Huskey v. Maryland Cas. Co.

53 So. 2d 174, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 748
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 30, 1951
DocketNo. 7615 A
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 So. 2d 174 (Huskey v. Maryland Cas. 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
Huskey v. Maryland Cas. Co., 53 So. 2d 174, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 748 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

This is a suit arising from an automobile accident between plaintiff’s 1941 model Pontiac Sedan and a truck trailer unit owned by the defendant, Roy L. Beaver. The Maryland Casualty Company, Beaver’s liability insurer, was joined as party defendant. After trial there was judgment in favor of defendants rejecting plaintiff’s demands, from which plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The accident occurred about 6:00 p. m. on November 20, 1948, at a point known as Lloyd’s Bridge on JJ. S. Highway No. 71 in Rapides Parishsouth of the Town of Le-Compte. At the time' plaintiff was driving south at a speed of approximately forty-five miles per hour and the truck trailer unit of [176]*176the defendant, Beaver, heavily loaded with bundles of sugar cane, weighing some 28,-000 to 35,000 pounds, more or less, was proceeding north, at a speed of about fifteen miles per hour. Immediately before the vehicles met plaintiff alleges that the driver of the Beaver truck switched his .lights from dim to bright, momentarily blinding plaintiff; that as plaintiff passed the beam of the truck’s lights he was confronted with a large bundle of sugar cane which had apparently fallen from the truck into plaintiff’s right-hand highway lane; that he swerved to the left but was unable to avoid striking the bundle of cane, which threw his car out of control off the highway embankment on 'the east side thereof where it overturned in the water of the bayou, which was some two feet deep at the point. Plaintiff and his wife, who was on the front seat of the car with him, were turned upside down in the water and only extricated themselves with some difficulty. As the result of the accident it is alleged that both plaintiff and his wife sustained physical injuries and shock, as particularly set forth in the petitions of their separate suits. 'Further claims are made by both plaintiff and his wife for the loss of various personal belongings, particularly described and valued, and additionally plaintiff claims recovery for the cost of repairs to his automobile.

Plaintiff bases his right to recover damages on the charge that the cane was improperly loaded, as the result whereof a bundle of cane became dislodged from its place in the truck and fell to the highway, thereby creating the unexpected hazard and danger which was the sole and proximate cause of the accident.

The defense is predicated upon denial of any negligence on the part of defendant, Beaver, or his employees in improperly loading the cane truck, and, alternatively, contributory negligence is pleaded as against plaintiff, Huskey, in that he was traveling at a high rate of speed, failing to observe the bundle of cane on the highway, and to bring his car under control, thereby avoiding the accident. ,

Upon these issues the case was tried, developing the usual conflict of testimony between the witnesses for the respective parties.

Immediately ahead of plaintiff’s vehicle, and proceeding in the same direction on the highway just prior to the .accident, was a truck .and empty cane trailer unit, similar in nature to the Beaver unit, belonging to the Haas Investment Company, which was returning to Bunlcie after having delivered a load of cane to the refinery at Meeker. According to the testimony of the driver of the Haas truck,' as it passed the Beaver unit, a projecting bundle of cane fell from the top of the load over the side of the trailer to the highway. The driver testified that the cane in falling shattered his rear view mirror, bending the extension arm to ’the rear. This witness further testified that the wheels of his, trailer did not run over the bundle of cane but that lie felt the bundle strike the deft rear wheel of his trailer. The driver proceeded .to pull his unit over to his right where he brought it to a stop and returned to the point where the cane had fallen to the highway. Meanwhile the accident had transpired..

It is contended by defendants that the Haas truck actually sideswiped the Beaver trailer and that the force of the impact dislodged the half bundle of cane causing it to fall into the west lane of the highway.

We have referred to the cane which caused the accident as being a half bundle, a description which is one of the few un-contradicted facts in the record. This half bundle was apparently some three to four feet in diameter and weighed between two and three thousand pounds. In this connection it is necessary to advert to a description of the usual and apparently customary method of loading these cane trailers according to the testimony of witnesses experienced in the process. The Beaver cradle-like trailer, in which the bundles of cane were loaded, had sides fifty inches in height topped by ..vertical standards- of eighteen inches, giving a total height of some five feet eight inches. The trailer itself is approximately eight feet in width by twenty-two feet in length. In preparing the cane for loading bundles are made up of interlaced stalks of cane about three stalks long in overall length. Two chains [177]*177are then hound about the bundles near either end and the interlacing of the -stalks is depended upon to hold the bundle in 'the middle. While there is‘a sharp-divérgencé of opinion as to the usual load, it appears to vary from five to nine bundles. The Beaver truck at the time of the accident was carrying seven bundles. In the process of loading one bundle was placed in the center of the trailer toward the front and two bundles wére then dropped on either side. Similarly the rear end of the truck was loaded with three bundles of cane. Inasmuch as the average length of a bundle is shown to he about fourteen feet it is to be observed that the bundles placed "end-to-end would have a total length of some twenty-eight feet or about six feet more than the length of the trailer. A part of the projecting ends of the rear bundles is accommodated by the lowered tail-gate of the trailer but, even so, the rear bundles project some two and one-half feet beyond the rear of the trailer. This -method;of loading obviously takes care of six bundles of cane. • The seventh bundle, in this instance, .-was placed in the center .of the trailer on top of the lower six bundles.

It is contended by defendants that this established method of loading is safe and does not constitute an overload nor any hazard or danger. In support of this contention -certain of defendants’ witnesses testified that the top or seventh bundle extended only about six inches above the standards of the trailer. We do not consider this testimony to be accurate nor can it be reconciled with the physical facts. Accepting the testimony, of defendants’ witnesses as to the size of a bundle of cane being some four feet in diameter, we are at a loss to understand how the method of loading described could accommodate seven bundles in such manner as to prevent the top bundle from being more than six inches above the standards. This argument would indicate that the top of the seventh bundle was only six feet two inches above the floor of the trailer. Even making an exaggerated allowance for the packing down of the bundles, which is done by agitating them, we cannot conceive any method of calculation by which the top of the seventh bundle could be less than eight feet above the trailer bed, or two feet four inches above the standards. It also must be borne in mind that this top or seventh bundle rests, unsecured by chains and unconfined by the sides or standards of the trailer, in its place in the load.

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 2d 174, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huskey-v-maryland-cas-co-lactapp-1951.