Lynch v. Fisher

34 So. 2d 513, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 610
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1947
DocketNo. 7021.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 34 So. 2d 513 (Lynch v. Fisher) 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
Lynch v. Fisher, 34 So. 2d 513, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 610 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

This matter comes before us on appeal from judgment of the Eleventh Judicial District Court of Louisiana sustaining exceptions of no cause or right of action filed on behalf of all defendants and dismissing plaintiff's action as of nonsuit.

The allegations of the petition which are placed at issue as to their sufficiency in setting forth the cause of action in the exceptions referred to, and which set forth the facts upon which plaintiff's action is based, may be summarized as follows:

That about 9:00 p.m. on July 3, 1945, an employee of the defendants, Wheless and Fisher, (whose insurer is the defendant, *Page 515 Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Company of Chicago, Ill.) at the time engaged within the general scope and course of his employment, parked a pulpwood truck which he was driving on the right-hand side of highway No. 171, some twelve miles north of Mansfield, De Soto Parish, Louisiana;

That, while said truck was thus parked, a passenger car owned and driven by the defendant, Robert Joe Gunter, collided violently with the rear end thereof;

That the driver of the parked truck was guilty of negligence, imputable to his employers, on numerous grounds, specifically in parking the truck entirely on the highway without leaving a clearance of fifteen feet on the pavement; in failing to have warning lights on the parked truck; in leaving the truck parked on the highway, thereby constituting a menace to traffic, and in failing to set out flares, or to have same available and ready for service.

That the negligence of the defendant, Robert Joe Gunter consisted of driving and operating his automobile at an excessive, unreasonable and unlawful rate of speed; in failing to keep and maintain a proper lookout; operating his vehicle without adequate brakes; and failing to take any action to avoid the collision;

That the concurrent acts of negligence of the driver of the truck and the driver of the passenger car were the proximate causes of the accident;

That plaintiff seeing the collision ran to the scene thereof, succeeded in opening the doors of the badly damaged Gunter car, and, with the aid of another party, extricated both Mrs. Gunter and the defendant, Robert Joe Gunter, from the automobile, which had meanwhile caught fire;

That, in the effort to further assist the fatally injured Mrs. Gunter, plaintiff attempted to pull a floor mat out of the car to be used as a cushion for her head as she lay upon the roadside; that in the performance of this act plaintiff found a pistol on the floor of the car and handed the same to the defendant Gunter, who, being delirious and temporarily mentally deranged by reason of the shock of the accident, fired the pistol at plaintiff, the bullet passing through plaintiff's left ankle and inflicting serious injuries, for which damages are claimed in this action.

Defendant's exceptions, as directed at plaintiff's petition, are based upon the following points:

(1). That plaintiff's petition contains no allegation under which evidence of the existence of a sudden emergency would be admissible, and, as a consequence, no actionable negligence has been alleged.

(2). That the alleged negligence of the driver of the truck, employee of the defendants, Wheless and Fisher, was not the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff.

(3). That the act of defendant, Gunter, which caused plaintiff's injury, was an independent, intervening cause which broke the causal chain flowing from the original negligence of the driver of the truck.

(4). That the injuries suffered by plaintiff were not reasonably to be foreseen or anticipated as a normal result of the alleged negligence of the driver of the truck.

[1] Appellees correctly contend that the established jurisprudence of the State of Louisiana requires the driver of an automobile to have his vehicle under such control as to be able to bring it to a complete stop within the range of his vision or the penetration of the lights when confronted by any obstruction or danger. But they argue, further, that since plaintiff did not predicate the allegation of his petition upon any theory of sudden emergency, the simple allegation of statutory negligence fails to set forth a cause of action. In support of this position appellee's counsel has cited the cases of O'Rourke v. McConaughey, La. App., 157 So. 598; Safety Tire Service v. Murov, 19 La. App. 663, 140 So. 879; Bordelon v. T. L. James Co., La. App., 148 So. 484, 485; Waters, et al. v. Meriwether Transfer Co., 18 La. App. 18, 137 So. 578; and Odom v. Long, La. App., 26 So.2d 709.

[2] Reference to the cited cases discloses the fact that all were tried on the merits and all deal with the question of contributory negligence or the doctrine of last clear chance as between the parties, drivers of the respective vehicles. We concede that *Page 516 the authorities quoted would be applicable if the parties to this suit occupied a similar relationship, but it must be borne in mind that this is not such an action, but rather that plaintiff herein is a third party without any connection with the operation of either of the vehicles, and, therefore, entirely without concern or interest in the application of the doctrines of contributory negligence and last clear chance. For this reason, the cases cited have no application to the point raised.

[3] Plaintiff herein has properly alleged the concurrent negligence of the several defendants and there is ample authority in this State for the proposition that a third person may recover from either or all parties alleged to be guilty of concurrent negligence. Shields v. F. Johnson Son Co.,132 La. 773, 61 So. 787, 47 L.R.A., N.S., 1080.

[4] The rule is plainly stated in Comment (a) on page 472 of Volume 2 of the Restatement of the Law of Torts as follows: "A plaintiff who intervenes to rescue a third person is not affected by the fact that the third person has been a legally contributing cause in putting plaintiff in peril."

Determination of the issue of proximate cause must of necessity be considered with relation to the allied doctrine of intervening cause which is clearly material under the alleged facts of this case.

It is quite true, as contended by learned counsel for defendants, as a general proposition of law that only that negligence which directly causes the injury is deemed to be proximate. But a resolution of this point must perforce depend upon the particular facts of each case.

In the matter before us there are three elements that must be determined:

(a). Did the original negligence of the driver of the parked truck set in motion a chain of circumstances following consecutively one upon the other which led to plaintiff's injury?

(b). Was the act of original negligence superseded by an intervening act breaking the chain of causation leading to plaintiff's injury?

(c). Is the fact that plaintiff's injuries resulted from an improbable and unforeseeable incident sufficient to eliminate the original act of negligence from consideration as a proximate cause?

The answer to these queries will dispose of all the claims based upon the doctrines of proximate arid intervening causes and foreseeability.

Upon the basis of the allegations there is no room for any reasonable contravention of the proposition that the circumstances following the negligent parking of the truck down to the removal of the pistol from the car by plaintiff were natural, probable and reasonably to be expected. But at this point an imponderable enters into consideration. The rescuer hands a pistol to the rescued and is shot by the latter.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 2d 513, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-fisher-lactapp-1947.