Luke v. Theriot
This text of 195 So. 2d 685 (Luke v. Theriot) 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.
Opinion
Ethel LUKE et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
John THERIOT, Jr., et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*686 Cleveland J. Marcel, Daniel C. Wiemann, Frank W. Wurzlow, Jr., of Ellender, Wright & Wurzlow, Houma, for appellants.
Donald Hammett, of Hammett, Leake & Hammett, New Orleans, for appellees.
Before LANDRY, ELLIS and BAILES, JJ.
BAILES, Judge.
This action was instituted by plaintiffs, Ethel Luke, and her husband, Lawrence Luke, to recover damages for physical injuries received by Mrs. Ethel Luke in an *687 automobile collision, and to recover medical expenses incurred by the husband in the treatment of Mrs. Luke's injuries. The defendants are John Theriot, Jr., Donald Munson and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company.
Consolidated for the purposes of trial was the companion case of Gertie Hebert, et al versus these same defendants, on the docket of this court, our opinion being reported in 195 So.2d 691, wherein the plaintiffs seek to recover damages for physical injuries, expenses of medical treatments and property damages sustained in the same vehicular accident which gave rise to Mr. and Mrs. Luke's cause of action in the instant suit. All questions common to both actions will be discussed, explained and resolved in this opinion. The resolution of the amount of damages to be awarded Mr. and Mrs. Hebert, individually and on behalf of the minor child, Ferrell Hebert, will be discussed in a separate opinion this day rendered.
In both actions, defendant, John Theriot, Jr., through third party pleadings and as third party plaintiff alleges that Donald Munson was the named insured in a policy of public liability insurance issued by defendant, Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, and therein named as third party defendant, covering the operation of the 1959 Mercury automobile which Theriot was driving at the time of the collision. John Theriot, Jr., alleges that he immediately notified Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company of the accident; however, the latter denied any coverage whatever and denied the alleged obligation to defend said Theriot in the main demand asserted against him by the plaintiffs. In his third party petition, Theriot made claim for 12 per cent penalties on any judgment rendered against him and for attorney fees in the amount of $5,000 incurred in defending himself in this action.
After trial on the merits, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against John Theriot, Jr., and specifically awarded Mrs. Ethel Luke the sum of $8,500 and Lawrence Luke the sum of $1,456.94, all with legal interest from date of judicial demand.
The trial court rendered judgment rejecting the plaintiffs' demands against defendants, Donald Munson and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, at their costs; and further, there was judgment in favor of Donald Munson and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company rejecting the demands made in the third party petition of John Theriot, Jr., at his costs.
From this judgment, plaintiffs and defendant, John Theriot, Jr., have appealed devolutively.
The facts of the occurrence of the accident are simple and almost free of dispute. The only serious dispute as to the facts of the accident is that defendant Theriot maintains he was blinded by the headlights of an approaching vehicle and that this prevented him from seeing the vehicle whose rear he struck. This accident occurred south of Houma in Terrebonne Parish on the Grand Caillou highway. The State Trooper who investigated the accident, testified that this highway was paved, level and two-laned, with a total paved width of about twenty feet. On the night of April 20, 1963, at the hour of 10:45, a Mr. Louis J. Bergeron was driving his 1953 Dodge sedan north toward Houma. At this time and immediately in rear of the Bergeron automobile, defendant, Theriot, traveling alone, was driving his 1959 Mercury sedan. Meeting the Bergeron vehicle, traveling south, was a 1961 Comet station wagon owned by Vernon J. Hebert and driven by his wife, Mrs. Gertie Hebert. It was in this vehicle that Mrs. Ethel Luke was a guest passenger, as well as Mr. and Mrs. Hebert's minor son, Ferrell Hebert. As the Hebert and Bergeron vehicle approached each other and as they were in close proximity, John Theriot, Jr., drove his automobile into the rear of the Bergeron vehicle with such force as to cause the Bergeron vehicle to go uncontrolled *688 into the ditch on the right side of the highway. As a result of striking the Bergeron sedan, Theriot's Mercury sedan went out of control into the left lane of traffic and immediately in front of the Hebert station wagon. These two vehicles collided head-on.
The only reason defendant Theriot assigns for striking the rear of the Bergeron vehicle, which set in motion the collision between his Mercury automobile and the Hebert station wagon, as stated supra, is that he was blinded by the bright lights of a vehicle he claims he was meeting and which was preceding the Hebert station wagon. This does not relieve Theriot, even if he had proved such occurred, of his legal liability for the damages occasioned through his negligence. All witnesses and persons involved in the accident testified positively that there was no such vehicle on the highway. The proof is conclusive that the headlights on the Hebert station wagon were on dim or low beam, and the tail lights on the Bergeron vehicle were burning and were clearly visible.
The trial judge found that this accident was caused solely by the negligence of John Theriot, Jr. The judge a quo found this negligence consisted of "following too closely behind the Bergeron vehicle, failing to observe the Bergeron vehicle, failing to apply his brakes in time to avoid a collision with the Bergeron vehicle and failing to maintain his own vehicle under proper control." In this finding, we completely agree and concur.
Defendants, Donald Munson and his public liability insurer, Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company, were sued herein on the alleged fact that the automobile driven by Theriot was in fact owned by Donald Munson and that Theriot was using this Mercury sedan with his, Munson's, permission and consent, and further, on the alleged fact that Theriot should have the benefit and protection of Munson's public liability insurance under the provisions of the omnibus clause of the insurance policy.
Similarly, Theriot's theory of the case is that the Mercury automobile was the property of Munson and he should be afforded the protection of the said insurance policy.
The trial court found that Theriot was the owner of the vehicle, having acquired it in January, 1963. Also the trial court found that Donald Munson had no insurable interest in this vehicle. Mr. Munson was in no way legally responsible for the acts of Theriot. It further found no coverage by Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company under the policy the latter had issued to Munson.
While plaintiffs and the defendant, Theriot, have not assigned identical specifications of error to the judgment of the trial court, a fair statement of the assignment is set forth, as follows:
1. That Donald Munson was the legal owner of the automobile at the time of the accident; and
2. That Donald Munson had an insurable interest in the automobile at the time of the accident.
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195 So. 2d 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luke-v-theriot-lactapp-1967.