Lutrell v. Beard

273 So. 2d 312
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1973
Docket5267
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 273 So. 2d 312 (Lutrell v. Beard) 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
Lutrell v. Beard, 273 So. 2d 312 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

273 So.2d 312 (1973)

Marianne Drumm LUTRELL
v.
Cecil H. BEARD et al.

No. 5267.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 6, 1973.

Burton G. Klein and Robert A. Katz, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, Stewart E. Niles, Jr., New Orleans, for John A. Boyle, Tops Co., Inc., and Travelers Ins. Co., defendants-appellees.

Turner & Skinner, Emile L. Turner, Jr. and Thomas E. Johnson, New Orleans, for Admiral Merchants Ins. Co., defendant-appellant, and Cecil H. Beard, defendant-appellee.

Before SAMUEL, GULOTTA and SCHOTT, JJ.

SCHOTT, Judge.

This case arose out of an automobile accident which occurred at about 9:00 PM on February 3, 1970, on Elysian Fields Avenue *313 at Treasure Street, in the City of New Orleans. The plaintiff was a guest passenger in the automobile driven by John A. Boyle, owned by Tops Co., Inc., and insured by Travelers Insurance Company. The other vehicle involved in the collision was a tractor and trailer operated by Cecil H. Beard, owned by the Jack Cole Co. and insured by Admiral Merchants Insurance Company.

Prior to the accident Boyle was traveling along Elysian Fields descending from an overpass. Simultaneously Beard, traveling in the same direction as Boyle, entered Elysian Fields from a service road running at ground level parallel to the overpass until a merger of the two roads at Abundance Street, proceeded to his left across three lanes of traffic constituting Elysian Fields and was in the process of turning left into the neutral ground area when the two vehicles collided. According to Boyle he had at all times been in the extreme left lane of traffic and as he began to pass the Beard tractor and trailer which was then in the center lane Beard made his left turn, creating a situation in which Boyle was "pinned" between the Beard vehicle and the neutral ground, so that despite the application of his brakes the Boyle vehicle struck the "dolly" stationary wheels located to the rear of the middle of the trailer. According to Beard, when he entered Elysian Fields the Boyle vehicle was at the top of the overpass, about a block or block and a half away from the point where he entered the avenue at Abundance Street. As he crossed Abundance Street which was one block before Treasure Street he moved his vehicle across the center lane into the left lane, and just before reaching Treasure Street he veered slightly into the center lane so as to make it possible for him to execute a left turn. After he had proceeded with his turn to the point where the front of his tractor entered the neutral ground area, his trailer was struck by the Boyle vehicle.

After hearing testimony of the plaintiff, the two drivers and a police officer who investigated the accident, the trial judge awarded a judgment to the plaintiff for $3,345 against all defendants in solido.

From this judgment only Admiral Merchants, the insurer of the tractor and trailer, has taken an appeal, so that the judgment in favor of the plaintiff against all of the other parties became final in the trial court.

Admiral Merchants specifies errors on the part of the trial court in 1) concluding that both drivers were proximately negligent and caused the accident, 2) failing to consider the weight of the evidence and testimony concerning the intoxication of the plaintiff's host driver, Boyle, 3) failing to find that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence since she knew or should have known of the intoxication of her host, 4) failing to find that the host's intoxication was a substantial cause or factor in the accident, and 5) making an excessive award to the plaintiff for her injuries.

In his reasons for judgment the trial court stated as follows:

"This is a clear case in the Court's opinion, as clear a case as I have ever heard tried where both parties are negligent, or contributorily negligent. There is negligence on the part of the truck driver; there is negligence on the part of the automobile operator. Each driver saw the other vehicle. The truck driver says he saw the automobile at the crest. The automobile, at the crest of the overpass, says he saw the the truck. If either would have yield (sic.) to the other, the accident would not have happened. They were both negligent in the operation of the particular vehicles. The officer's sketch, the sketch of a disinterested party, clearly shows the position of the car and truck after the accident, and it shows that the accident could not have happened like the truck driver says it did. Now, insofar as the negligence of Mr. Boyle, being attributed to Miss Luttrell, there is nothing to that. She had *314 no control over his driving. Whether or not Mr. Boyle was intoxicated or not is immaterial, because he was negligent whether sober or drunk."

In disposing of this case, we may disregard Admiral's first specification of error and proceed to the specifications concerning intoxication on the part of the plaintiff's host and the affirmative defense that she was contributorily negligent in riding as a passenger when she knew or should have known that the driver did not have normal control of his physical and mental faculties, and when she knew or should have known that her driver was under the influence of intoxicants to the extent that his mental and physical faculties were materially impaired.

The plaintiff's host, Boyle, testified that while at the top of the overpass he saw the truck coming onto Elysian Fields. When he reached the bottom of the overpass at Abundance Street the truck had gotten into the center lane, it veered to the right and then to the left, whereupon the plaintiff's host applied his brakes, the plaintiff screamed and "we were under the trailer-truck." The host insisted that he had been in the left lane at all times prior to the collision, and both he and his passenger, the plaintiff, denied seeing any signals on the truck trailer indicating an intention on the part of its driver to make a left turn.

The police officer, who investigated the accident, testified that he found the two vehicles in this position after the accident: The front of the cab on the truck trailer was within the neutral ground crossing of Treasure Street with the length of the rig running diagonally across the left lane of Elysian Fields or the lane nearest the neutral ground and the right rear of the trailer still in the center lane or second lane from the neutral ground. The Boyle automobile was wholly within the left lane with its right front against a plate supporting the "dolly wheels" of the trailer located about one-third of the length of the trailer from its rear. Significantly the officer found 35 feet of skid marks measuring from the front wheels of Boyle's automobile in the left lane running diagonally and coming to an end wholly within the center lane to the rear of the trailer. This leads to a conclusion that Boyle attempted to pass when the truck trailer was already in the process of turning, constituting clear cut negligence on his part. It is equally clear that the truck driver, Beard, was negligent in attempting to execute a left turn when it was unsafe to do so.

The police officer also testified that Boyle appeared as though he had been drinking from "his walk, talk, speech, his clothes disarrangement." He said there was the odor of alcohol on his breath, his pupils were dilated and his eyes were bloodshot. He characterized Boyle's attitude as "belligerent and incoherent" and as a result of his investigation he charged Boyle with driving while under the influence of intoxicants and reckless driving.

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Related

Case v. Arrow Trucking Co.
372 So. 2d 670 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
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301 So. 2d 428 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
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293 So. 2d 507 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
273 So. 2d 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lutrell-v-beard-lactapp-1973.