Gutierrez v. Columbia Casualty Co.
This text of 100 So. 2d 537 (Gutierrez v. Columbia 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.
Opinion
Sidney GUTIERREZ
v.
COLUMBIA CASUALTY CO.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent & Denegre, Michael J. Molony, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.
James Thomas Connor, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.
*538 REGAN, Judge.
Plaintiff Sidney Guierrez, the owner and operator of a 1950 Ford sedan, instituted this suit directly against the defendant, Columbia Casualty Co., the liability insurer of Mrs. Isobel Rogers, wife of Leslie J. Rogers, the operator of her 1954 Ford sedan, endeavoring to recover the sum of $945.93, representing personal and property damages incurred on January 4, 1956, at 6:10 p.m. as the result of a collision between the two vehicles in the fourth lane of the Airline Highway, the situs of which was opposite to a driveway servicing the parking lot of a supermarket and from which Rogers had entered the highway.
Defendant answered and admitted the occurrence of the accident, but denied that Leslie Rogers was guilty of any negligence in the premises and asserted the proximate cause of the accident was plaintiff's fault, and in the alternative defendant pleaded plaintiff's contributory negligence.
From a judgment in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $480.93 for property damages and $224.50 for personal injuries, the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.
The record reveals that the Airline Highway at the situs of the accident consists of an inbound [1] and an outbound[2] roadway, each of which is divided into four traffic lanes, separated by a neutral ground. The collision between plaintiff's automobile and the automobile operated by Leslie Rogers occurred in the left outbound lane of the Airline Highway at an auxiliary crossing through the neutral ground thereof, which is used by a large number of vehicles entering or leaving the driveway which services a parking lot adjacent to Schwegmann's supermarket. There are no streets, as such, at the crossing which traverses the neutral ground, and it is located approximately 100 feet from the intersection of Labarre Road and the Airline Highway. The paved crossing in the Airline Highway neutral ground is about 75 feet wide and directly opposite the driveway located at about the center of the parking lot, which is estimated to be about 50 feet in width.
In Ordinance No. 1085 as amended by No. 2031, the Police Jury of Jefferson Parish designated this section of the Airline Highway as a business district and made it unlawful to operate motor vehicles in excess of thirty miles per hour. However, according to plaintiff's testimony, which stands uncontradicted in the record, the posted speed limit at the point where the accident occurred is forty miles per hour.
Rogers, who was an employee of the Schwegmann supermarket, testified that prior to the accident he drove across the Schwegmann parking lot to the driveway which, as we repeat, was opposite the auxiliary crossing in the neutral ground of the Airline Highway and stopped the vehicle in the driveway in deference to the vehicles moving in the highway away from New Orleans. When the traffic signal at Labarre Road changed to red, those vehicles moving out of the city in the Airline Highway stopped in obedience to this signal light; as a result thereof, three lanes of the Airline Highway contained motor vehicles stopped to his right from the driveway to Labarre Road, and the vehicles approaching in the three traffic lanes from his left likewise stopped as they reached the driveway; thus somewhat of a passageway approximately twelve feet in width was created by virtue of the manner in which the vehicles referred to hereinabove had positioned themselves.
It was then that Rogers, so he testified, slowly moved across the first three lanes of the highway. He asserted that although he carefully looked to his left, to his right and straight ahead, he did not observe plaintiff's automobile approaching from his left in the fourth, or fast, lane, which had remained open. It was Rogers' intention to drive across the neutral ground and turn left *539 toward New Orleans. In any event, when the front section of his automobile entered the fourth lane of the highway, it was struck on the left front wheel and fender; the impact knocked the hood of the automobile onto the neutral ground. Plaintiff's vehicle abruptly stopped at the point of contact.
On the other hand, plaintiff testified that it had been his custom to drive past this section of the Airline Highway at least twice a day in going to and returning from work since the Schwegmann supermarket had opened. On the night of the accident plaintiff was operating his automobile in the fourth traffic lane of the outbound roadway of the highway moving toward Kenner, Louisiana. When his automobile approached the driveway and the crossing in the neutral ground, he observed the red signal light ahead, but as the lane in which he was traveling was free of traffic up to the signal light, he only reduced the speed of his car and planned to continue up to the light. Plaintiff also noticed that the automobiles in the three lanes to his right had stopped or were moving very slowly, but he asserted he never saw the Rogers automobile as it moved out of the Schwegmann parking lot and over the driveway and across three of the traffic lanes of the Airline Highway. His automobile struck the Rogers car the instant it entered the fourth lane thereof, and he said that he saw the front of the Rogers automobile only a split second before the collision occurred, at which time he was traveling at a speed of twenty-five to thirty miles per hour. He was injured as a result of the accident and removed to the Charity Hospital in New Orleans.
By stipulation it was agreed that the reasonable cost of repairing his automobile together with other incidental expenses amounted to $480.53.
The only witness to the accident was E. J. Chauvin, who was operating his automobile in the same traffic lane of the Airline Highway as plaintiff approximately 100 feet behind him. He testified that as they approached the situs of the accident both were traveling about thirty-five to forty miles per hour. Chauvin noticed that other vehicles had stopped in the three lanes of traffic to his right, but the fourth lane in which he and plaintiff were traveling was clear up to the light. The automobiles which had stopped where the driveway enters the Airline left a passageway open for this vehicle which was endeavoring to cross both the highway and the neutral ground in order to execute a left turn in the direction of New Orleans. It was dark, and Chauvin first noticed the Rogers car moving downgrade from the Schwegmann parking lot with its lights burning and enter into the highway; and it was his impression that one of the two vehicles would have to stop in order to avoid a collision; but as neither did, plaintiff's vehicle struck the Rogers car on the left front fender and left front wheel. He concluded by asserting that the Rogers vehicle was thrown approximately twenty-five feet by virtue of the impact and that plaintiff's car stopped at or near the point of impact.
Each of the litigants, as usual, contends that the negligence of the other was the proximate cause of the accident.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
100 So. 2d 537, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutierrez-v-columbia-casualty-co-lactapp-1958.