Interurban Transp. Co. v. F. Strauss & Sons

196 So. 367, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 68
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1940
DocketNo. 6154.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 196 So. 367 (Interurban Transp. Co. v. F. Strauss & Sons) 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
Interurban Transp. Co. v. F. Strauss & Sons, 196 So. 367, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 68 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

*368 DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit to recover damages caused to one of its buses by a collision with a truck owned and operated by defendant. For a cause of action, plaintiff alleged:

“Petitioner shows that at about 1:20 P. M., on the said date, its passenger bus was proceeding in a southerly direction on U. S. Highway 165, traveling at about 40 miles per hour. Petitioner shows that as its said passenger bus approached a place on the highway where a small bar and filling station, known as the Pine Bar, is situated, the bus driver observed the defendants’ truck and trailer some distance phead of the car, also traveling in a southerly direction, at which time the said truck and trailer were on the extreme right side of the highway, slowing down and traveling at a very slow speed as if to come to a stop on the right side of the road.
“Petitioner shows that the driver and operator of said truck, one Harold Turner, failed to give any signal of an intention to alter the course of the said truck and from his position apparently intended to stop on the right side of the road.
“Petitioner shows that as the bus approached within 100 yards of the said truck and trailer, the bus driver blew his horn and pulled to the left to indicate his intention to pass the said truck and trailer of the defendant; that he proceeded to pass, blowing his horn several times as he neared the truck, but that when the bus reached a point within about 50 feet of the rear of the truck, defendants’ truck driver, without giving any signal or warning whatever, turned the truck and trailer abruptly toward the left, apparently for the purpose of entering a private driveway on his left, thereby blocking and obstructing the path of the bus.
“Petitioner shows that when the defendants’ truck driver began the said turn, moving slowly, the bus driver immediately applied his emergency brakes, which were in perfect condition, in an effort to stop, and blew his horn to warn the driver of the truck ahead to bring his truck to a stop and allow the bus to pass. However, petitioner shows that the said truck driver never did stop the movement of the truck, with the result that it completely blocked the path of petitioner’s bus, thereby causing the bus to collide with the left side of the truck, due to the fact that the distance was too short for petitioner’s bus driver to stop the bus before the collision.
“6. Petitioner shows that the said collision was caused by the gross negligence of the defendants’ truck driver- in making a left turn across the highway without giving any signal or warning of his intention to do so, and in his failing to hear the horn of the bus and stop his truck in time to avoid the collision.”

Plaintiff itemizes its damages as follows:

“Parts, labor, freight & express $ 726.31
10% for supervision, etc. 72.63
Relief bus from Olla to Alexandria .15.00
Towing from Olla to Alexandria . 15.00
Loss of time for 21 days. 210.00
Total . $1038.94”

It made party defendant the United Employers Casualty Insurance Company, -of Houston, Texas, the alleged public liability insurer of defendant, and prayed for judgment, in solido, against all defendants, including the defendant partnership and each of its members.

Defendant filed exceptions of no cause or right of action, which were not tried below and are not urged here.

The Gulf Insurance Company intervened in the suit alleging it carried a policy of collision insurance on defendant’s truck and was therefore vitally interested in the outcome of the suit; that it had paid to defendant $389.36 to cover the damage for which it was liable. It alleged freedom from negligence on the part of defendant and actionable negligence on the part of plaintiff. These allegations are the same as were made by defendant in answer, which will be hereafter stated. It prayed for judgment against plaintiff for the sum it had paid out.

Plaintiff answered the petition of' intervention and denied liability and in defense reiterated the allegations made in its petition.

Defendant F. Strauss & Sons and its insurer answered denying the principal allegations of plaintiff’s petition and also denying there was any negligence on the part of the driver of its truck. It further answered as follows:

“11. Now further answering, your respondents aver that on February 2, 1939, *369 Harold Turner was driving an International Trailer Truck of F. Strauss & Sons, turning into a vacant space immediately to the north of the Pine Bar, approximately two miles south of Grayson, Louisiana, in Caldwell Parish, when a bus of the Interurban Transportation Company, Inc., being driven by one of its employees, in the course and scope of its business, in a highly careless and negligent manner with an utter disregard for the safety of others, ran into the left side of the truck of F. Strauss & Sons, as will be more fully set out elsewhere herein.
“12. Your respondents aver that the accident occurred at a point on U. S. Highway 165, approximately two miles south of Grayson; that the highway at this point is an ordinary, black-topped highway which, because of the fact that it has become worn and settled in spots, is very rough, making it extremely dangerous to drive even a small passenger automobile over it at a speed in excess of 30 miles an hours. That the highway is approximately 18 feet in width and extends in approximately a northerly and southerly direction and is straight for a distance of approximately 150 yards, and in a southerly direction for approximately one-fourth mile. That at the time of the accident sued on, the Pine Bar, an ordinary frame building with a shed and filling-station pump, located approximately 8 feet in front of same, were located approximately 10 feet east of the easterly tip of the black-topped portion of the highway.
“13. Your respondents aver that Harold Turner was driving the afore-described truck of F. Strauss & Sons in a southerly direction on the afore-described highway just north of the Pine Bar on his right side of the highway at a very slow and careful rate of speed, preparatory to turning to his left into a vacant clearing of space situated just north of the Pine Bar, on his left. That Turner, before starting to turn to his left, slowed his truck down, looked to his rear view mirror, saw no one approaching, held his left hand out of the window of the cab of his truck and then started to turn.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 367, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interurban-transp-co-v-f-strauss-sons-lactapp-1940.