Mathews v. Hayne

188 So. 462, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 211
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1939
DocketNos. 5816, 5817.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 188 So. 462 (Mathews v. Hayne) 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
Mathews v. Hayne, 188 So. 462, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 211 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The Ford coach of the defendant Hayne collided with the Chevrolet sedan of plaintiff, Leonard Mathews, in the northeasterly part of the area embraced within the intersection of Texas Avenue, a graveled road, and the Alexandria-Lake Charles highway (being State Highway No. 135) at about the hour of 6 o’clock P. M., December 24, 1937. The intersection is less than one-half mile without the limits of the city of Alexandria. Each car was being operated by its owner; No one accompanied Hayne. On the front seat with Mathews were' his wife and daughter, Margie, age 14. Their son, Dan, age 10, and Eloise, a daughter, age 7, were in the rear of 'the-car. All six of the cars’ occupants were were injured. These suits to recover damages followed. ■

The highway is straight for a half mile or more on each side of the intersection. Its course there is northeasterly and southwesterly. The concrete slab thereon is 18 feet -wide. Texas Avenue is surfaced with *464 gravel 26 feet wide. It intersects the highway on its westerly side at an angle of 75 degrees, north of west. It leaves the east side of the highway at an angle more acute, north of east. The intersectional area-is therefore of irregular form. On the west side of the highway the 6-foot shoulder is surfaced with gravel. The drainage ditch adjacent thereto is ten feet wide. The ditches on both sides of the Avenue, west of the highway, are six feet wide. The record does not disclose the depth of either ditch. Apparently, they are shallow.

The home of the Mathews family is on the Avenue, approximately one-half mile west of the highway. On the date of the accident Mathews operated a filling station and beer garden located in the northeast angle formed by the crossing of the Avenue and the highway. The station is 18 feet east of the concrete on the highway and its west corner is about 72 feet north of the center of the Avenue. The beer garden is approximately 30 feet east from the station. The area about the station and garden and extending to the highway and Avenue is surfaced with gravel. Its elevation is the same as both roads.

The Mathews family had spent some time in the city of Alexandria the afternoon of December 24th, making purchases and attending church services, and then began the trip toward their home. They drove out Lee Street to its intersection with said highway No. 135 and turned south thereon. They stopped in front of the Mathews filling station a few minutes. Mr. Mathews went inside the beer garden building and upon his return to the car, the journey homeward was resumed. . The car was driven forward into Texas Avenue and then turned west into the intersection. Exactly how far it went before turning west is a controverted issue. It was rammed by the Hayne car, traveling north on the highway, after its rear end had passed over the concrete and was on the gravel a few feet west of the slab.

Mrs. Lilly Flynn Mathews, wife of Leonard Mathews, sued to recover $2,000 damages for the injuries sustained by her in the collision. She alleges that before her husband’s car left the filling station, its headlights were switched on; that he then drove slowly into Texas Avenue and turned west toward the highway; that when within three or four feet of the slab, the car was brought to a stop;'that he and she looked for traffic in each direction on the highway. None was in sight on their right. They observed the lights of defendant’s car south of them a distance estimated at 1,000 feet and, believing they had ample time to safely cross over, the car was driven forward at the rate of six or eight miles per hour until struck by the Hayne car.

The sole cause of the accident is accredited to Hayne. Specific acts of negligence and carelessness on his part are alleged to be these:

1. Excessive speed, approximated at 70 or 80 miles per hour;

2. Failure to keep a proper lookout for traffic on or entering upon the highway;

3. Failure to apply the brakes, if his car was equipped with any; and

4. Driving at a speed so rapid that his car could not be stopped within the distance illumined by its headlights.

It is further alleged that defendant was familiar with conditions on both sides of the highway below and above the intersection, and knew that said highway was lined on its east side above Texas Avenue with drive-in drink and sandwich stands, and that many homes and public driveways were thereon; and further, that he knew that many roads and streets intersected the highway in that locality; and in view of these conditions, the manner and method of defendant’s driving as he approached the intersection was a “wilful and wanton disregard for the safety and rights of petitioner, her husband and children”.

She additionally alleges that by the “use of ordinary care and prudence, defendant, despite his negligence, as aforesaid, could have avoided striking petitioner’s husband’s car by continuing on his right hand side of said highway”.

Defendant denies each and every act of negligence and carelessness charged to him as being the cause or contributing cause of the accident and alleges that said accident was due solely to the negligent acts of this plaintiff in these respects, to-wit:

1. That she failed to keep a proper lookout for cars on the highway so that she could warn her husband of their presence prior to undertaking to cross it;

2. That she was negligent in not warning and cautioning her husband against driving onto said highway in the face of defendant’s approaching car, after having observed it; and

*465 3. That plaintiff knew that said highway carried much through traffic and that it was dangerous to attempt to drive thereon or across it unless certain that no cars were in close proximity to her husband’s car, and that she did not, as a prudent and careful passenger would have done under such circumstances, warn her said husband and prevent him from driving onto said highway and across the path of defendant’s car.

In the alternative, he pleads these elements of negligence in bar of plaintiff’s right to recover.

Leonard Mathews sued to recover damages for the personal injuries received by him as a result of the collision; for medical and hospital expenses incurred in his own behalf and for his wife and children; and also for the use and benefit of his said three minor children, for the damages suffered by them therein or as a result thereof.

The allegations of the petition of this plaintiff relative to the facts of the accident, those immediately preceding, and the cause or causes thereof, are identical with those of Mrs. Mathews’ petition. Defendant’s answer is practically the same as was made by him to Mrs. Mathews’ suit. He also, in the alternative, pleads the contributory negligence of Mathews to preclude recovery by him and those whom he represents in the following respects:

1. That he failed to keep a proper lookout for cars approaching on said highway before driving upon it;

2.

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Bluebook (online)
188 So. 462, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathews-v-hayne-lactapp-1939.