebert must have been a considerable distance behind Guidry at the time that Crowther went into his skid and, consequently, could not have drawn out into Crowther's lane just 150-200' distant from him.

The fallacy of this well reasoned argument is that the only testimony as to this safe stop was given by the occupants of the station wagon. And the District Court specifically found, based on what it found to be deliberate and apparently well-planned variations from original statements given by them to their own insurer,[2] that these three engineering employees were in concert deliberately trying to deceive the court by concocting a version of the accident which, mathematically, would exculpate Hebert, their driver. He found their testimony completely unworthy of belief. We, an appellant could unable to see and hear the witnesses as did the trier of fact, are unable to hold that this evaluation of credibility was manifestly wrong; and we ourselves note that, unlike those particular witnesses, Mr. and Mrs. Crowther consistently gave the same version of the accident—from the time the State police drove up a few minutes after the accident, with Mrs. Crowther mutilated and in agony, perhaps dying, Mrs. Guidry dead, and Mr. Guidry dying, right on up through the trial below.

We do not find too impressive efforts made by appellants to discredit Crowther's testimony because he initially reported to the police right at the time of the accident *75 that it was a yellow Plymouth automobile which drew alongside the Guidry car (whereas in truth the Hebert vehicle was a green Plymouth station wagon), precipitating the accident. All parties agree that the only overtaking vehicle involved was the Hebert vehicle, and the precision of observation expected as to such relatively minor incidentals in the few split-seconds preceding a horrible tragedy seems to be unrealistic.

Corroborative of the testimony of the Crowthers that a vehicle drew out into their lane, immediately in their path, almost alongside the Guidry car, is the death bed declaration of Mr. Guidry, lying in the hospital, to a kinswoman, "If it wouldn't have been for that station wagon and those three boys, it never would have happened." (Tr-81.) No objection was made at the time this evidence was introduced.

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96 So. 2d 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guidry-v-crowther-lactapp-1957.