Jowers v. Pleasant

220 So. 2d 211, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5341
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1969
DocketNo. 2624
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 220 So. 2d 211 (Jowers v. Pleasant) 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
Jowers v. Pleasant, 220 So. 2d 211, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5341 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinions

FRUGÉ, Judge.

This is a tort action seeking damages for personal injuries and property damage resulting from a collision between plaintiff’s motorcycle and a calf. The accident occurred about 5 :00 p. m., on August 5, 1967, on Highway 8 of Rapides Parish, Louisiana. Highway 8 is not a “stock law”1 highway, and thus cattle are legally free to roam on and about the public highway.

At the time of the accident, the light was good, conditions were dry, and the visibility was excellent. Plaintiff, Olen T. Jow-ers, was driving a 1958 Allstate 150 cc motorcycle in a general westerly direction, on this east-west highway, when his motorcycle was suddenly struck from the left side by a two-hundred and fifty pound calf. The calf belonged to defendant, John L. Pleasant, Sr., who was in the process of attempting to move his cattle from one side of the road to the other. Defendant was on horseback on the south side of the highway. Some of his cattle were on the north side, some crossing the highway and some in the woods and brush between him and the highway. He planned to traverse the highway, drive the cattle back to the south side, and bring them home.

At the place of the accident, the highway is straight and level. On the north side of the highway, there was an open ball park, but on the south side only eleven feet of open area separated the roadway from the dense brush and trees of the woods. It is from this left or south side of the highway that the calf appeared.

The testimony of the plaintiff and the defendant, the only two persons near the scene of the accident, does not differ substantially as to essential points. According to the testimony of the defendant, who was not an eye witness to the accident, he was on horseback some fifty yards off the highway on the south side, headed for the ball park on the opposite side of the highway, when he heard the motorcycle approaching. As he was in dense brush, he could not see the highway, but had observed that two of his cattle were headed in a direction over the road from the woods to the ball park. He testified that he knew there were several cattle in the woods and the undergrowth, located between himself [213]*213and the highway, but that he was not certain of where they were. He heard the motorcycle when it was about a half-mile away, and at that time, stopped his horse for the .express purpose of not exciting the cattle to run onto the highway. He remained in that position for several minutes while the motorcycle approached, and after hearing the noise of its involvement with one of his cattle, not the two he had seen crossing, he rode up to the highway.

When plaintiff approached a point approximately one-eighth of a mile from the scene of the accident, he observed two cows enter the road from the woods on his left, or the south side of the highway. At that time he was driving the motorcycle at a speed of forty miles per hour but reduced his speed to twenty or twenty-five miles per hour. The cattle continued across the highway to the open area of the ball park. Continuing forward at this reduced speed, plaintiff had passed the point where the cattle crossed the highway when suddenly, without warning, a single cow ran onto the highway from the dense trees and undergrowth on the left or south side and struck the motorcycle on which Mr. Jowers was riding. The motorcycle was struck on the left side, knocking it off the highway on the right, where it came to rest.

Plaintiff sustained injuries and was treated by Dr. Bennett Sewell of Boise, Louisiana. His injuries amounted to minor bruises and abrasions, brush burns and a strain of the left shoulder. As a result of his injuries, Mr. Jowers missed a week of work. The motorcycle sustained damage as a result of the accident and was left in an inoperable condition.

After trial on the merits, the lower court awarded judgment in favor of plaintiff, from which judgment defendant has appealed.

Defendant alleges that there is no evidence upon which the trial court could have logically found negligence on his part, or in the alternative, that the trial court was manifestly erroneous in not finding that plaintiff was contributorily negligent.

The law governing the liability of owners of animals is found in Article 2321 of the Louisiana Civil Code (1870) which article reads in part as follows:

“The owner of an animal is answerable for the damage he has caused * *

By a reading of L.S.A.-C.C. Art. 2321, it would seem that strict liability would be imposed upon the owner of an animal that did damage. That article has been interpreted, however, as being subject to the “fault” requirements of L.S.A.-C.C. Arts. 2315 and 2316. See Tripani v. Meraux, 184 La. 66, 165 So. 453 (1936). As was well stated in the case of Kennedy v. Frierson, 142 So.2d 838 (La.App.2d Cir., 1962):

“ * * * [T]he owner of an animal is responsible for damage which it causes if there is any proof of negligence, however slight, on his part * * * (Citations omitted.)
“It is equally well established by the above cited cases, and others to the same effect, that where an animal has been the cause of damage, the burden rests upon the owner to exculpate himself of. even the slightest degree of negligence.
“It is scarcely necessary to observe that the burden placed upon the owner of an animal by these incontrovertibly established legal principles is not insubstantial but requires him to establish, by proof of facts in a given case, his complete freedom from any negligence of even the slightest degree to which might be attributed the action of the owned animal by which damage is caused- to another.”

Of significance here is the fact that the highway upon which the accident happened is not what is generally referred to as a “stock law highway”.2 The cases involving accidents between motor vehicles and animals are generally dividable accord[214]*214ing to whether the accident happened on a stock law highway or a non-stock law highway. The predominance of cases dealing with the latter concern suits by animal owners against motorist, while the former concern suits by motorist against animal owners, and thus the emphasis on liability has been different in each of the two situations.

After some research, the court has found some cases which it believes consider facts similar to the one at hand. In all three of the following cases noted there was a question of personal injury arising from collision with an animal on a non-stock law highway.

In the case of Cusimano v. Giannobile, 15 So.2d 87 (La.App.1st Cir., 1943), plaintiff alleged that, while she was driving by the residence of defendant, a mule was suddenly driven out of the premises through a gate, allegedly held open by defendants, onto a highway, and so close to her automobile that she was unable, although driving at a safe and reasonable speed, to stop before colliding with the mule. Further, it was alleged that an employee of defendants had been chasing a mule from a back pasture to the front lot next to the highway, and that said chasing by the employee, and the opening of the gate by defendant, caused the mule to come out on the highway where it became an obstruction to plaintiff's free use of the highway.

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240 So. 2d 42 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
220 So. 2d 211, 1969 La. App. LEXIS 5341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jowers-v-pleasant-lactapp-1969.