Johnson v. Whitfield

89 So. 2d 413
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1956
Docket4250
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 89 So. 2d 413 (Johnson v. Whitfield) 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. Whitfield, 89 So. 2d 413 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

89 So.2d 413 (1956)

Kate Evans JOHNSON
v.
Emmitt WHITFIELD.

No. 4250.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

June 29, 1956.
Rehearing Denied September 24, 1956.

Barnes & Smith, Baton Rouge, for appellant.

Ralph L. Roy, Baton Rouge, for appellee.

ELLIS, Judge.

Plaintiff was a guest passenger in a car owned and being operated by Morris Sholes which, at about 2:30 A.M. on the 7th day of March, 1954, collided with a car owned and being driven by the defendant Whitfield. From an adverse judgment she has appealed to this Court.

Sholes had taken the plaintiff from Baton Rouge to visit her children in New Orleans, and they were accompanied by Hannah Lee Minor, plaintiff's cousin, who had been returned to her home in Baton Rouge prior to the accident. Sholes and the plaintiff then decided that they were hungry and would return to Scotland, which is in North Baton Rouge and while driving south on Scenic Highway the collision occurred.

*414 Plaintiff and Sholes testified that the defendant, without lights, backed his automobile from the vicinity of a filling station opposite Oriole Street across Scenic Highway when the Sholes car was too near to avoid the collision, although Sholes' horn was blown and brakes applied.

The defendant and his alleged eyewitness, Thomas, stated that the defendant was backing out of Goose Street which has been estimated to be from 150 to 250 feet North of Oriole Street, and that he backed across Scenic Highway and had completed his turn to the south and was in second gear traveling at about 20 miles an hour when the car driven by Sholes, traveling at a speed estimated by the witness Thomas to be 65 to 70 miles per hour, struck the rear end of defendant's automobile.

The question to be decided is one of fact, which we realize was resolved in favor of the defendant by the learned judge of the District Court, however, his reasons were given orally and were not transcribed and placed in the record. In such cases we have only the record to consider and should not surmise, unless it is shown by the record, that a witness or witnesses were not worthy of belief or that possibly their demeanor on the stand was such that the Lower Court did not believe them. In the absence of any reasons in the record that the manner or demeanor of any witness testifying in the case was unsatisfactory to the trial judge or that the witnesses falsified, we can only assume that the Lower Court decided the case strictly upon the actual testimony and when the plaintiff's case has been dismissed, that the Lower Court believed that the plaintiff had not proved his case as required by law.

The plaintiff testified that she had gotten Morris Sholes to take her to New Orleans to see about her children, and after returning to Baton Rouge and leaving her cousin Hannah Lee Minor, at the latter's home, Sholes persuaded her to go with him to get something to eat. They then started back to Scotland and were traveling south on the Scenic Highway at a speed of approximately 45 or 50 miles per hour when she saw the Whitfield car crossways of the Highway across the black line, with no lights. She estimated the distance when she first saw the Whitfield car across the highway as being the length of the room, which counsel for plaintiff estimated and placed in the record as being a distance of approximately 50 feet. She screamed and said: "Look out! We are going to have a wreck", and the collision occurred.

She said that Sholes got out of the car, crossed and asked the defendant Whitfield: "Why did you back out in front of me," and Whitfield answered, "I thought I could make it." Within about three minutes after the collision, Oree Evans, another cousin of the plaintiff, came to the scene of the wreck, and after the police were called, they got Howard Thomas, who lived very close on Scenic Highway to take the plaintiff to the hospital. She wore glasses which had been broken and her face had broken the windshield of the car, cutting her face in many places which required 35 stitches.

After the plaintiff returned home from the hospital she stated that the defendant came to her home to see how she felt and told her that she did not have anything to worry about, he had insurance on his car but at the time she asked him, "Why did he back out in front of us and he say, well, I thought I could make it, and I say you know good and well you couldn't make it as close as we was on you."

Sholes testified that he was traveling on Scenic Highway south at approximately 1:30 or 2:00 o'clock in the morning at the rate of about 45 miles per hour when he noticed a car in front of him without any lights backing across the street between Kitty and Goose Street, "which would be directly in front of Oriole." His first idea was to try to miss the car and he thinks he would have done so if the defendant's car had stopped where it was, but instead he tried to "pull off and at that time that when the accident happened." *415 He further testified that he blew his horn and applied his brakes in order to warn Whitfield and in an attempt to avoid the accident and that after the collision the horn was stuck and it was necessary for him to cut the wires to stop it from blowing. Sholes questioned Whitfield immediately after the accident and the latter told him that "he thought he could make it out of the road before the car got there," although he stated he saw the car coming. Sholes also stated that from the point from which Whitfield backed out to the point of impact "wasn't over fifteen or twenty feet I know." Both he and the plaintiff as well as Hannah Minor testified that they had had nothing to drink on the trip. In describing the place that Whitfield backed from left to right across Scenic Highway, Sholes testified that directly in front of Oriole Street was a two-story building that had been used as a garage for trucks, and that Whitfield backed out from a station, presumably a filling station, in connection with this garage across Scenic Highway directly in front of Oriole Street.

A Highway Patrolman was called to the scene of the accident and testified, which is corroborated by the map and report of the accident, that it happened almost opposite Oriole Street. This testimony would also be corroborative of Sholes' testimony. According to the report, the vehicles traveled approximately 12 feet after the collision and Sholes' automobile came to rest pointing in a northwesterly direction on the west side of Scenic Highway just to the south of and opposite Oriole Street, while the defendant Whitfield's car came to rest close to the entrance of Oriole Street, pointed in an easterly direction. According to this patrolman's testimony, none of the parties involved in this wreck were drunk nor could he detect any signs of drinking and he stated that Sholes told him that he was traveling 50 miles per hour and that he was only 25 feet away when he first saw Whitfield's car, and that Whitfield did not mention backing out of Goose Street but merely stated that he backed across Scenic Highway. He stated that Goose Street was never mentioned to him. This officer stated that Whitfield further told him that he had backed across the highway and had gotten straightened out and was traveling at approximately 20 miles per hour in the west or southbound traffic lane, which is the lane in which the collision occurred, when he was struck from the rear by the Sholes car. The officer stated that the left front fender and body of the Sholes car was damaged, and the right rear portion of the Whitfield car.

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 2d 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-whitfield-lactapp-1956.