Harrelson v. McCook

198 So. 532, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 345
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1940
DocketNo. 6172.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 198 So. 532 (Harrelson v. McCook) 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
Harrelson v. McCook, 198 So. 532, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 345 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, the guest passenger of A. J. McCook, was injured when the new Buick automobile of the latter left the highway, descended into a parallel ditch and twice turned over. He sues McCook and his insurer, the Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, to recover damages on account of physical injuries, pain and suffering, physicians’ bills, for loss of earnings to the time of filing suit and for permanent impairment of earning capacity.

Plaintiff did not specifically charge that the action of the car in leaving the highway and turning over was attributable to the negligence of McCook. The petition, on this score, is conspicuously silent. It is alleged that the car was under the exclusive control and operation of McCook and while being driven by him it left the highway, ran into the ditch and turned over. The omission of allegations of negligence was not due to inadvertence. Plaintiff’s theory is that the facts of the case, so far as known to him and as reflected from his petition, warrant the application of the res ipsa loquitur rule.

Defendants excepted to the petition as disclosing1 neither a right nor a cause of action and as being vague. These exceptions were sustained with leave to amend. The court ruled that the allegations were insufficient to bring the case within the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, and this being true, specific charges of negligence were indispensable to the petition’s efficacy.

Plaintiff protested against the court’s ruling on the exceptions of no cause and no right of action, but to obviate dismissal of the suit, tendered an amendment in which it is alleged that the highway for at least one-half mile on each side of the locus of the accident is straight with no obstruction to vision or traffic thereon; that the center of the road is slightly higher than its edges; its surface rough, but when wet is slippery, and, therefore, operating an automobile thereon safely exacts of the driver the maximum of care and attention. Further, on information and belief, plaintiff alleges that McCook was guilty of the following acts of negligence, which, singly or together, caused the accident, to-wit:

“That defendant, A.1 J. McCook, was running in excess of 40 miles per hour, an excessive speed on this saddle-back, slick and rough road.
“That said defendant, A. J. McCook, was not attentive to the steering of his automobile or keeping close attention to same-and a firm grip on the steering wheel, •and that he allowed it to slide off the slick highway, or to be diverted by a bump, or he allowed his lookout to wander from the road and drove it off into the ditch.”

Defendants admit the occurrence of the accident at the time and place alleged, but deny that it happened because of any negligence or carelessness of McCook. They aver that it was due to the sudden and unforeseeable skidding of the car while being driven in a prudent manner. In the alternative, defendants plead that plaintiff was contributorily negligent and therefore is barred from recovery, in that he acquiesced in and approved the manner of operation of the car and its speed at the time of and prior to the accident. They also admit that plaintiff was injured, but not to the extent asserted by him.

Defendants appealed from a judgment against them for Two Thousand Ten and no/100 ($2,010) Dollars. Plaintiff here asks no increase in the award.

*534 The trial’judge has favored us with a written opinion wherein -he' discusses quite logically and fully the testimony and the issues of the case. He reached the conclusion that in view of the road’s slippery surface, at the time of the accident, the rate of speed at which McCook was then driving-was excessive and that this speed proximately caused the car to skid; and, in addition, that he was inattentive to his driving. These acts of negligence, the court specifically held, caused the accident. The plea of contributory negligence was rejected.

Plaintiff is engaged in the sale, repair and installation of refrigerating equipment and store fixtures. He was employed by McCook to install some fixtures for him in the village of Belcher, twenty miles north of Shreveport. McCook suggested to plaintiff that they make the trip to Belcher in his new Buick car as he desired to acquire more mileage thereon. •This was satisfactory to plaintiff. ;He rode beside McCook on the front seat. Rain was then falling and continued to fall to the time and place of the accident. The time was 8:30 A. M. The highway over which they traveled, excepting' some concrete sections, is surfaced with what is commonly referred to as “blacktop”. It becomes very slippery from rainfall. This sort of ■ topping surfaced the road where the accident occurred. The shoulders are three feet wide.-

McCook is positive the car skidded and became uncontrollable while going at a speed not more than forty' (40) miles per •hour, which he contends was not' then and there excessive nor unreasonable. Plaintiff is as equally certain that the car did not skid prior to loss of its control by McCook. There were no other eyewitnesses. Plaintiff did not know the rate of speed the car was traveling when its right wheels left the road. He guessed that the speed was around forty (40) miles per hour, however, he was not in a position to accurately gauge the speed as the car was closed and rain was then falling, unless he had been watching the speedometer, and this he was not doing.

. McCook also testified that immediately prior to the accident he was driving along the road’s center, “a little over on the other side”, and desiring to get on his proper side, undertook the appropriate move to do so. It was then, he says, that the car began to skid sidewise to its right. He ' further testified:

“Naturally, when that started to skid I caught hold of the steering wheel and pulled it around and shot the gas into it to try to throw it back on the road after it started to skid,”
“ * * * you know when it starts skidding, when it did, I tried to pull the car around; it skidded out to the edge; I caught hold and pulled the car around and shot the gas to it to try to pull it back on the road.' You know when a car skids you are helpless, you cannot do a thing in the world with it.”

He also says that the front wheels left the road first and that he “fought the car until it went over the embankment.” We interpret this as meaning that he strenuously endeavored to drive the car back upon the highway until it rammed the opposite ditch bank. He finally says that it “puzzled me how it happened”, and that the car came to stop about forty (40) feet from the point it left the road.

Plaintiff does not know what caused the car to leave the road. He became aware of its abnormal movements before it went into the ditch.

The téstimony discloses that the right wheels of the car traversed the wet dirt shoulders a distance of approximately seventy-five (75) feet before the car left the road. entirely and descended into the ditch; that it collided with a small stump in the bottom of the ditch or on the slope of its eastern bank, somersaulted twice and rested on all wheels facing south, a distance of approximately one hundred (100) feet from where it went into the ditch. From these antics, the trial court decided that the car’s speed was considerably in excess of forty (40) miles per hour.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 532, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrelson-v-mccook-lactapp-1940.