Jinks v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co. of Wisconsin

45 So. 2d 918, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 574
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 1950
DocketNo. 7498
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 So. 2d 918 (Jinks v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co. of Wisconsin) 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
Jinks v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co. of Wisconsin, 45 So. 2d 918, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 574 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO,-Judge: '

'The' four door Nash sedan of the co-partnership o'f Jinks and Clark Insurance Agency, composed of. James R. Jinks and John F. Clark, residents of the City of Shreveport, Louisiana, was damaged from forceful contact with 'a Chevrolet stake body truck of Norman'D. Perkins, doing business as'Caddo Wholesale Beer Distributors, in the town of Bossier City, Louisiana, in the day time, on September 17, 1948. At the time of the accident the automobile was being driven by said Jinks. He was accompanied' by his partner, Clark. They were proceeding south on U. S. Highway No. 71, sometimes called Barksdale Boulevard, en route to Barksdale Field, on partnership business. The truck was proceeding in the same direction, and was being driven by defendant’s agent, Charles Tuminello.

Both occupants of the Nash car suffered physical injuries in the accident. They sued for damages on that account, and the partnership sued to recover the amount expended to repair .the car. The suit is against Norman D. Perkins and his insurer, Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Company of Wisconsin.

Plaintiffs allege that as their car drew close to the truck; desiring to pass the same, the horn was sounded as a signal of their intention to pass, and promptly thereafter the car was pulled to its left- and into the left lane; that while occupying that position and while alongside, of the truck the driver thereof, without giving any warning or signal of .his: intention so to -do, suddenly swerved the truck to, his left, causing it to encroach upon the east lane of the [920]*920highway and to strike the Nash car about the handle of the right front door thereof ; that the impact was so heavy the driver of the Nash car lost control thereof, and it proceeded some thirty yards down the highway and finally rested in the ditch on the east side thereof. The negligence of the truck driver, in the respects mentioned, is alleged to have been the proximate cause of the accident and the resulting injury and damages.

Defendants deny that the accident occurred because of any negligence of the truck driver. They charge that the accident was due wholly, to the negligence of the driver of the Nash in that the accident occurred when he was attempting to pass the truck while traveling at a speed in excess of the limit fixed by ordinance of the Town of Bossier ■ City; that he was negligent in attempting to pass the truck when too close to it, and in not maintaining proper control of his vehicle and not maintaining a proper watch of the highway.

In the alternative,' defendants allege that plaintiffs’ contributory negligence in the respects mentioned -bars recovery by them or either of them. ■ ■

Further, in the alternative, defendants plead that should the truck driver be found to have been negligent as a cause or proximate cause of the accident, in that event he' should be exonerated'therefrom because his action arose as the result of a sudden emergency that was created by a pedestrian suddenly darting into the path of the vehicle he was driving, and his efforts to escape running over him.

Defendants further aver that said co-partners, when the accident occurred, were on a joint mission in a jointly owned vehicle, under their joint control, and that the negligence of the one is imputable to the other. • •

There was judgment for each of the plaintiffs and defendants appealed.. Plaintiff Jinks individually answered the- appeal and asked for-increase in the judgment in his favor to the amount sued for.

The facts of the case are, with one exception, not in controversy. • The exception has to do with the relative position of the vehicles when contact between them occurred.

Mr. Jinks testified that the Nash car was traveling at the rate of between twenty-five and thirty miles per hour and that the truck was making about the same speed; that as he drew close to the truqk he pulled the Nash slightly to his left in order to observe traffic conditions in the left lane, and finding them favorable he undertook to pass the truck. Pie is positive that prior to doing this he sounded the horn to apprise the truck driver of his presence and desire to pass him; that after straightening out his car in the left lane and when parallel to the truck, the driver thereof suddenly swerved it to the left and that contact between the vehicles then, occurred. The Nash was struck about the handle of the rear right door and its right rear fender was crushed. Jinks and Clark are sure some part of the left side of the stake body, while the vehicles were traveling side by side, scraped the Nash. Anyway, the violent contact was followed by loss of control by Jinks. If the Nash car wa.« traveling at the moderate speed contended by plaintiffs, it must, have been accelerated after the contact as its speed was rapid thereafter until it rested in the east side ditch.

Jinks’ testimony is corroborative of that of Clark’s. There is virtually no difference between them as regards the facts.

We are quite certain the accident did nqt happen precisely in the manner Jinks and Clark think. Had the vehicles collided after the Nash had straightened out in the east lane and after the truck had veered to its left, there would have remained evidence of the contact on the vehicles toward their forward ends. As it was, the truck sustained no injury whatever. Its left rear corner, after the accident, was observed to be colored with paint of the same hue as that of the Nash car at the locus of the door injury. Police officers who investigated the accident immediately thereafter, reached the conclusion that no part of the -truck’s body contacted the car save the mefitioned corner. And we agree with them. From this conclusion follows the ultimate conclusion that this corner scraped the Nash [921]*921while it was being driven into the east lane of traffic, and likely the contact occurred simultaneously with the. truck’s left .movement to avoid running over the pedestrian. When the truck’s left front end crossed the medial line, necessarily its left rear corner slightly moved westward,

The operator of the truck and his assistant testified that -they did not hear the signal allegedly given by the Nash driver,' nor did they know that the vehicles had contacted until after the Nash car, out of control, passed them.

It • is true, as alleged, that immediately prior to the accident, a Negro child, four years old, suddenly ran from the west athwart the path the truck then not over fifteen feet away, but reversed its course in time to escape being run. over. The action of this child was the cause of the truck being suddenly swerved to its left.

To offset the alternative defense of sudden emergency, appellees say that as the child and two other children with him, were in plain view, approaching the highway, the truck driver should have reduced his speed and brought the truck under such control as to have.obviated the necessity of swerving it to the left to avoid an accident, if either child had acted as the one in question did. It is our view that this point is not pivotal. But, in passing,, we do say that regardless of the rate.of speed at which a vehicle is traveling when an'emergency of this character suddenly "Confronts him, the driver will instantaneously swerve his vehicle to his left, as though by involuntary action, and without any effort to pbserve traffic conditions behind him. If he should take time to ascertain traffic conditions to the rear, that action would enhance the chances for an accident. The element of time is pivotal.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Courtault v. Government Employees Insurance Co.
169 So. 2d 592 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
Whittington v. Gully
164 So. 2d 57 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
Leroy v. Methvin
81 So. 2d 138 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 So. 2d 918, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jinks-v-employers-mut-liability-ins-co-of-wisconsin-lactapp-1950.