Lee Bros. Bakery v. R. L. Jeffries Trucking Co.

178 So. 665
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 1937
DocketNo. 5516.
StatusPublished

This text of 178 So. 665 (Lee Bros. Bakery v. R. L. Jeffries Trucking Co.) 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
Lee Bros. Bakery v. R. L. Jeffries Trucking Co., 178 So. 665 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit to recover for damages to its truck and merchandise carried thereon at the time. The allegations of plaintiff’s petition for its cause of action are as follows:

“1. That at about seven O’clock A. M. on the morning of February 5, 1937, your petitioner’s bakery truck, while being operated along the main street of the village of Converse, Sabine Parish, Louisiana, which street is also a State highway, was run into from the rear by a truck, with a trailer attached, owned and being operated by defendant, R. L. Jeffries Trucking Company, and in charge of its driver, J. B. Arnold, with such force as to practically demolish your petitioner’s truck, and particularly the body and cab thereon.
“2. Petitioner shows that said collision and the accident occurred solely and alone through the negligence and carelessness of the driver of defendant’s truck, and that said accident happened while the said J. B. Arnold, an employee of the defendant, and said truck were in the discharge of the duties and services to the said defendant, said truck being loaded with oil well pipe which was being transported on said truck by or for the defendant trucking company.
“3. Petitioner shows that the driver of its truck was operating said vehicle in an entirely proper and legal manner, with due care and regard for the legal traffic regulations as well as public safety., but *666 that the driver of the truck of defendant company was driving through the village of Converse at a high and excessive rate of speed, totally disregarding all legal traffic regulations, and without regard or respect to public safety, and that the careless disregard of the'law-and gross negligence of the driver of defendant’s truck' was the sole cause of the collision that caused damage to plaintiff’s track, as well as the cargo of bakery products then being carried on plaintiff’s truck.
“4. That said accident and collision caused damage to petitioner in the full sum of $450.00, the cost and expense of repairing its track, and the sum of $50.00 to its shipment of bread and other bakery products which were being transported in its truck at the time of said accident.
.“5. Petitioner shows that the said R. L. Jeffries Tracking Company is a non-' resident of the State of Louisiana, and is domiciled and doing business at or near the city of Kilgore, Texas; that petitioner is not informed as to whether said defendant is a corporation or a partnership and that it is necessary that a curator ad hoc be appointed to represent the absent defendant herein.
“6. Petitioner shows that the said defendant owns property and particularly the truck hereinabove mentioned, now situated in the Parish of Sabine, and that writs of attachment are necessary to protect petitioner’s interest in the premises.”

The writ of attachment was prayed for and issued.

Defendant answered, denying all the principal allegations of plaintiff’s petition and set out that R. L. Jeffries Trucking Company was merely a trade-name, and that the owner of the track attached was R. L. Jeffries.- He denied that the driver of his truck was guilty of any negligence of any kind,- and averred that the accident was due solely and entirely to the negligence of the driver of plaintiff’s track; and further alleged:

“Respondent further shows that his truck wás being driven south at a careful, reasonable and prudent rate of speed, not in excess of 25 miles per hour;
“9. That when your respondent’s truck reached a point approximately 50 feet from where the Holly Ferry road intersects the highway upon which your respondent’s truck was being operated, plaintiff’s truck suddenly, negligently and without any warning entered onto said highway from the Holly Ferry road directly ' in front of your respondent’s truck;
“10. That the highway upon which your respondent’s truck was being operated was U. S. Highway No. 171, which had the right of way over said Holly Ferry road;
- “11. That your respondent’s track was-proceeding south when said truck of plaintiff’s, which had been proceeding east on said Holly Ferry road, entered onto said U. S. Highway 171 and turned south directly in front of your respondent’s said truck;
“12. That as plaintiff’s said truck entered onto said U. S. Highway 171 and headed south, it slowed down and came practically to a stop directly in front of your respondent’s truck without any warning or signal of any kind.
“13. That at said time there was another truck and trailer loaded with a boiler on said U. S. Highway 171 headed north and meeting your respondent’s truck, which said truck when the driver thereof saw the negligent manner in which plaintiff’s truck was being operated, was pulled by the driver thereof as far to his right as possible, in order for the respondent’s said truck to have room to pass between it and the truck of the saiij plaintiff.
“14. That on account of the negligence of the driver of plaintiff’s truck in stopping or practically stopping on the west side of the highway and on account of the presence of said boiler truck on the east side of the highway, there was not enough room for your respondent’s driver to pass between them and, because of the negligence of the driver of plaintiff’s truck in coming onto the highway in such close proximity to respondent’s truck, respondent’s driver was unable to bring the same to a stop and the right side of respondent’s truck struck the left rear end of the body of plaintiff’s truck;
“15.- That there were a number of automobiles parked on the west side of said U. S. highway 171 north of its intersection with the said Holly Ferry road, which obstructed the vision of respondent’s driver of said Holly Ferry road, and your respondent’s driver had no way of knowing that the driver of plaintiff’s truck would suddenly and without warning emerge onto U. S. Highway 171, directly in front of him in too close proximity to permit him to stop.
“16. Respondent further shows that the driver of plaintiff’s truck had only one *667 eye, -which impaired his vision, and it was further negligence on the part of plaintiff to permit its truck to be driven by a man with only one eye, and who was thereby handicapped in the operation of said truck;
"17. Respondent further shows in the alternative and only in the alternative, that if the court should find that he was negligent in any respect, which is denied, then and in that event respondent shows that plaintiff’s driver was guilty of contributory negligence, contributing to the accident and without which negligence said accident would not have occurred; all as set forth "hereinabove, which said contributory negligence respondent specially pleads as a bar to the right of plaintiff to recover herein, in the alternative, as aforesaid.”

In the alternative, defendant pleaded contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s driver, based upon the above-alleged facts.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-bros-bakery-v-r-l-jeffries-trucking-co-lactapp-1937.