Herring v. Holicer Gas Co.

22 So. 2d 868, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 411
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 16, 1945
DocketNo. 6799.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 868 (Herring v. Holicer Gas 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
Herring v. Holicer Gas Co., 22 So. 2d 868, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 411 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

This is a damage suit wherein plaintiff seeks judgment against the Holicer Gas Company, Incorporated, and the carrier of its public liability insurance, the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, for physical injuries sustained by him and for the value of his automobile destroyed in a collision between it and a trailer owned by the gas company; also for loss of time from business, due to the collision. The *Page 870 accident occurred a few minutes after midnight of March 16, 1944, on Highway No. 80, between the cities of Shreveport and Minden, Louisiana, a few miles west of the Louisiana Ordnance Plant.

The facts of the case are largely removed from dispute.

Defendant is engaged in retailing butane gas, which it transports in tanks affixed to trailers drawn by motor trucks. Plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was working in said Ordnance Plant. His shift went off duty at midnight. He immediately repaired to his automobile and after picking up five other workmen, started to Shreveport where all lived.

Defendant's trailer was loaded with three thousand (3,000) gallons of gas. It had left Shreveport and was destined for Minden. The driver was not well acquainted with the highway to Minden and when a few miles west of the Ordnance Plant, decided he was on the wrong road. He continued easterly until he came to a place he thought was sufficiently wide to admit turning the truck and trailer around. At this place the main highway is intersected by a narrow unimproved road. The driver decided to make the turn by backing the trailer northerly into the intersecting road and then drive the truck gradually westerly. There was no traffic in sight in either direction. After backing a short distance he stopped the motor, got out and inspected the locus. To aid him in guiding the backward movement of the trailer, he placed an empty tin box on his left side of the road and then got back into the truck. He had backed only a few feet more when he observed the lights of plaintiff's car coming toward him over a rise in the road approximately 4 of a mile away. At that time his truck was facing easterly on the south side of the highway and the trailer was diagonally across the road, traversing entirely the north half of the concrete portion thereof. The driver then undertook to clear plaintiff's side of the road by driving forward, but became excited and killed the motor. He tried but failed to again start it. While in the position above described, plaintiff's car ran into the side of the trailer, causing the damages for which sued.

Plaintiff's action is buttressed upon the following acts of negligence of the gas company's driver, to-wit:

That the truck and trailer, parked crosswise the highway, effectually blocked traffic thereon; that the trailer was without lights to apprise motorists of its presence and location; that flares were not placed on the road as required by law; that the lights of the truck were very bright and were not dimmed by the driver as plaintiff approached him, although he was signalled several times to do so. Plaintiff affirms absence of any negligence on his part as a cause or a contributory cause of the accident.

Defendants deny that the driver was to any extent negligent in the handling and operation of the truck and trailer, and aver that at the time and place he sought to turn them he had the right to do so; that the vehicles were not parked within legal contemplation, but were momentarily stalled, and, therefore, there rested on him no duty, legal or otherwise, to place flares on the road. They pleaded, in the alternative, that plaintiff's own contributory negligence bars recovery by him, such negligence consisting of the following elements:

That he was driving in the night time without having the lights on his car so adjusted as to be able to see at least two hundred (200) feet ahead of him; that he failed to have his car under such control that it was possible to stop it when he saw or should have seen the trailer blocking his side of the highway; that he did not maintain a careful lookout for objects in front of him which were disclosed by his headlights; that he did not stop his car or slow it down as he approached the truck after observing its presence on the road. Further, in the alternative, defendants plead that plaintiff had the last clear chance to avoid the accident.

Plaintiff was awarded damages for pain and suffering, loss of business and loss of time from work, in the sum of Seven Hundred Eighty-Six ($786) Dollars, and for Nine Hundred Seventy-Five ($975) Dollars, the value of his automobile, less salvage. Defendants prosecute appeal from this judgment. Answering the appeal, appellee prays for increase in the judgment to the extent of One Thousand ($1,000) Dollars.

When plaintiff first observed the truck's lights, then over seven hundred (700) yards therefrom, he was traveling at thirty-five (35) miles per hour. He released the gas feed and his speed fell to from twenty-five (25) to thirty (30) miles per hour. His testimony that he put on the dimmers several times before the collision, and that *Page 871 the driver of the truck did not respond by doing likewise, is corroborated by a passenger riding on the front seat with him. The truck driver testified that he did dim his lights after seeing those of plaintiff, but in this he is probably in error since he became so excited that he killed his motor and could not again start it, notwithstanding it was in first class running condition.

Plaintiff also testified and again he is corroborated by one of the passengers, that notwithstanding the truck's lights were very bright, and were not dimmed, his own lights enabled him to observe conditions on the road to the truck, but not beyond. He also testified that he believed all the while that the truck was moving toward him. Neither he nor any of the passengers who testified saw the trailer until the front end of the truck had been passed. It was then too late to avert the collision, although there was room enough for the car to pass on the shoulder at the trailer's rear end.

[1, 2] That the driver of the truck was grossly negligent in attempting to turn it and the trailer at the time and place mentioned, it seems to us, is not open to debate. It is certain that to effect a complete reversal in the position of the vehicles on the highway enough time was required to allow motor vehicles several miles away, traveling at legal rates of speed, to reach the scene before the turn could be completed.

The place where the turn was attempted is not far west of the Ordnance Plant. A large number of persons worked there; in fact, work is continuous, requiring three eight hour shifts. Many of these workmen, probably a large majority of them, go to and from the Plant in automobiles. Traffic on the highway, for this and other reasons, is heavy night and day. This is reflected from the fact that several cars passed the scene of the accident immediately following the collision, and the hour was past midnight. And, it is equally true, that the driver's negligence was active down to the time of the collision. His status was not the same as would be that of a motorist who had parked his car on his proper side of the highway at night and left it there. Under the circumstances the absence of flares on each side of the trailer does not amount to negligence.

In view of the foregoing conclusions it is necessary to determine if plaintiff negligently operated his car from the time he saw the head lights of the truck to the moment of the collision; and if he was negligent in not seeing the trailer in time to avoid colliding with it; and, if so, was such negligence the or a proximate cause of the accident?

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 2d 868, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-holicer-gas-co-lactapp-1945.