Hanson v. Texas Co.

3 La. App. 46, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 534
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1925
DocketNo. 2326
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 La. App. 46 (Hanson v. Texas 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
Hanson v. Texas Co., 3 La. App. 46, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 534 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

ODOM, J.

This is a suit against The Texas Company and Andrew Gourrier, an employee of said company, in which plaintiff, Mrs. Julia S. Hanson, seeks to recover damages for personal injuries which she received when an automobile driven by said Gourrier struck her.

The case was tried in the District Court before a jury. The plaintiff was awarded $10,000.00 for her injuries and suffering and $743.00 for expenses in the way of medical and hospital bills. The defendants have appealed. Plaintiff has answered the appeal, asking that the amount of the award be increased.

OPINION

Only questions of fact are involved in this case.

It is admitted that the automobile driven by Andrew Gourrier, who was an employee of his co-defendant, The Texas Company, struck and injured plaintiff. Plaintiff charges negligence on the part of the driver of the car. Defendants in answer deny the charges of negligence and aver that the accident was caused solely on account of the carelessness of plaintiff in failing to heed the warnings given by the approaching car and in leaving the place of safety on the side of the road where she was walking and going upon the portion of the road reserved for vehicles.

Defendants, after denying negligence on their part, plead contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff.

The Shreveport-Texarkana highway has a pavement seventeen and one-half feet wide in the center. On each side of this pavement there is a strip of road about five feet wide which is graveled. On July 7, 1924, the plaintiff and her sister, Mrs. Cain, were traveling this road on foot going north. They were walking on the right-hand side of the road on the graveled strip. The two sisters were walking side by side, Mrs. Hanson, the plaintiff, being on the side next to the pavement, and her sister, Mrs. Cain, on the outside, next to the ditch.

The defendant, Gourrier, was in his automobile going north on the road, and as. he overtook them the right-hand fender of his car struck the plaintiff, inflicting the injuries of which she complains.

[48]*48As we understand the case, it is admitted by counsel on both sides that if the plaintiff was walking on the graveled portion of the road referred to.by counsel as a “place of safety” and was struck by the automobile while on this place of safety, then the defendants are liable. On the contrary, if the driver of the automobile did not leave the paved portion of the road and if the plaintiff left her side of the road and got up on the paved portion thereof in front of the automobile so suddenly that it was impossible for the driver of the car to avoid the accident, then the defendants are not liable.

The whole case, therefore, hinges on the point whether the plaintiff was over on the graveled portion of the road when struck or whether she was on the paved part.

The 'testimony all shows that there was no reason or necessity for the driver of the car to leave the paved portion of the road nor was there any reason why the plaintiff should leave the graveled portion thereof and go over on the pavement.

The plaintiff contends that the driver of the car left the pavement and ran his car over on the graveled portion of the road where she was walking and struck her, and as there was no reason or necessity for him to do so he was grossly negligent and therefore liable.

On the contrary, defendants say that the driver of the car did not leave the pavement but that the plaintiff got on the paved portion of the road unexpectedly by him and that when he discovered her there he could not stop his car in time to avoid the collision.

The accident occurred about 8 o’clock P. M. on the evening of July 7, 1924. The witness says it was about “dusk dark”. At any rate, it was dark enough to make it necessary for motorists to put on their ■lights.

All the testimony shows that the plaintiff and her sister were walking along the road on the right-hand side on the graveled part of the road usually used by pedestrians. Both plaintiff and her sister testify that they were walking close together éngaged in conversation. Neither, it seems, was aware that an automobile was approaching them from the rear. The plaintiff says that she did not hear the car nor did she observe the lights; ' that the first knowledge she had of the presence of the car was when it struck and knocked her down. She is positive in her statement that at the time she was struck she was on the graveled portion of the road and that at no time did she go on the pavement until Gourrier’s car struck her. Mrs. Cain, plaintiff’s sister, says that plaintiff was walking by her side when •the car struck her. She is positive that plaintiff did not leave the graveled portion of the road until struck by the car. She says,' also, that the car ran very close to her, Mrs. Cain, so close that it “swished” her skirts around her ankles. She did not see the car hit her sister as the car approached them from the rear and they were both looking forward.

The defendant Gourrier’s version of the accident is substantially as follows: He was driving north on the paved portion of the road at a moderate rate of speed, about fifteen miles an hour. He saw the plaintiff and her sister walking on the right-hand side of the road on the graveled portion. When he saw them they were about fifty feet ahead of him, and he says that he was looking at them from the moment he first saw them until his car struck plaintiff. He says that he was over on the right-hand side of the paved part of the road and moving in a- straight [49]*49line and that if plaintiff had continued to walk along the gravel his car would have missed her about eighteen inches or two feet. He says that just as he overtook them the plaintiff either stumbled, stepped or fell over on the pavement in front of his car when it was so close to her that it was impossible for him to stop it in time to avoid the accident.

Aside from some conflicting statements, Gourrier’s testimony is that his car at no time left the paved portion of the road and that plaintiff in some way left the place of safety where she was walking and got in front of his car on the pavement.

His testimony on the main point is corroborated by that of Mr. Golden and his wife and Mrs. Hughes, all three of whom were traveling in an automobile going south on the same road, meeting the other parties at the scene of the accident. Each of these witnesses says that plaintiff and her sister were walking on the side of the road on the gravel as the Gourrier car overtook them; that the Gourrier car was on the paved part of the road, and just at the moment that the car overtook them the plaintiff stepped, stumbled or fell over onto the paved part of the road immediately in front of the car. They each use about the same language in describing how she got onto the pavement. She either “stumbled or fell” or stepped onto the pavement.

We think it fair to state with reference to the testimony of these witnesses that they believe that plaintiff either “stumbled or fell” over onto the paved portion of the road.

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Related

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6 La. App. 137 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 46, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-texas-co-lactapp-1925.