Johnson v. Houston Fire & Casualty Co.

66 So. 2d 528, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 741
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1953
DocketNo. 7940
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 So. 2d 528 (Johnson v. Houston Fire & Casualty 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
Johnson v. Houston Fire & Casualty Co., 66 So. 2d 528, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 741 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

McINNIS, Judge.

This is a tort action by the Administra-trix of the estate of her husband, Jesse Willard (Pete) Johnson, and as Guardian of their four minor children, demanding $40,000 for the death of her husband which was caused by an automobile-truck collision. The tragic accident resulted from the collision of a truck and trailer loaded with poles, some forty feet in length, driven by Jesse Willard Johnson, with a 1950 Mex--cui'y Club Coupe automobile, (hereinafter referred to as the Mercury), driven by Claude Goocher, defendant’s insured. As a result of the collision the two vehicles caught on fire and both drivers lost their lives by being burned to death. Three other persons riding the track were also burned to death, and their legal representatives are plaintiffs in three other suits, consolidated with this suit for trial in the district court and in this court.

[529]*529After exceptions of no cause and no right of action were referred to the merits, answer was filed and trial had, resulting in judgment in favor of defendant. A de-volutive appeal from the judgment is prosecuted here.

The accident happened on State Highway 70, a black-topped road, leading from Summerfield to Haynesville, Louisiana, about one-fourth of a mile from Summer-field, at about 5:00 o’clock p. m., August 31, 1951. The highway runs generally in a northwest-southeast direction. Johnson was driving the truck toward Haynesville, in a northwesterly direction. Two other persons, Thomas R. Little and Bunyan Little were riding in the cab of the truck with the driver and Arthur Lee Johnson was riding on the back of the cab. As the truck driver approached a curve, the inside of which was on the north side of the highway, two automobiles were approaching from the opposite direction, traveling toward Summerfield. One was a Ford auomobile, driven by J. W. Gray, and the other the Mercury, driven by Claude Goocher. Gray had his two year old grandson in the car with him. They are the only survivors and the grandson was too young to testify, leaving Gray as the only eye, witness to the tragedy. Gray’s version of the happening is:

“As I approached this curve I saw a log truck coming around the curve; he had practically all of the road, and looked so much like he was taking all of it, until I immediately ran in the ditch to miss the truck.' He was blowing his horn at about all it would do; it sounded almost like a siren to me; and he was continuing to blow after I passed him. So I guess I must have gone up this ditch maybe a hundred feet from where I first took it, over a culvert and about the length of the car from the culvert when I was hit by the truck. It knocked me over against a little tree .and I guess threw the boy out, and the car turned over on top and back on the side and rolled arotínd there some few minutes, it seemed to me like, but anyway when I got out everything was on fire. As I passed over the driveway that goes up to Bay’s house and got up high, I saw a car on the opposite side, I could see over, the logs. That was before I was hit. I saw this just to glance at it, and it was turning back toward Haynesville, when I saw it, and about that time I was hit, and when I got out, this car was fastened under, someway, up there.
“They was all burning so much I expect I was probably a minute or two getting out of the car. I didn’t see anyone; there was so much fire and smoke, all I heard wa.s the cries of some man in the flames down there, but I still couldn’t see him. I guess I must have stood there some five minutes until people began to come in, and then I left.
“I didn’t know any car was behind me at all. I didn’t see it. It is a little up grade there, and the truck had just come over that grade, and I thought he had all of the road; probably lacked two feet of having all of the black-top, and when I saw the predicament I was in, I just immediately took the ditch.”

In answer to questions he estimated the speed of the truck at 35 miles. He said it was not going fast. He thinks the truck traveled 30 or 40 feet after it struck him. He says he was completely off the blacktop when his car was struck by some part of the truck.

Plaintiff charges that the accident resulted solely from the gross negligence of Claude Goocher in driving his automobile in a reckless manner in the following respects :

“1. Petitioner is informed and believes and on such information and belief alleges that immediately prior to and at the time of said accident, Claude Goocher was proceeding at an excessive rate of speed in a Southeasterly direction along Highway No. 70 Claiborne Parish, Louisiana, traveling in the direction of Summerfield, Louisiana.
“2. Petitioner is informed and believes and on such information and be[530]*530lief alleges that immediately prior to and at the time of said accident, Claude Goocher was intoxicated and under the influence of intoxicating beverages and was driving his vehicle in a reckless manner.
“3. Petitioner is informed and believes and on such information and belief alleges that said Claude Goocher attempted to pass an automobile on a curve and that said Claude Goocher failed to keep a proper lookout for the area toward which he was speeding.”

Defendant answered, denying the substantial allegations of the petition and alleging that the driver of the truck and the other men, riding with him, were joint adventurers, having a common interest in the performance of the mission in which they were engaged, with joint responsibility for expenses, and the right to joint control over the operation of the log truck and after setting forth defendant’s version of the manner in which the accident happened, alleges that the negligence of the truck driver and his joint adventurers was the proximate cause of the accident, in the following particular, but not exclusive, respects :

“(a) In driving on the wrong, or left hand side of the highway in violation of rules of common prudence and of the Rules of the Road of the State of Louisiana;
“(b) In driving around a curve, where visibility was limited, at a reckless and excessive rate of speed of approximately 45 miles per hour on a down-hill grade in a heavily loaded truck and trailer;
“(c) In failing to maintain a careful and proper lookout for other vehicles using the highway, such as the automobiles of Messrs. Gray and Goocher;
“(d) In failing to have said truck-trailer combination under careful and proper control, as required by law;
“(e) In failing to slow, stop or turn aside so as to avoid the collision;
“(f) In effectively blocking the highway to on-coming traffic;
“(g) In failing to sound a horn or give other audible warning of its approach.”

It is alleged in the alternative, and only in the event Goocher was negligent in any respect, that no recovery can be had because of contributory negligence of the truck driver and those riding with him, in the respects set forth above.

Plaintiff offered other witnesses in support of her theory of the cause of the accident.

Lynn Stagg saw Goocher in the G. & G. Grocery Store at Haynesville about 4:00 o’clock p. m., August 31, 1951. Goocher asked the witness to buy him a can of beer, and the witness told him he didn’t need it, and Goocher told him he already had a can.

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Related

Platt v. Scarborough
108 So. 2d 802 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)
Johnson v. El Dorado Creosoting Co.
71 So. 2d 613 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)
Little v. Houston Fire & Casualty Co.
66 So. 2d 532 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)
Johnson v. Houston Fire & Casualty Co.
66 So. 2d 533 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 So. 2d 528, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-houston-fire-casualty-co-lactapp-1953.