Lavergne v. Pedarre

165 So. 17
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1935
DocketNo. 1529.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 165 So. 17 (Lavergne v. Pedarre) 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
Lavergne v. Pedarre, 165 So. 17 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

An automobile collision which occurred at about 10 o’clock at night on January 25, 1933, at the point where Jefferson street intersects the Highland road, south of the corporate limits of the city of Baton Rouge, gave rise to several suits for damages for personal injuries as well as for other damages and expenses alleged to have been incurred by the various parties involved, all of which suits were consolidated for the purpose of taking testimony.

Besides the present which will serve as the basis for a decision in three of these, we are concerned on this appeal with the suits of Auletus L. Pitts, who also sues in his own behalf as well as that of his minor son Alvin Burkett Pitts, and of Malcolm J. Fischer. The defendants are Roch H. Pedarre and Ellsworth N. Smith and their respective public liability indemnitors, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company and Great American Indemnity Company. We understand that there is also a suit between the two principal defendants, Pedarre and Smith, which was also decided in the lower court on the same testimony, but the same is not before *18 this court at present. It appears from the record in the suit of Mr. Auletus Pitts that prior to the rendition of judgment, Alvin B. Pitts, who evidently became of age, was made party plaintiff and authorized to prosecute the demand made for and on his behalf by his father, in so far as his interest therein was concerned.

Daly C. Lavergne, Alvin B. Pitts, and Malcolm J. Fischer were guests of the defendant Ellsworth N. Smith in his Ford sport-phaeton automobile on the night that it collided with the defendant Pedarre’s Graham-Paige two-door sedan. The Smith car was traveling north towards the city of Baton Rouge and the Pedarre car south. Pedarre has a grocery store and his residence at the northeast corner of the intersection of Highland road and Jefferson street. He was on h'is way home after having attended some church social function that night and was making a left-hand turn into Jefferson street when the Smith car ran into his.

As a result of the accident, Daly C. Lavergne and Alvin B. Pitts sustained rather severe injuries, both having suffered a fracture of the skull. In addition, Lavergne suffered a number of deep cuts and lacerations about the face and also a dislocation of the semi-lunar cartilage of the left knee. Besides the injury to his skull, Pitts suffered a cut above his right brow and an injury to his left leg and ankle. Fischer’s injuries were not as severe. They consisted, according to the allegation of his petition, of several cuts and gashes in his scalp and on both his legs, cuts and bruises about the body generally, and a sprained right ankle. For his suffering and injuries, he claims damages in the sum of $500; for loss of time from his classes at the Louisiana State University where he was a student, $25; for damages to his clothing, $35; and doctor’s bills, $10. His total demand is for the sum of $570. Pitts, also a student at the University, claims $1,500 as damages for loss of time from his studies. He claims $2,500 for his injuries and pain and suffering caused by them; $500 for facial disfigurement; and $1,500 for impairment to the use of his leg and future danger from the fracture of his skull. His personal demand therefore totals the sum of $6,000. His .father claims the sum of $392 for medical, hospital, nursing, and ambulance expenses incurred in his son’s treatment. Lavergne, who also was a student at the University, claims $1,500 for one year’s loss of time at school, $3,000 for pain and suffering and for the fracture of his skull and dislocation of his knee. For disfigurement, he claims $1,000, and for permanent injuries and future danger from the skull fracture, the sum of $2,000. His total demand, therefore, is for the sum of $7,500. His father claims the sum of $472.85 for medical and other expenses incurred in his treatment.

The negligence charged against Pedarre consists in his having made a left-hand turn toward Jefferson street from the Highland road in face of a fast approaching automobile, which was the Smith car, without giving any signal or warning of his intention to do so. The charge against Smith is principally fast and reckless driving on a highway that is heavy with traffic and with which he was very familiar, and in not having his car under such control as' to be able to stop it when he perceived, or should have perceived, the Pedarre car turning in his path.

After the suits had been filed, the defendant Pedarre and his liability insurance carrier, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, settled with all three plaintiffs for so much of their respective demands as arose out of the fact that the Pedarre car was involved in the accident. Proper releases were executed and the suits dismissed as against both these defendant?. The effect of that was to place the issue of Smith’s negligence which had been denied by him and his insurer, as well as that of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiffs which had been pleaded by them in the alternative, in their answers, as the only matters before the court. The plea of contributory negligence is based on the failure of the plaintiffs to have protested at Smith’s fast and reckless driving, assuming that he was so driving. ■

On the issues as thus made, the cases, as already stated, were consolidated for the purpose of taking testimony, and, after submission, 'the district judge rendered judgment in each case in favor of the defendants Smith and his insurer, Great American Indemnity Company, and against each of the plaintiffs, dismissing their respective suits and rejecting their demands. He assigned no written reasons for judgment, and the record does not show whether he found Smith free of negligence in the operation of his car or whether he sus *19 tained the plea of contributory negligence. All plaintiffs have appealed.

Highland road is the principal thoroughfare which leads from the city of Baton Rouge to Louisiana State University. It is a paved highway, being part of the state highway system, and is designated as State Route 63. Jefferson street has a graveled surface and leads into Highland road from the east, but it does not continue across Highland road on the west. According to Mr. John J. Mundinger, civil engineer, the distance from the south city limits of Baton Rouge to the University grounds entrance is approximately 7,800 feet, and Jefferson street is almost exactly in the middle between those two points. The Pedarre store and residence, as before indicated, are situated at the northeast corner of the intersection of the street with Highland road. According to Mr. Mundinger, Highland road is 27 feet wide from curb to curb, and is practically straight from a point about’300 feet north of the University to several hundred feet north of Jefferson street. It has some slight grade, but not enough to affect the driving of an automobile.

The first point urged for consideration is to the effect that the- community beyond the city limits of Baton Rouge through which Highland road passes being thickly populated, the speed limit of twenty-five miles per hour which applies to unincorporated towns and villages under the provisions of the state highway regulatory act (Act No. 21 of 1932) governs, and as it is conceded that Smith was going at a speed in excess of that rate, he was violating the statute and this constituted negligence on his part.

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Related

Cline v. Atwood
147 S.E.2d 885 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1966)
Matlock v. State
4 So. 2d 90 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)
Butner v. . Spease
6 S.E.2d 808 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1940)
Pitts v. Pedarre
165 So. 22 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1935)
Fischer v. Pedarre
165 So. 22 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
165 So. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lavergne-v-pedarre-lactapp-1935.