Malone v. Hughes

65 So. 2d 665, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 679
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1953
DocketNo. 7936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 65 So. 2d 665 (Malone v. Hughes) 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
Malone v. Hughes, 65 So. 2d 665, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 679 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinions

McINNIS, Judge.

The demand in this casé is against W. R. Hughes and his employer, American Snuff Company and its public liability insurer, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, following a collision between an automobile owned and being driven by Grady Malone with one owned by American Snuff Company, and being operated by W. R. Hughes, about 3:15 P. M. August 23, 1951, on state highway 480 in Bienville Parish, near Shady Grove School.

Tony Malone, husband of Bessie Malone, demands $225 'for medical treatment incurred and to be incurred for his wife, and Bessie Malone damands $15,000 for her injuries, mental and physical suffering and disability.

On the day in question W. R. Hughes and another employee of American Snuff Company, Edwin M. Spell, were distributing samples of snuff in this rural area. Spell had parked the automobile he was using, headed south, as near the right side of the graveled road as he could, and Hughes, driving south, had parked the automobile he was operating to the rear and left of the Spell automobile, obstructing the road, rendering it difficult if not impossible for automobiles to pass to the left of the Hughes automobile. The two were engaged in conversation. To the north of the point where the automobiles were parked is a curve, variously estimated as at a distance of 125 to 500 feet. The latter figure is most likely nearer correct. The curve is on a hill, and to the south for some 200 feet it is down a hill which is not steep, and then the road levels off beyond the place where the automobiles were parked. A family named Blankenship lives in a house some 25 feet east of the road on the hill near the curve.

Grady Malone, with his mother, Bessie Malone, on the front seat and his 20 year old sister, Igusta Malone, on the back seat, came around the curve and down the hill at a speed, variously estimated by different witnesses, of from 45.miles an hour to 75 miles an hour. The first figure is most likely nearer correct. His brakes apparent[667]*667ly took effect when he was some 140 feet from the Hughes automobile, but he failed to stop, and the right front of his automobile contacted the left rear of the Hughes ■automobile and it was moved south and around the Spell automobile, without touching it, and on into the ditch on the right, •and the Malone automobile left the road on •the left side and went into the ditch.

Plaintiffs contend that the collision was -caused solely by the negligence of Hughes in parking the automobile so as to block the road near this curve, and in the alternative, they say that in the event -that either Grady .Malone or Bessie Malone, or both, were negligent, which is denied, that they are •nevertheless entitled to recover, for the reason that the negligence of Hughes was ’the sole and proximate cause of the collision. .

Answering, defendants admit the ownership of the Hughes automobile and his employment, and the insurance coverage, but ■deny any negligence on the part of Hughes, and in the alternative, allege that if Hughes was guilty of any negligence that Bessie Malone was guilty of contributory negligence barring any recovery by her, for the reasons, 1, that she was riding in a car at an excessive rate of speed, believed to have been approximately 70 miles per hour, without making any protest, and, 2, in failing to keep a proper.lookout and warning the driver of the parked car of Hughes, and 3, failing to warn the driver, who it is alleged was looking at an object in a field on one side of the road, to observe the road ahead.

After trial on the merits the district judge awarded judgment in favor of Tony Malone for $90.50 and in favor of Bessie Malone for $1,200, from which judgment defendants are prosecuting a suspensive appeal, and plaintiffs have answered the appeal, asking that the award to Bessie Malone be increased to $3,500.

Defendants say that the Hughes automobile was parked in a place that could be seen 500 feet to the north, and that the proximate cause of the accident was the excessive speed of the automobile in which plaintiff Bessie Malone was riding, and the failure of the driver and plaintiff Bessie Malone to keep a proper lookout. They contend also that there was ample space for the Malone automobile to have passed to the left of the Hughes automobile, and in the alternative, plead independent contributory negligence of plaintiff Bessie Malone in. bar of her right to recovery.

We are not impressed with the claim that there was ample space on the left of the Hughes automobile for traffic to pass. It is possible that an automobile proceeding at a very slow rate of speed might have negotiated the narrow strip of the road on the left of the Hughes automobile, but from all the evidence, we are convinced that the road was rather effectively blocked. It is true that Hughes and Spell testified that an automobile occupied by two men they did not know, had safely passed to the left of the Hughes automobile, at a very slow speed. There is so much inconsistency in the testimony of these two witnesses that we are unable to place a great deal of reliance on any of it. We are asked to believe the testimony of these two witnesses as to the manner in which the automobiles were parked, because they were where the automobiles were parked and the witnesses of plaintiff were 500 feet away. It is true that some of the witnesses were some 500 feet away, but Grady Malone, his mother and sister were not 500 feet away when the collision took place.

It is also contended that it is immaterial whether the Hughes and Spell automobiles did completely block the highway, because the proximate cause of the collision was negligent operation of the Malone automobile.

We have been cited to a number of cases on “proximate cause”, such as Painter v. Bewley Furniture Company, La.App., 195 So. 70, which involved injury to a pedestrian, and the facts are not similar; Hataway v. F. Strauss & Son, Inc., La.App., 158 So. 408, where it was held that parking a truck with the back end some two or three feet from the curb on a street 36 feet wide was not a proximate cause of the accident; Sexton v. Stiles, 15 La.App. 148, 130 So, 821, where it was held that a truck left parked at night without lights on its right-hand side of the road was not a proximate cause [668]*668Of the accident, but that the proximate cause was the failure of the driver of the car to see it in time to avoid striking it; Penton v. Scars, Roebuck & Co., La.App., 4 So.2d 547, where recovery was denied when husband collided with rear of truck parked on its right-hand side of the road, the court finding that parking the truck was not a proximate cause of the accident.

We have been cited to one of our recent decisions, Herget v. Saucier, La.App., 61 So.2d 545, where we held that a guest who not only failed to warn driver, but urged her to pass another vehicle at a time when both were approaching intersection, was guilty of independent contributory negligence barring recovery, and also that another guest in the same car who gave no attention to things obviously visible was also barred from recovery. We note that the Honorable Supreme Court granted writs in this Herget case, and has not yet handed down a decision.

In the cited cases there was no complete obstruction of the highway, and there was ample space to pass the obstructions in safety, which in our opinion was not so in the present case. It cannot be successfully or logically argued that Hughes did not violate the law in parking his automobile as he did.

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 2d 665, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-hughes-lactapp-1953.