Lebray v. Vicari

3 La. App. 459, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 286
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 3 La. App. 459 (Lebray v. Vicari) 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
Lebray v. Vicari, 3 La. App. 459, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 286 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

MOUTON, J.

Plaintiff was injured in an automobile accident on the Highland road in the Parish of East Baton Rouge on Saturday, December 8, 1923. Plaintiff was riding in a truck which was being driven at the time by Collie Vicari, the minor son of defendant herein, against whom this suit is brought in damages. The claim was rejected and plaintiff appeals.

No question of law is raised in this case, the issue presented being almost entirely one of fact. The sole contest submitted is as to whether Collie Vicari, the minor son of defendant, who was driving the truck, was guilty of negligence at the time of the occurrence.

Sam Vicari, defendant, is a merchant and runs a store on the Highland Roadway some distance from the place where plaintiff was injured. His son, Collie, left the store in a truck to make delivery of merchandise at different points. Upon leaving plaintiff got in the truck with Collie and Spina, a companion of the driver. Much is said as to whether plaintiff was riding in the truck as an invitee. The proof is not clear on this question, but we will consider him as such in passing on the issue presented.

Collie was driving southward and his truck, upon reaching a portion of the Highland road where it is cut in a hill forming banks on each side, was turned over, resulting in the injuries of which plaintiff complains. These banks, as the record shows, rise to a height of some six or eight feet on each side of this roadway. In his petition plaintiff alleges: “That as the truck approached the bottom of the hill (which is the portion of the road above described) that Collie Vicari lost control of said truck in such a manner, as to cause it to swerve to the west side of the road, which it did, striking the bank on that side with such force and violence as to completely overturn said truck, and the momentum by its speed just prior thereto propelled your petitioner through the air a distance of approximately twenty feet, in such a manner that he fell upon the ground, severely injuring him”. The defendant, on the other hand, alleges as the cause of the accident, that the truck his son was driving on the Highland road was struck by a large automobile which was coming in a northerly direction on said road; that plaintiff, realizing the certainty of a collision, jumped out of respondent’s truck .and was thereby injured. Defendant, in his answer, ascribes the accident to the fault of the driver of the automobile that ran into his truck, and asks exoneration for the damages claimed.

•Willie Crockett, witness for plaintiff, [460]*460when asked if he knew anything about the “wreck”, answered: “Yes, sir, ‘in parts’.” Thereafter, he explains that he knew nothing of the accident' except the impression he saw on the back of the truck where it struck the ground, but that lj.e did not see when it happened. Jake Keller, another witness for plaintiff, says he was about 55 or 60 yards from the truck when the accident happened. He says he saw when the truck hit the west bank. When asked if he claimed to know how the wreck occurred, he said: “No, sir, no more than hearing him strike the bank. That is all I seen.” He testifies that the truck was coming down hill at the speed of about 30 miles an hour; that he did not see any other automobile at the time of the wreck, and from the position he occupied would have seen one if any had been on that roadway. Tobe Richardson, another witness for plaintiff, says Collie Vicari was ^driving the truck fast, and in a reckless manner. He likewise saw no other automobile at the time. The only thing he could see, he says, “was the hole in the ground where they ran into the ditch bank”. This witness seems to have seized on the leading issue of the complaint in saying he had seen a hole in. the ground caused by the impact of the truck, a fact not testified to by any other witness, if we have correctly read the note of evidence. This testimony in reference to the “hole” does not harmonize with the theory of the defense where counsel explains that the truck “did not run to the bank head on, but approached it at an angle, etc.”, and where, he says further on, in referring to the truck, that it will thus be seen that the right side would never come in contact with anything that could injure it, etc.” If the impact of the truck was such as to tear a hole in the ground, as stated by Richardson, the truck unquestionably came in contact with something that could injure it.

Richardson was walking on the Highland road and was going in the same direction that defendant’s car was traveling, which passed him, as he testifies, a long while before it got to the place where the wreck occurred. He says he did not see how it happened; that he was around the corner from the car and did not know if he was “three or four or five blocks”. He does not seem to have heard the wreck as was the ease with Crockett, the other witness. The record shows that Richardson has a police record and had been six or seven times in jail for drunkenness and disorderly conduct. Two officers, well acquainted with him, testified they would not believe him under oath. In all probability, from the character of his evidence, and his record, the court reached the same conclusion as to his veracity.

Lebray, plaintiff, testified that Collie, with whom he was riding, was speeding along the highway, and that he cautioned him against running at such a rate of speed, particularly, as it was Saturday night wheh many cars were traveling this roadway; that Collie continued in this reckless speed down the hill and that as he got around the curve ran into the bank which skirted the road, throwing him out of the car, thus inflicting the injuries for which he sues in damages. He is certain there was no other auto around at the time which ran or could have run into Collie’s car, as asserted by defendant.

Dr. E. 0. Trahan, a practicing physician of the city of Baton Rouge, was called upon to attend to the injuries of the plaintiff, and which he says he understood was immediately after the accident. He testified that he asked plaintiff how the accident happened, to .which he veplied that “he saw they were going to run into some[461]*461body”; that he tried to jump out and in doing so fell down. On cross-examination counsel for plaintiff asked the doctor if he had not asked plaintiff “if this was a wreck between two cars”. His answer to this question is: “He told me that he thought another car had run into him.” If we understand counsel for plaintiff correctly, he points out that the questions propounded by the doctor were suggestive, and in a way account for the answers of defendant. Not only did the plaintiff answer that another car was about running into Collie’s auto, but also said that he had tried to jump out, and, in doing so, fell. There was nothing in the question that could suggest such an answer, which was made immediately after the accident when the facts were still fresh in plaintiff’s mind. This answer of plaintiff not only contradicts his testimony when he says the cause of the accident was the running of Collie’s auto into the bank, but also that portion of his statement where he says the car ran into the bank with such great speed that it “throwed me out of the car”, which is contrary to his statement that he “tried to jump out”. These statements of the plaintiff to Dr. Trahan are also in direct conflict with the grounds of complaint of the plaintiff, as appears in his petition above reproduced.

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Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 459, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lebray-v-vicari-lactapp-1925.