Lyons v. Magee Truck Lines, Inc.

200 So. 841, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 86
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1941
DocketNo. 16937.
StatusPublished

This text of 200 So. 841 (Lyons v. Magee Truck Lines, Inc.) 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
Lyons v. Magee Truck Lines, Inc., 200 So. 841, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 86 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

This is a suit for damages for the personal injuries received by the plaintiff, a colored man named Charles Lyons, in an intersectional collision which occurred on December 19, 1936, between á small truck owned and operated by one Percy Johnson, in which plaintiff was a passenger, and a large five-ton truck and trailer of Magee Track Lines, Inc., at the corner of LaSalle and Terpsichore Streets in the City of New Orleans. Plaintiff has made as defendants to the action Magee Truck Lines, Inc., and its employee and operator of the track, Wilmer Garrison. He charges that the track in which he was riding had pre-empt-ed the intersection when the large truck with trailer, which was being operated at a fast rate of speed, ran into the right side and center thereof.

The defendants deny any and all negligence on their part and they allege that the accident occurred solely through the fault of Percy Johnson, the driver of the small truck. They assert that Garrison was driving the large track at a slow rate of speed on Terpsichore Street; that, upon reaching thp intersection of LaSalle Street, he slowed down to five miles per hour; that he entered the intersection and was about three-quarters across it wh.en the truck driven by Percy Johnson, which was traveling at a high rate of speed down LaSalle Street, crashed into the left side of the trailer. The defendants further plead that Percy Johnson and the occupants of the small truck' were under the influence of liquor at the time of the accident and it is alleged, in the alternative, that, should the court find that Garrison was guilty of fault in any particular, then plaintiff was con-tributorily negligent, in that he rode in the Johnson truck when he knew that Johnson was unable to drive safely because he was under the influence of intoxicating liquor.

The case proceeded to trial in the lower court on the foregoing issues -and the district judge, after hearing the evidence, found for the defendants ánd dismissed the plaintiff’s suit. Plaintiff has appealed from the adverse decision.

The case involves solely questions of fact. A review of the record shows that the evidence presented by the litigants is in hopeless conflict and it therefore becomes necessary that we set forth the respective versions of the participants in the accident so that we may discern wherein the truth lies.

The accident occurred on December 19, 1936, between 7 and 7:30 p. m. at the-corner of LaSalle and Terpsichore Streets. These streets are both two-way paved thoroughfares, which intersect each other at right angles. Percy Johnson was driving his small truck on LaSalle Street in the direction of Canal Street, and Garrison was driving the large track with trailer on Terpsichore Street in the direction of Lake Pontchartrain. The Johnson truck had two passengers- — -the plaintiff, who was seated on a box on the right-hand side in the rear *842 of' the truck, and one Willie Harper, another colored man .who was seated on the left side in the rear of the truck. The truck and trailer of the defendants, which was driven by Garrison, had no passengers.

Johnson’s version of the accident is as follows: That he was traveling on LaSalle Street at a slow rate of speed; that, when he -approached the intersection and had slowed down to eight miles per hour, he saw a big truck proceeding out Terpsichore Street and approaching the intersection from his right about 90 feet from him; that he pre-empted the crossing and had almost traversed it when the large truck came into the intersection at a fast rate of speed, striking the right side of his truck and knocking it to the left so that, when it came to rest some SO feet from the point of collision, it was facing out Terpsichore Street in the same direction in which the large truck had been traveling. He further says that Lyons received personal injuries as a result of the impact and that he left the scene shortly after the collision in order to -take Lyons to his home.

Johnson’s testimony, with respect to the manner in which the accident occurred, is corroborated by the evidence of the plaintiff and Harper who were passengers in the rear of the small truck. His statement is likewise supported by the testimony of another colored man named A. C. Williams who says that he was standing on the uptown riverside corner of the intersection at the time of the occurrence and that he saw the big truck strike the small truck at a time when the small truck had almost passed over the crossing.

The only eyewitness to the accident produced by the defendants was Garrison, the driver of the large truck. His version of the accident cannot be reconciled with that of plaintiff and his witnesses and it portrays an entirely different state of facts. Garrison says that he was driving the' large truck with trailer attached on Terpsichore Street at a speed of about 20 miles per hour; that, when he was about ten or twenty yards from the entrance of the intersection, he retarded his speed to between/ five and ten miles per hour; that he looked for traffic proceeding on LaSalle Street and, upon observing that the intersection was clear, he continued into the crossing and that the body of the truck had already passed over the intersection when the Johnson truck, which was being operated at a fast rate of speed, struck the left side of his trailer which was proceeding over the crossing at the time. He further says that, when he entered the intersection, he had placed his truck in second gear; that he was going slowly; that the lights of the truck and trailer were burning and that, as soon as his trailer was struck by the Johnson truck, he brought the vehicle to a stop about nine yards from the point of contact. He asserts that he got out of his truck immediately after the accident and asked the negroes if any of them were hurt; that they replied that they were not; that he smelled liquor on their breaths; that he went to the grocery store situated on the corner where he reported the accident to his employer and from there he went to the nearest precinct station where he reported the occurrence to the police and that, when he returned with the police, Johnson and the other two negroes had left the scene of the accident.

In corroboration of Garrison’s testimony, the defendants produced Police Officer Jof-frion, who testified that Garrison came to the Twelfth Precinct Station on the night of the accident and reported the collision; that he and Officer David immediately went to the scene of the accident where he saw the large truck and trailer on Terpsichore Street just past the LaSalle Street intersection facing towards the lake; that Johnson and the occupants of the small truck had left the scene; that he made an investigation and that he was unable to locate Johnson until sometime later. He further says that he noticed marks on the left-hand side of the large truck indicating the point at which it had been struck but that he did not see any marks on the trailer.

It was on the foregoing evidence that the district judge resolved that the version given by Garrison was correct and that the accident occurred solely through the negligence of Johnson, the owner and operator of the small truck. In his written reasons for judgment, the judge remarks that he is not impressed with the testimony of plaintiff and and his .witnesses and that he believes that their evidence is false.

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200 So. 841, 1941 La. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyons-v-magee-truck-lines-inc-lactapp-1941.