McCain v. Pan-American Petroleum Corp.

142 So. 376
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 15, 1932
DocketNo. 4312.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 142 So. 376 (McCain v. Pan-American Petroleum Corp.) 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
McCain v. Pan-American Petroleum Corp., 142 So. 376 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

McGregor, j.

On December 12, 1929, plaintiff, Milling McCain, while on his way to make a visit to his mother in the city of Natchitoches, was driving a Buick roadster on the gravelled highway between the towns of Montgomery and Natchitoches. Just after he left Montgomery and was about to enter the main highway from one of the side streets of the town, he paused for a moment to permit S. M. Sims, one of the defendants, to pass ahead of him, driving a Pan-American Petroleum Corporation truck. Sims evidently was running the oil truck at least as fast as plaintiff was driving his Buick roadster, for he stayed in the lead for about a mile and a half. J. F. Rhodes, with his wife on the front seat and a negro man standing at the back of the seat, entered the road ahead of Sims in a kind of dismantled 1924 model T Ford touring car. He was passed first by Sims with his oil truck and then by plaintiff in his Buick roadster.

As soon as plaintiff had passed the Rhodes car, he continued on the left side of the road with the apparent intention of passing the Sims oil truck. From the testimony it seems apparent that Sims was not aware of the plaintiff’s desire or intention to pass him, though it was proved, and is now admitted, that plaintiff blew several loud blasts of his automobile horn to indicate his intention to pass. Be that as it may, just as plaintiff was about even and parallel with the oil truck,, there was a collision between the two, with the result that plaintiff was thrown forward out of his car over one hundred feet from the point of the collision, and the Buick roadster was practically demolished. Sims brought his truck to a standstill within a relatively few feet, and neither he nor the truck was injured to any appreciable extent. Plaintiff fell in a sitting posture. One of his lumbar vertebrae was fractured, and several severe lacerations about the body were received by him.

Quite a number of people soon gathered around the scene of the accident. As quickly as possible, Sims, with the assistance of others, placed the plaintiff in his truck and carried him back to Montgomery to the residence of Dr. John I. McCain, an uncle of the plaintiff. At the earliest date possible, eleven days after the collision, plaintiff was removed to the home of his mother in the town of Natch-itoches, where he remained for some time. On May 21, 1930, this suit was filed against the Pan-American Petroleum Corporation, and on August 30, '1930, the petition was amended so as to include S. M. Sims as a party defendant. In his petition as amended *378 and supplemented the plaintiff prayed for judgment in solido against the defendants for damages in the sum of $60,002.50, which he itemized as follows:

(a) Amount due by petitioner to John I. McCain for care, attention, treatment, board, lodging and keep for a period of eleven (11) days immediately following receipt injuries.$ 55.00

(b) Amount due E»r. N. M. Brian for professional services rendered in treatment of petitioner’s injuries, for medicines, gauzes, bandages, etc. 347.50

(c) Amount due petitioner as actual and compensatory damages for injuries received and sustained rendering him perma- ' nently and totally disabled. 54,600.00

(d) Amount due petitioner for mental pain, mental anguish, and mental suffering. 5,000.00

Total. $60,002.50

There was a long, drawn-out trial, extending through five days, with a record of over five hundred pages. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants in solido for the sum of $7,000. The defendants have appealed, and the plaintiff has answered the appeals, and prays that the damages awarded be increased to $20,000.

Opinion.

In his petition, as amended and supplemented, plaintiff alleges that the defendant Sims was an agent and employee of the defendant Pan-American Petroleum Corporation, and that the collision in which he received the injuries complained of was cajised by the negligence of Sims while engaged in the business of his principal or employer. The defendants deny the agency of Sims, and aver that the plaintiff, driving at an excessive rate of speed, sideswiped the truck in attempting to pass it. Plaintiff’s version of how the collision occurred is contained in paragraphs 11 and 12 of his original petition, which read as follows:

“That petitioner was driving his father’s said automobile upon the aforesaid highway in a northerly direction, and at a legal and moderate rate of speed; that he came up within a proper distance of defendant’s said motor truck then being driven by the said S. M. Sims, along said highway in the same direction, and at a point about one mile north of Montgomery, in said Parish of Grant, Louisiana; that, observing the left side of the road to be clear and fre'e of oncoming traffic, petitioner desired to overtake and pass said motor truck; that he sounded the horn of the automobile which he was driving, which gave an audible signal indicating petitioner’s desire to pass said motor truck; that as petitioner sounded said horn, the said motor truck veered or turned to the right of said highway; that from this action it appeared to petitioner that the driver of said motor truck had given way to the right side of said road for the purpose of allowing petitioner to pass on the left; that petitioner, having his car under control and driving at a legal and moderate rate of speed, thereupon proceeded to drive to the left of the center of said road, and at a distance to safely clear and pass said truck, all in accordance with-the rules of the road as established by both custom and the laws of this State; that after petitioner had so proceeded to drive his father’s said automobile to and along the left of said road to a point where the front part of said automobile had just passed the front of defendant’s said motor truck, and when said automobile was beginning to forge ahead, of said motor ttu.ck, and while petitioner was still proceeding along the left hand side of the said road in a straight direction, defendant’s said motor truck, then being driven and operated by said S. M. Sims, its servant, agent and employee as aforesaid, suddenly,, quickly, and without any signal or warning whatever, turned sharply from the right of said road, across the center line of said road, and on to the left of said road into the automobile then being driven by petitioner, striking said automobile on the side with great force, turning it pver, and causing the injury and damage to petitioner as set forth in this petition.
“That the act of the said motor truck, operated by defendant’s servant, agent and employee as aforesaid, in turning sharply across the said public highway without warning, and without petitioner in the least expecting, the same, or having cause to expect the same., rendered it humanly impossible for petitioner to do anything whatever to avoid being struck by said motor truck.”

It is conceded, as well as proved, that plaintiff sounded his horn both while he was passing J. F. Rhodes’ Ford car and .while approaching the oil truck. Sims denies having heard it at any time, and so do all the occupants of the Rhodes car. From the testimony in the case we think it certain that Sims has no recollection of having heard the horn, and yet there is testimony in the case that there was a kind of subconscious reaction on his part to the sounding of this alarm by the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
142 So. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccain-v-pan-american-petroleum-corp-lactapp-1932.