Johnson v. National Casualty Co.

176 So. 235
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1937
DocketNo. 1726.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 176 So. 235 (Johnson v. National 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. National Casualty Co., 176 So. 235 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Le BLANC, Judge.

Horace Johnson, young negro boy, fifteen years of age, son of Ignace and Louisa Johnson met his death on Saturday, August 24, 1935, under the following circumstances :

He lived with his parents, in the country, about seven miles east of the- city of Opelousas, in the parish of St. Landry. On the afternoon of August 24, 1935, he had ridden to Opelousas on his bicycle and there took in some of the attractions afforded the people of his race in a city of that size. He left a dance hall at about 11:30 and started out for home on his bicycle. His route took him to the blacktop highway leading from Opelousas to the town of Port Barre.' He was well beyond the city limits of Opelousas, when, in some manner which is a controverted point in the case, he became a passenger on a truck belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stelly, who operated a dairy business under the name of “Rose Dairy” in the same vicinity in which he resided. The driver of the truck was a negro named Leo Reed, employed by Mr. and Mrs. Stelly in their dairy business. Morris Johnson, brother of the deceased boy, who also worked for the Stellys, was with Reed in the truck. The owners of the truck carried public liability insurance with the National Casualty Company.

When he boarded the truck, Horace Johnson placed his bicycle on the running board on the right-hand side, and held it steady from his place on the right-hand tside of the driver’s seat.

They had gone about four miles on the highway and were at a point where there was an intersecting road when the truck crashed into a horse drawn wagon in which was a party of young people returning home from a dance. The wagon was not on the intersecting road but was coming on the same highway as the truck, from the opposite direction in which the truck was traveling. The force of the impact was so great that the wagon shaft or pole pierced the right front door of the cab of the truck, next to which the deceased boy was sitting, and struck him in the stomach, causing internal injuries from which he died about thirty minutes after.

His parents have instituted this suit seeking to recover damages in the sum of' $3,750, each. The suit is directed against Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stelly, the National Casualty Company, and Leo Reed. The last-named defendant is charged with extreme negligence in operating the truck by having failed to maintain a proper lookout and to keep it under such control as to be able to stop or properly manipulate it within the range of vision afforded by the headlights, which were burning at the time. Mr. and Mrs. Stelly are sought' *237 to be held liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior as it is alleged that Reed, the driver of the truck, was, at the time, acting within the’ scope of his employment by them in the conduct of their dairy business. The National Casualty Company is sued as the public liability insurance carrier on a policy of insurance covering the truck involved in the accident.

It is shown that shortly after the death of their son the plaintiffs had signed a document intended as a release in favor of the named defendants, but in their petition the same is attacked on the ground that their signature thereto had been obtained through misrepresentations, fraud, and deceit, and without any valid consideration, and also that the draft in the sum of $50 which they had received from the defendant insurance company under the terms of the said document was never indorsed or cashed by- them after they had learned the true significance of what was being perpetrated on them and had ascertained their real rights in connection with his death. They had offered to return the draft to the insurance company but the same was refused; so they annexed it to their petition and thus tendered its return to the insurance company.

The issues raised by the pleadings submitted on behalf of all defendants may be said to be the following: (1) On the part of them all, the plea that the deceased was a trespasser at the time of the accident and was riding on the truck at his. own risk. (2) A denial of the negligence charged against the driver of the truck, by all defendants, and, in the alternative, a plea of contributory negligence against the deceased. (3) On behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stelly and the defendant insurance company, the validity of the release executed by the plaintiffs under which they claim to be relieved of further liability, and on behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Stelly, the plea that they cannot be held liable under the plea of respondeat superior for the reason that the driver of the truck, Leo Reed, had been given positive instructions against permitting any one to ride on the truck which itself was equipped with a “No Riders” warning sign, and all of this to the knowledge of the deceased himself. Further, on behalf of Mrs. Stelly, the plea that if there should be any liability on their part that there can be no separate judgment rendered against her but one only against the community between them as the dairy business in which they were engaged was not her separate enterprise but one operated with community funds. (4) On behalf of the insurance company, a plea that it cannot be held under the policy as it contained a provision to the effect that the coverage afforded under a special paragraph, which is invoked, did not apply unless the injured party riding in the truck was so riding with the permission of the assured, which of course the deceased boy was not doing at the time of the accident.

With the issues as thus made, the case went to trial before the district judge whose term of office was to expire within a rather short period thereafter. He rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, dismissing the plaintiffs’ suit at their costs. His successor in office qualified within the delay fixed by law for applying for a new trial. The application was timely presented and a new trial granted. The case was then resubmitted to the presiding district judge on the record as made and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in the sum of $2,500 each, as against the defendants Leo Reed and the National Casualty Company, in solido, and a dismissal of the suit as against the other defendants Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stelly. Appeals, both suspensive and de-volutive, were granted to the two defendants cast by the judgment. The National Casualty Company perfected the suspen-sive appeal, Leo Reed took only the de-volutive. The plaintiffs did not appeal from that part of the judgment which dismissed their suit as against Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stelly, neither did they answer the appeal taken by the two other defendants. We are .therefore not concerned with any of the issues presented by their answers.

We will take up first the question of the validity, vel non,. of the document executed by the plaintiffs, which the defendants contend constitutes a full.release from liability in as much as a draft for the amount therein specified, to wit, the sum of $50, was delivered to the plaintiffs.

The circumstances under which the document was signed by these two illiterate negroes do not leave us with a favorable impression regarding its validity as a binding contract. The defendant insurance company’s sole object, of course, was to obtain and have executed a contract of compromise and settlement, under which *238

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Bluebook (online)
176 So. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-national-casualty-co-lactapp-1937.