Maddox v. Pattison

186 So. 894
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1938
DocketNo. 5812.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 186 So. 894 (Maddox v. Pattison) 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
Maddox v. Pattison, 186 So. 894 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

A collision between a one and one-half ton truck of the Magnolia Pipe Line Company and another of two-ton capacity belonging to W. C. Pattison of Mansfield, Louisiana, occurred on November 18, 1937, at the southern end of a narrow bridge on the Shreveport-Mansfield highway. The locus is in Caddo Parish, approximately 650 feet north of its boundary line with DeSoto Parish. At the time of the collision the Magnolia truck was being driven in a northerly direction by an employee of its owner, while the other vehicle, operated by Clayton Bates, an employee of Mr. Pattison who was acting within the course and scope of his employment, was proceeding toward the south.

Following the accident, Mrs. Evelyn Phillips Maddox instituted suit to- recover damages against the said W. C. Pattison and his admitted insurer, Hardware Mutual Casualty Company, alleging that her husband, Jack H. Maddox, was an employee of the Magnolia Pipe Line Company and was riding in its said truck at ■ the time, and that the collision was proximately caused by the negligent operation and handling of the Pattison truck and resulted in the death of her said husband. Her suit was numbered 74,041 on the docket of the First District Court of Caddo Parish, Louisiana.

Also as a consequence of the collision was suit No. 74,160 on the docket of said court, filed by Ben F. Buckliew against the above named defendants seeking an award of damages. He alleges that he was an employee of the Magnolia Pipe Line Company and was riding in its truck on the occasion in question, and that the negligent driving of the Pattison truck was responsible for his sustaining injuries which are totally and permanently disabling.

The truck of Mr. Pattison was protected by a policy o-f bodily injury liability insurance issued by the said Hardware Mutual Casualty Company. The mentioned coverage, however, was restricted to $10,-000 for each person, with a maximum of $20,000 for each accident.

The acts of negligence attributed to Pattison’s employee by the plaintiff in each of the mentioned suits are:

“(a) In driving the truck of W. C. Patti-son at a high, excessive, unlawful and negligent rate of speed at the place of collision.
“(b) In driving said truck at a high, excessive and unlawful rate of speed of not less than fifty miles per hour towards the narrow bridge and on the narrow embankment near the place of collision.
“(c) In driving said truck at a high, excessive and unlawful rate of speed of not less than fifty miles per hour on the narrow embankment at and near the place of collision shortly after a rainfall when the pavement was wet, especially in view of the fact that the said Clayton Bates drove along said road almost daily, knew that the roadbed to the north of said narrow bridge was on a high, narrow embankment, knew that there was another narrow bridge some distance north of the bridge at which the collision occurred, knew that the bridge at which the collision occurred *896 was a narrow bridge, and knew the danger of travelling at a high rate of speed over such high, narrow embankment and the narrow bridges thereon in the vicinity of the place where' the collision occurred.
“(d) In seeing the truck belonging to the Magnolia Pipe Line Company approaching the narrow bridge, near which the collision occurred, and in not retarding the excessive and high rate of speed at which he was traveling, and in not stopping the truck driven by him, or slowing the same down to such an extent as to be under his complete control before entering the narrow bridge near where the collision occurred.
“(e) In driving his truck partly on the left side of the center of the road.
“(f) In not passing to the right of the truck of the Magnolia Pipe Line Company without striking it, which he could easily have done if he had been driving the truck of W. C. Pattision at a reasonable rate of speed and had had complete control thereof just prior to the accident.”

The named defendants filed a joint answer in each suit and, as disclosed by the brief of their counsel, urge, — “* * * that there was no negligence on the part of the driver of the Pattison truck; that the accident resulted solely from the fact that the Magnolia truck was defective and its driver lost control thereof; that Maddox and Buckliew suffered their injuries before the collision of the trucks, and that the Pattison truck was operated in a prudent and careful manner at all times by its driver. In the alternative the defendants plead that if it be held that the Patti-son truck was negligently operated, the accident was caused by the contributory negligence of the driver of the Magnolia truck, which negligence is imputable to Mrs. Maddox and to Buckliew for the reason that Maddox and Buckliew were fellow servants of the driver of the Magnolia truck. The contributory negligence alleged is excessive speed by the driver of the Magnolia truck and the loss of control of the said truck by its driver, being the same facts pleaded by the defendants as the sole cause of the accident and alternatively pleaded as contributory negligence.”

The Magnolia Pipe Line Company intervened in both proceedings, alleging, that it had paid compensation under the Louisiana Employers’ Liability Act, Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended, to Ben F. Buckliew, and to the widow of Jack Maddox. It prays for judgments against said defendants for all amounts paid and to be paid as compensation by reason of said accident, and for reasonable attorney’s fees for the filing and prosecution of the interventions. The making of the alleged payments is not disputed by the parties.

On written motion of defendants the two cases were consolidated for the purpose of trial. Thereafter they were tried by a jury at the request of the respective plaintiffs.

The judgment in the Maddox case, which was predicated on the jury’s verdict, was in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants in solido for $9,500, with interest and costs.

It further decreed that, “intervenor, Magnolia Pipe Line Company, do have and recover out of such sum so awarded to plaintiff all compensation paid to plaintiff prior to the date of the collection of this judgment and $150.00 funeral expenses contributed by intervenor, together with twenty per cent attorney’s fees on such compensation and such sum of $150.00.”

Also based on the verdict of the jury was the judgment in the Buckliew suit. It condemned defendants in solido to pay to plaintiff the sum of $10,000, with interest and costs, and recognized the right of the intervenor, Magnolia Pipe Line Company, to be reimbursed out of such judgment the sums paid and to be paid its said employee as compensation. The fees of certain expert witnesses were fixed and assessed as costs in this judgment.

Defendants moved for a new trial and rehearing. The request was denied.

Thereafter they appealed to this court from both of the judgments, the appeals of the Hardware Mutual Casualty Company being suspensive and devolutive, while those of Pattison were only devolu-tive.

Also appealing devolutively was each plaintiff; but such appeals were from the judgments only in so far as they failed to grant the full amount of damages requested.

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maddox-v-pattison-lactapp-1938.