Hadrick v. Burbank Cooperage Co.

177 So. 831
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1938
DocketNo. 16671.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 177 So. 831 (Hadrick v. Burbank Cooperage 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
Hadrick v. Burbank Cooperage Co., 177 So. 831 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Nola Hadrick, while riding in a trailer drawn by a motortruck, both of which were owned by Burbank Cooperage Company, Limited, received physical injuries for which she seeks redress. The vehicle was being driven at the time by Otis Scott, an employee of the said cooperage company, and the injuries were sustained when plaintiff’s arm, which, to s.ome extent, protruded beyond the side of the trailer, struck an upright portion of a bridge over which the vehicle was passing.

The defendants are Scott, who was ■operating the truck, the Burbank Cooperage Co., Limited, owner of the vehicle, and National Casualty Company, the liability insurance carrier of the Burbank Company.

The charges of negligence are that Scott was operating the vehicle at an excessive speed and that, i-n attempting, on the narrow bridge, to pass another automobile proceeding in the opposite direction, he swerved tffe truck and trailer so far to the right that a portion of the trailer came into contact with the side of the bridge, crushing petitioner’s arm and hand with which she was holding on to a stanchion of the trailer and a portion of which arm extended a few inches beyond the side of the said trailer.

Liability in the Burbank Company is alleged to have resulted from the asserted fact that Scott was acting, at the time, within the scope of his employment by the said company and also from the fact — -alleged in the. petition — that petitioner was a passenger for hire with the knowledge and consent of the officials of the said company.

Liability in the. insurer is declared to result from either or both of two facts: (1) That because of the provisions of Act No. 55 of 1930 the said insurer is directly liable as the insurance carrier of the said cooperage company; and (2) that, since the insurance policy contained what is known as an omnibus clause under which the protection of the policy is afforded to' any person operating the vehicle with the consent of the owner, the said Scott- was protected by the said policy, and that therefore, since he was so protected, Act No. 55 of 1930 renders the insurer liable.

Defendant Scott and the other defendants deny that the said Scott was in any way at fault, maintaining that the truck was being carefully operated at a moderate speed, and that, as the said vehicle proceeded over the bridge, it was necessary to drive it to the right in order to afford an automobile approaching from the other direction sufficient room to pass. Defendants maintain, however, that the vehicle was not driven sufficiently near to the edge of the bridge to cause danger to any one within the said trailer, and that the cause of plaintiff’s injuries was the fact that she extended her arm, at full length, beyond the said trailer and pointed out to other passengers the stream over which they were passing, and called it by name; that, as she did this, her arm struck an upright portion of the bridge, 'which was so far from the truck as to afford no danger at all to any one within the trailer, or even to any one extending an arm or hand only a few inches beyond its side.

As an alternative defense, the Burbank Company and the insurer both maintain that, at the time of the accident, Scott was not acting within the scope of his employment and that his employer was in no way involved or interested in the venture in which he was engaged, and, finally, as a separate and independent alternative defense, the insurer contends that, even if it be shown that Scott was at fault and that he was acting at the time within the scope of his employment by the Burbank Company, nevertheless there resulted no liability in the insurer, for the reason that the policy, under which liability is sought to be fastened upon the said insurer, provides that there shall be no protection afforded while the vehicle contemplated by the policy is used as a carrier of passengers for hire.

The matter was tried by jury, which rendered a verdict for plaintiff against all defendants in the sum of $2,500. Scott, the *833 driver, has appealed devolutively, and the Burbank Company and the insurer hive appealed suspensively.

We shall first consider the facts of the accident itself in an effort to determine whether the driver was at fault.

The trailer, in which plaintiff together with some 25 or 30 other passengers was riding, was not intended for the transportation of passengers. It was constructed with flaring upright stakes extending from the bottom upwards, but curved so that the body of the trailer was much wider at the top than at the bottom. These upright stakes were placed a few feet apart and, attached to them, were rails a foot or so apart, extending lengthwise from the front to the rear of the trailer. The trailer was attached to and drawn by a motor-driven tractor, which is the name applied to a motortruck which has no body, but which is used to draw a trailer. Plaintiff was on a seat built parallel to the right side of the trailer and at a point near the middle. She states that her arm was not extended beyond the side slats of the trailer more than a few inches and that her hand grasped one of the right-hand stakes of the body. While she contends that the vehicle was operated at an excessive speed, the record convinces us that the speed was moderate and that, in this respect, Scott was not at fault.

The bridge over which they were crossing was an old one, constructed of wood, though the uprights may have been of iron; the record does not make it certain whether they were of wood or iron. These upright portions extended higher than the side of the truck. Just as the vehicle approached the drawspan on which the upright portions were erected, an automobile, going in the other direction, reached the other side of the drawspan, and it became necessary for Scott to turn his vehicle to the right-in order to afford a space sufficiently wide for the other automobile to pass and plaintiff’s arm was struck by one of the uprights.

Defendants deny that the trailer struck any portion of the bridge, asserting that there was ample clearance between the side of the bridge and the trailer and that plaintiff’s arm would not have been injured at all but for the fact that she extended it at full length beyond the side of the vehicle.

That the side of the trailer was quite close to the uprights of the bridge is conceded by -all, though all of defendants’ witnesses, save one, deny that there was actual contact. Though Scott contends that the trailer did not strike the bridge and though the record shows that the said trailer, after the accident, exhibited no evidence of having come in contact with any portion of the bridge, we think that the evidence that there was contact between the two preponderates.

Mary Smith, one of the passengers, says: “ * * * When we were going across the bridge, it hit against the side rail. sjs jJj H* **

Eleonore ■ Mason testified as follows: “ * * * I could feel it; it scraped when it hit the side of that thing, you could feel the whole pass of it; it scraped the sidé of the truck.”

Martha Smith, who was placed on the stand by defendants, said: “ * * * it hit something or other when it was going on the bridge.”

Later she said, “it seemed to me like it struck something on the edge of the bridge.” Still later, when asked if “it seemed like the truck hit the edge of the bridge,.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadrick-v-burbank-cooperage-co-lactapp-1938.