Loret v. Armour Co.

32 So. 2d 55, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 484
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 3, 1947
DocketNo. 2920.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 So. 2d 55 (Loret v. Armour 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
Loret v. Armour Co., 32 So. 2d 55, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 484 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

The automobile of Mr. Joseph A. Loret, a 1941 Special Deluxe two door Chevrolet, was involved in an accident on March 6, 1946. His wife, Mrs. Catherine Weber Loret, was driving the car, returning to their home which is situated on the Mississippi River Road, about six miles south of the City of Baton Rouge. It was about five o'clock in the afternoon and Mrs. Loret was returning home by the usual route they follow, that is, after leaving Nicholson Drive she entered a street known as McKinley Street which begins at a point east of the Yazoo Mississippi Railroad tracks and runs west towards the Mississippi *Page 56 River Road. She had reached a point about 40 to 50 feet from the river road, intending to turn left into that road to go to her home when there was a collision between her car and a truck belonging to Armour Company which was being driven at the time by one of its employees, a negro named Ray Williams. Williams lived on Terrace Street, the next street south of McKinley Street, and he was on his way back to the place of business of his employer to deliver the truck as that is where it was kept after the day's work was over.

Claiming that the accident and damage to his automobile, as well as other items of damage he claims to have suffered, were caused by the negligence of the driver of the Armour truck, Mr. Loret instituted this suit to recover judgment against Armour Company and its liability insurer, Zurich General Accident Liability Insurance Co., Ltd., in the sum of $914.85. He charges the driver with driving the truck, at the moment of the accident, in a reckless and careless manner and at a rapid and excessive rate of speed; that after entering McKinley Street he kept his truck on the south side of the street instead of the north side where there was plenty of room for him to meet the automobile; that he either saw or should have seen the automobile travelling westward from the time it had crossed the railroad track and had he been keeping a proper lookout he would have avoided running into the automobile when it was on its right hand side of the street, which was the proper place for it to be.

He alleges that the driver of the truck was the agent, servant and employee of Armour Company and that at the moment when he ran the truck into the automobile he was its servant and employee, acting within the scope of his employment as such and in the exercise of the functions and duties of his employment.

The damages claimed are itemized in very minute detail by Mr. Loret and we will try to condense them as much as we can. The largest item is for depreciation of the value of his automobile. He had it repaired and put in running condition at a cost of $175.61, but these repairs did not include the replacement and repair of a ruined tire and wheel. He had to replace this tire with another at a cost of $7.50 and the broken wheel at a cost of $5. He claims however that the automobile never ran well again after the repairs had been made and that as it was absolutely necessary for him to have a car for use in business, he was obliged to trade it in and in the trade he received a credit of $210. He claims however that before the accident the car had a low ceiling price under the O.P.A. of approximately $800 and that consequently it had depreciated in an amount between what the ceiling price was and the amount he received as a credit in the trade for a new car which represented the sum of $590. He claims that as he was deprived of the use of his car during the time it was being repaired, that is between March 9, 1946, and March 14, 1946, inclusive, he had to hire taxicabs and this cost him $19.50. After March 19, 1946, his car was still laid up and instead of riding in public conveyances he hired an automobile by the week and that cost him $50.50, plus insurance which he had to place on that car at a cost of $14.48.

He also claims the sum of $49.66 which he says he incurred as doctor and medical bills in treatment of Mrs. Loret for injuries which he alleges were the result of the accident; also the sum of $2.15 which he had to pay a nurse for taking care of their two year old child on the occasions when Mrs. Loret had to visit the doctor's office.

The defendants filed a joint answer in which they denied the negligence charged against the driver of the Armour truck, as alleged, and in the alternative pleaded contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Loret for having failed to keep a proper lookout in approaching the Mississippi River Road. As a special defense they plead that the driver of the Armour truck, though admittedly a servant and employee of the defendant Armour Company, had deviated from the course of his employment at the time of the accident and therefore the defendants cannot be held liable for his negligence in case any is shown. *Page 57

After the trial of the case in the court below there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff awarding damages in the sum of $308.22. Defendants appealed, and plaintiff has answered the appeal asking that the damages be increased to the sum originally prayed for by him.

As will be noted from the foregoing statement, there are several points involved in the case, the first being the negligence charged against the driver of the defendant Armour truck, the second the contributory negligence of Mrs. Loret, the third the legal proposition presented in defendants' answer to the effect that there was a deviation by the employee from the scope of his employment, and the fourth, assuming that plaintiff is entitled to recover, the amount of the damages sustained.

[1] On the first point we find no difficulty in agreeing with the trial judge that the testimony strongly preponderates in favor of the plaintiff to the effect that the accident was caused by the negligence, and solely by the negligence, of the driver of the truck. The accident happened in the afternoon when it had been and probably was still raining a light drizzle. Mrs. Loret seems to have been very careful in her manner of approaching the river road in order to make her left hand turn to go south. She had just crossed the railroad tracks and, as she says, had slowed down in order to make the crossing. As it was only a few hundred feet from there to the river road she had not, as she says she never does, accelerated her speed. Her testimony is, and the physical facts as well as the position of her car after the accident all support her, to the effect that her car was on the right hand side of the road and that it was run into by the truck on its left front end. There is hardly any testimony to dispute these facts except that of the driver of the Armour truck who, hesitatingly, would now have it appear that Mrs. Loret's car occupied the center of the street when the collision took place. We say hesitatingly, because in a statement given by him to Mr. J.H. Percy, Jr., one of the plaintiff's attorneys, he had said that she was on her right hand side of the street and practically admitted that he had run into her car. He now tries to have the court believe that part of the statement was added after it had been written and he had signed it. Looking at the form of the hand written statement it would seem to be a physical impossibility for anything to have been added to it at the place where the questioned part of it appears and besides it could hardly be expected that the court would accept his word against that of a highly respectable attorney such as we consider Mr. Percy to be.

The position of the Loret car after the collision and the debris from the broken glass both prove conclusively that the impact took place on the right hand side of the street and that the truck driver was careless and negligent either in making his turn into that street or in straightening out his truck after he had made the turn.

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Bluebook (online)
32 So. 2d 55, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loret-v-armour-co-lactapp-1947.