Le Blanc v. New Orleans Public Service

22 So. 2d 294, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 368
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1945
DocketNo. 18195.
StatusPublished

This text of 22 So. 2d 294 (Le Blanc v. New Orleans Public Service) 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
Le Blanc v. New Orleans Public Service, 22 So. 2d 294, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 368 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

On July 20th, 1943, at about 6:45 p.m., an automobile owned by Lieutenant Colonel Edward H. Le Blanc and driven by his wife collided head-on with an omnibus of New Orleans Public Service, Inc., on Metairie Road in Jefferson Parish. As a consequence of the accident, Mrs. Le Blanc received painful personal injuries and the Le Blanc automobile was badly damaged. Claiming that the collision was occasioned by the negligence of the operator of the omnibus in that he was operating the bus in a reckless manner and without exercising a proper lookout; that he failed to drive on his right or proper side of the roadway; failed to slow up in negotiating a curve therein and in that he attempted to pass an automobile parked on his side of the road while the Le Blanc car was approaching from the opposite direction, Colonel and Mrs. Le Blanc instituted this action against Frederick Miller, the busdriver, New Orleans Public Service, Inc., and its liability insurance carrier, Travelers Insurance Company, to recover the damages which they allegedly sustained. Mrs. Le Blanc demands $15,000 for her personal injuries and her husband seeks a total of $5,874 for the damage to the automobile, medical and other expenses defrayed by him, his inconvenience and mental anguish.

Defendants resisted liability in the case on the ground that the accident occurred solely as the result of the negligence of Mrs. Le Blanc. They asserted that the bus driver was free from any fault; that he was operating the omnibus on Metairie Road in a northerly direction from New Orleans at a slow rate of speed and on the right or proper side of the road; that, as the bus was approaching the intersection of Oak Ridge Park and was being brought to a slow stop on the right-hand side of the road in order to discharge a passenger, the Le Blanc automobile, which was travelling in the opposite direction or towards the city of New Orleans, rounded a curve on Metairie Road, slightly north of its intersection with Oak Ridge Park, at a fast and reckless speed on the outside periphery of the curve and crossed, from its own right or proper side of the road, over to its left or wrong side directly into the path of the omnibus and crashed with *Page 295 great force and violence into and against the left front portion thereof; that the highway was wet and slippery as a consequence of a heavy rain and that the accident resulted from the fault of Mrs. Le Blanc in attempting to negotiate the curve in the road at a high rate of speed under the conditions then prevailing. In the alternative, defendants pleaded the contributory negligence of Mrs. Le Blanc as a bar to plaintiffs' recovery.

After a trial of the case in the lower court, there was judgment dismissing plaintiffs' demand. Wherefore this appeal.

It is clear from the pleadings in the case that the principal matters presented for determination are issues of fact. Hence, we hasten to a discussion of the evidence submitted at the trial by the opposing litigants and their witnesses which, in common with cases of this type, is most conflicting.

The accident occurred on Metairie Road just south of its intersection with Oak Ridge Park on a rainy day at about 6:45 p.m. Metairie Road is a two-way highway running through the Metairie Ridge section of Jefferson Parish and extends from the Orleans Parish line northward to Shrewsbury, Louisiana. It is approximately 30 feet wide, paved with Macadam (or black top) and accommodates traffic proceeding to and from Orleans Parish. The bus of the Public Service was travelling in a northerly direction, or towards Shrewsbury, and had reached or was about to reach Gruber's Bar, a small place of business abutting the lake or right-hand side of the road, when the accident occurred. Just north of this point, there is a wide turn in the road towards the left for vehicles proceeding in a northerly direction and, for vehicles approaching from the opposite direction, the turn in the road is to the right and begins approximately at the corner of Oak Ridge Park, which intersects the riverside of the road slightly north of Gruber's Bar.

Mrs. Le Blanc testifies that, on the day of the accident, she was driving her Buick car from Camp Polk, Louisiana, where her husband was stationed, to the city of New Orleans, a distance of some 260 miles; that she had left Camp Polk at about 12:15 p.m. and had driven continuously to the point where the accident occurred in approximately six hours and a half (or that she had averaged a speed of approximately 40 miles per hour including one stop of 10 minutes which she had made on the way); that, as she approached the curve in the road which began at Oak Ridge Park, she was driving at a speed of 25 or 30 miles per hour; that, when she entered the curve, she noticed the omnibus approaching from the opposite direction; that it was then about 100 feet away from her and was proceeding on its left or wrong side of the road and directly in her path of travel; that she pulled her car over to the shoulder of the road, or as close thereto as safety would permit, but that, notwithstanding this, the bus continued forward in her lane and crashed against the left front side of her automobile.

In support of Mrs. Le Blanc's testimony, plaintiffs produced the following witnesses: Mr. Jules Mendel, Mr. Fred W. Betz, Mr. Albert Ballatine and Mr. Frank Geffs. None of these persons, except Ballatine, claimed to have been eye-witnesses to the accident. Ballatine testified, in substance, that he had been driving his car to the rear of the omnibus at the time of the accident and that he had been following it for quite some distance prior thereto; that he had previously attempted to pass the bus but, due to the fact that the bus was being driven alternately to the right, then to the left and back to the right side of the road, he felt that it would be safer for him not to do so; that he therefore remained to the rear of the bus and that, when the bus reached a point just south of the Oak Ridge Park intersection, it suddenly swerved to the left or wrong side of the road, where it crashed into plaintiffs' car which was coming from the opposite direction. He further says that, after the accident, the bus was straddling the road at the point of impact with its front and facing the left or riverside of the road, and its rear and extending in the direction of Lake Ponchartrain and that the accident upset him to such an extent that "everything got black and I had to leave."

Jules Mendel testified that he was employed as a bartender at Gruber's Bar; that he did not see the accident but that, upon hearing the crash, he immediately left his place of business and went into the street for the purpose of rendering assistance to Mrs. Le Blanc; that the Le Blanc car was on its right side of the road; that its rear right wheel was close to a post near the shoulder of the road and that the front of the car extended somewhat outwardly from the shoulder; that the front of the omnibus was about 10 or 12 feet *Page 296 south of Gruber's Bar and that, while the front end thereof was on the right or proper side of the highway, its rear was out over the center of the road in the lane of traffic used by cars travelling in the direction of New Orleans. He further says that there was a truck parked in front of Gruber's Bar at the usual bus stop; that the bus was in the rear of this parked truck and that, upon examination of the roadway, he noticed tire marks made by the omnibus on the left-hand or wrong side of the road.

The testimony of Mr. Fred W. Betz, who owns a filling station located just south of Gruber's Bar, is similar to that of Mendel. He did not see the accident but says that he noticed tire marks of the bus on the left or wrong side of the road.

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22 So. 2d 294, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-blanc-v-new-orleans-public-service-lactapp-1945.