Killian v. Modern Iron Works

15 So. 2d 532, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 460
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 19, 1943
DocketNo. 6638.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 So. 2d 532 (Killian v. Modern Iron Works) 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
Killian v. Modern Iron Works, 15 So. 2d 532, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 460 (La. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Plaintiff in her own behalf and for the use and benefit of her minor child instituted this suit for damages caused to them by the accidental death of her husband, the father of her minor child. The record is unnecessarily voluminous, being filled with irrelevant testimony and too much repetition. The court has consumed much time in condensing the record in order that the true, relevant facts might be arrived at.

The accident causing the death of decedent occurred on Texas Avenue in the City of Shreveport, Louisiana, at about seven-thirty on the morning of March 14, 1942 and, for the purpose of this decision, Texas Avenue will be considered as running north and south. At the south end of Texas Avenue it forks, one prong forming the highway to Greenwood and the other to Mansfield, Louisiana. Approximately 300 feet north of this junction there is located on the west side of said Avenue the Magnolia Filling Station; the accident causing the death of plaintiff's husband happening directly in front of this filling station on the extreme west side of the street.

V.E. Smith, an employee of the Modern Iron Works, Incorporated, acting within the scope and course of his employment, drove a truck loaded with a welding machine weighing 3,000 pounds into the Magnolia Filling Station for the purpose of putting gas into the welding machine. The truck came from the north and was headed south. It was Smith's intention, after receiving the gasoline, to turn left across Texas Avenue and go back north from whence he came on the east side of the street and, in order to carry out this maneuver, it was necessary for the truck to make a "U" turn. There was no intersection at this point in the street, the nearest intersection being at the junction of Texas Avenue with the Greenwood-Mansfield Highway. A City ordinance of the City of Shreveport forbade the making of the U turn, except at an intersection. In driving out of the filling station, Smith turned his truck to the left heading across Texas Avenue and started the movement of the truck. When he reached the street, traveling at a rate of speed not exceeding two to three miles per hour, he looked both to his left and right and at that time saw decedent on his bicycle traveling south on the extreme west side of the street and Willie First, driving a car owned by his employer, E.A. Holley, acting within the scope and course of his employment, just entering Texas Avenue from the Greenwood Road and traveling north. Smith continued to drive his truck across Texas Avenue and to complete his turn on the east side of the street so far as the front wheels of his truck were concerned. The rear of the truck was at the time about the center of the street and the front wheels close to the east side of the street, completely blocking that side, which was the right side for Willie First to travel. When the truck was in that position, the car driven by Willie First had approached to within twenty to thirty feet of the truck and was traveling at approximately 25 miles per hour. Willie First made no attempt to slacken his speed, but cut the car sharply to the left. He missed the truck and drove to the extreme west side of the street before being able to straighten his car out.

Texas Avenue is thirty-seven feet wide at this point and just as the car driven by Willie First cleared the back end of the truck and reached the extreme west side of the street, it collided head-on with decedent and his bicycle. The force of the impact hurled decedent into the air and broke the bicycle into two parts. Willie First drove his car up the street approximately 100 feet, parked it and came back to the scene of the accident. The bicyclist was dead before he could be taken to the sanitarium.

Plaintiff impleaded as defendants, V.E. Smith, the truck driver, and his employer, the Modern Iron Works, Incorporated, and its liability insurer, Traders General Insurance Company of Dallas, Texas; and Willie First and his employer, E.A. Holley.

All defendants admit there was no negligence on the part of decedent and that plaintiff is entitled to recover; however, Willie First and his employer contend they were free from negligence and the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of V.E. Smith, the driver of the truck, and Smith, his employer and insurer contend that Smith was free from negligence and the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of Willie First.

The lower court rendered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $5,000 in favor of Mrs. Joann Killian, wife of the decedent, against V.E. Smith, Modern Iron Works, Incorporated, and Traders General *Page 534 Insurance Company of Dallas, Texas, in solido, and in the further sum of $287.25 for burial expenses and one-half the value of the bicycle against V.E. Smith and the Modern Iron Works, Incorporated, in solido, and for the use and benefit of the minor, Richard Harvey Killian, $5,000 against V.E. Smith, Modern Iron Works, Incorporated, and Traders General Insurance Company of Dallas, Texas, in solido; and in the further sum of $21.25, one-half the value of the bicycle, against V.E. Smith and the Modern Iron Works, Incorporated, in solido. It rejected all demands against Willie First and his employer, E.A. Holley.

Plaintiff in this court, through proper procedure, is asking for an increase in the amount of the award and that all defendants be held liable. V.E. Smith, his employer and their insurer are asking that the judgment against them be reversed; and Willie First and his employer are asking that the judgment rejecting plaintiff's demands against them be affirmed.

In this court, Joe H. Crosby, the liquidator of the Modern Iron Works, Incorporated, has been admitted as a party in these proceedings in his official capacity as liquidator.

Smith testified that when he started to drive out into the street, he never stopped again until after the accident; that when he first saw Willie First coming north in his car he thought he had sufficient time to clear the street before Willie First would arrive; and that when he entered the street, he was traveling at a speed of from two to three miles per hour and never exceeded a speed of from five to six miles per hour in negotiating his turn. The truck driven by Smith was not an extra large one and there was no necessity for the snail's pace speed at which he was traveling at the time. In making the turn, the truck's direction necessarily made an arc and in making this arc it traversed a distance of approximately fifty feet in arriving at the place where the accident occurred, and the rear end of the truck was still in the center of the street. The average speed of the truck, according to Smith's testimony, from the time he started out of the filling station until the time of the accident was not in excess of four miles per hour.

It is clearly established that the car driven by Willie First was traveling approximately 25 miles per hour from the time it entered Texas Avenue until it struck decedent. It was therefore traveling six times as fast as the truck driven by Smith. It follows then that when Smith attempted to negotiate this turn, his truck at the slow rate of speed it was traveling was necessarily sure to block the right-of-way of any car traveling north on its right side of the road at a rate of speed of 25 miles per hour, which was not more than 300 feet south of him at the time he started. This is a fact Smith is presumed to have known and when he, in violation of a City ordinance, attempted a U turn at an average rate of speed of four miles per hour when a car was approaching from the south a distance of only 300 feet away, he failed to act as a reasonable, prudent driver should have acted and was guilty of gross negligence which was a proximate cause of the accident and death of decedent.

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Related

Killian v. Modern Iron Works, Inc.
96 So. 2d 377 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
15 So. 2d 532, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killian-v-modern-iron-works-lactapp-1943.