Johnson v. Fabacher

175 So. 129, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 280
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1937
DocketNo. 16663.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 175 So. 129 (Johnson v. Fabacher) 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
Johnson v. Fabacher, 175 So. 129, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 280 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Mrs. Neville Johnson sustained personal injuries in an automobile collision at the corner of Marengo and Freret Streets on October 1, 1935,' at about 2:30 o’clock in the afternoon. The motor vehicles involved were a Ford “V-8” Tudor sedan, occupied by Mrs. Johnson and her husband and driven by her, and a Chevrolet truck owned by defendant Albert Fabacher, Jr., doing business as Hammond Dairy Company, and operated at the time by a colored chauffeur, Edward Gremillion, who admittedly was acting within the scope of his employment. The other defendant, New Amsterdam Casualty Company, is the liability insurance carrier of defendant Fa-bacher.

The Ford sedan was rather seriously damaged, as were various articles which were being transported in it, and Mr. Johnson seeks recovery for the amount expended in repairing the car, the amount of damage sustained by the personal effects, and for the costs of hospital and medical services rendered to Mrs. Johnson.

Mrs. Johnson’s injuries consisted, in the main, of several fractures of the bones of her left hand, and for her personal injuries she prays for judgment in the sum of $6,000.

Plaintiffs allege that the Ford was being driven out Marengo street in the direction of Lake Pontchartrain and that, as it reached the corner of Freret street, it was brought to a full stop by Mrs. Johnson alongside a “stop” sign erected in compliance with the traffic ordinance of the city of New Orleans, No. 13702, C.C.S.; that at that point both Mr. and Mrs. Johnson looked down Freret street to see if any vehicle was approaching on that street; that as they looked they saw the Chevrolet *130 truck coming up Freret street about a block away and at a speed which did not appear to them sufficient to bring the Chevrolet to the crossing before their Ford could pass to the other side; that Mrs. Johnson then started the Ford across Freret street; that the crossing was made at a moderate ■ speed' — -in their testimony they fix it at from 8 to 10 miles per hour — and that, as the Ford had practically completed the crossing, the Chevrolet truck, which had been approaching at an extraordinarily fast speed, crashed into the right rear of the Ford, hurled it completely across Mar-engo street, and turned it over on its side, partially on the grass plot, between the curb and the sidewalk; that the Ford had pre-empted the intersection; and that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of the driver of the Chevrolet truck in not according .to the Ford the right of way to which plaintiffs allege it was entitled by reason of its having entered the intersection first.

Defendants maintain that the truck approached the intersection at a moderate speed and that, just before it reached Mar-engo street, the Ford, without stopping, dashed across in front; that the rear of its right side “sideswiped” the front of the truck just as it was being brought to a stop; that the speed of the Ford was so great that it continued on for some distance, crossed to the upper side of Marengo street, and turned over 20 or 30 feet from the corner, after its front wheels had mounted the curb, which was 6 or 8 inches high.

■ The jury rendered a verdict in favor of Mr. Johnson for $696.75 and in favor of Mrs. Johnson for $3,000. From a judgment based on this verdict, defendants have appealed. Plaintiffs have answered the appeal, conceding that the judgment in favor of Mr. Johnson is correct, maintaining, however, that it should be amended so as to award to Mrs. Johnson the amount originally prayed for.

The question presented is solely one of fact, and the two versions of the accident cannot be reconciled. In support of the testimony of plaintiffs there is practically no evidence, whereas the physical facts overwhelmingly corroborate the testimony of the driver of the truck and that of the witness whose version of the accident coincides with that of the driver.

In the first place, it is obvious that, as plaintiffs reached the corner and commenced to cross, the truck was not so far away as they say it was, because, had it been a block away when they stopped (if they did stop) and had it been three-quarters of a block away when the Ford commenced its progress across Freret street, it is obvious that there would have been no accident, because it is not claimed that the speed of the truck was greater than about 30 or 35 miles per hour, and it is conceded that the speed of the Ford was about 8 or 10 miles ‘per hour, and it is impossible to believe that, had the facts been as stated by plaintiffs, the Ford would not have completely crossed Freret street and safely started on its way out Marengo street. The distance across Freret street is not more than 30 or 40 feet and, if plaintiffs’ version of the accident is correct, the Ford was already moving and had only to traverse that distance while the truck, approaching at about 35 miles per hour, had more than 200 feet to go.

In Thibodeaux v. Star Checker Cab Co., 143 So. 101, 103, we said: “It is very difficult for us to accept his statement that he saw the taxicab about a block away and that it struck his car before he could complete the crossing, for the taxicab would have had to be going at a terrific rate of speed to have covered the distance in so short a period of time. Yet all the evidence shows that it came to rest a very short distance from the point of contact.”

Mr. Johnson stated that when the truck hit the rear of the Ford the former stopped with “the front part * * * slightly in Marengo Street and most of it * * * still in Freret Street.” If the truck stopped with the front portion in the position described by Mr. Johnson, it was only a very few feet from the point at which the impact took place, and it could not-have been going at any great speed when the collision occurred. Yet Johnson testifies that the truck was proceeding at a speed of “between thirty and thirty-five when he struck us.” Had that been the fact, obviously it could not have stopped immediately, as the witnesses agree that it did.

Another fact which cannot be reconciled with plaintiffs’ theory is that the damage to the Ford car was largely sustained by its left side. If the truck had crashed into its right rear at the terrific speed claimed — so hard that it knocked it across the street and turned it over — surely severe damage would have resulted at the point of impact, and surely, also, had the truck dashed headlong into the Ford the damage to the truck *131 would have been sustained across its entire front — its right side as well as its left— and the headlights and the bumper would have been crushed backwards into the front of the radiator. But the evidence shows that the damage sustained by the truck was, in the main, on the left front side and that the bumper and the fender and the left headlight were not crushed backwards into the radiator, but slightly forward and to the right. The front bumper is shown to have been broken loose at the left end and to have been twisted to the right and slightly forward and the left fender and the headlight were also bent to the right. Mr. Muntz, the mechanic who repaired the truck, in describing the damage to the bumper, said: “The bumper, you see, runs across the truck and the ties on to the chassis, which is about ten inches from the chassis, was pulled out, and out, like a hinge would open, toward the front of the truck.”

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 129, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-fabacher-lactapp-1937.