McCain v. Tatman

53 So. 2d 187, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 751
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 30, 1951
DocketNo. 7659
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 53 So. 2d 187 (McCain v. Tatman) 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. Tatman, 53 So. 2d 187, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 751 (La. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

This suit in the Lower Court bears No. 36,491. It was consolidated for trial below with No. 36,492. In each suit the plaintiff seeks to recover damages that resulted from the same motor vehicle accident. Separate judgments, however, were rendered and signed by the District Judge. In this Court suit No. 36,492 will be designated as No. 7659%. McKnight v. Tatman, La.App., 53 So.2d 191.

At about the hour of 11:15 p. m. on August 13, 1947, the truck and semi-trailer of Wilson J. Tatman, being then operated by [188]*188his agent, Wallace Matt, loaded with several head of cattle and traveling northerly on United States Highway No. 71, about four miles north of the City of Alexandria, Louisiana, was stopped by officers of the Division of State Police, Department of Public Safety of the State of Louisiana, and inspected to ascertain if it carried physical evidence to identify it as the hit-and-run vehicle that had. collided with another motor vehicle in a village some distance south of the City of Alexandria, Louisiana.

The truck and trailer were approximately feet wide and together were 47 feet long. When stopped they were entirely on the right lane of travel, leaving 26 feet of open road (concrete and shoulder), on the left or west side. While the officers were inspecting the vehicle and questioning Matt, a Studebaker car, owned and then being operated by Robert C. Bowers of Colfax, Louisiana, approached from the south at a rapid speed, and violently collided with the left rear corner' of the trailer. . Bowers was injured, as also was plaintiff, McCain, riding on the rear seat of the car, while Howard Luther McKnight, riding' beside Bowers, was killed from the force of the impact.

Plaintiff herein sued for damages and impleaded as defendants, Wilson J. Tatman and his insurer, Great American Indemnity Company of New York, and his driver, Wallace Matt; also, the highway officers, Troopers Phillip Higdon and E. C. Lyles, and Sergeant W. E. Penny.

The accident is accredited to the concurring negligence of the officers in stopping and allowing to remain stopped on the paved portion of the highway, the truck and trailer, and to the alleged negligence of Matt in not- driving his vehicles from the highway onto- the spacious road shoulder at his right side, while the officers were performing their duties of inspection, etc.

Plaintiff also alleged that while flares had been placed on the highway by said officers, the truck and trailer were signaled by them to stop and were allowed to stop below the most southern flare, which in itself was an act of negligence.

It is additionally alleged that under the law it is made the duty of state troopers to prevent illegal parking on and obstruction of state highways, and that by failing to observe this law, but, on the contrary, permitting its breach by allowing the vehicles to remain stationary thereon, without adequate warning of their presence by flares, fore and aft, was actionable negligence and the proximate cause of the collision.

It is also alleged by the plaintiff that when approximately 150 feet south of the parked truck and trailer, the Bo-wers car met and passed another vehicle and in doing so its lights were dimmed, as were those of the other car; that after said other car passed, Bowers again switched ■ on ■ his bright lights, at which time he was entering a curve in said highway; that Bowers had his car under complete control, and as soon as he saw the obstruction created by the parked truck and trailer, he applied his brakes and did all that was possible to avert the impending collision. He affirmed freedom of fault on his part as a cause or contributing cause of the accident.

Defendants, Tatman, Matt and the insurance company filed joint answer which denied articulately all allegations designed to serve as an integral part of the basis of the alleged cause of action. Amplifying, they aver that at the approximate location alleged, Matt observed a road block established by three patrolmen, some distance ahead (north) of him, and also observed the flares that had been placed in the center of the highway, some distance apart, as well as the three highway men with burning flashlights; that for said reasons, and at the command of one of said officers, he brought the truck and trailer gradually to a stop; that he remained so immobilized for a few minutes and then the collision occurred; that all lights on the vehicles, including six rear lights of the trailer, were burning, and acted as notice of the location of the vehicles, which was accentuated by the presence' of the patrolmen with flashlights, and the flares; that notwithstanding all this, the Bowers car was carelessly and heedlessly driven into the trailer.

These defendants specially plead that the accident was the result of the joint negligence of Bowers, the 'highway patrolmen in flagging and stopping defendant’s truck [189]*189and plaintiff’s want of care as a guest passenger in the Bowers car, in that he was riding therein while, under the circumstances, it was being driven at an excessive speed; that he negligently failed to observe the parked truck on the highway ahead of him, with bright lights thereon, plainly visible to one keeping a proper lookout; that he was also negligent in failing to observe the road block and the signals given by the patrolmen and in failing to warn the driver of the car, and to protest at his conduct.

In the alternative, should it be found and held that defendants Tatman and Matt were guilty of negligence, causing or contributing to the accident, these defendants, employing the above related facts and acts of the plaintiff as a predicate, urge that he is barred from recovery because of his own contributory negligence, which, they aver, was the sole and the proximate cause of the tragedy.

The defendants, Penny, Lyles and Rigdon severed in their answers, but there is not a great deal of difference, in substance, between them. Each' denies that he was guilty of any sort of negligence for the part he, directly or indirectly, played in stopping the truck and trailer and detaining them briefly on the highway while being examined in obedience to orders. They each resist the demand on the samé grounds and urge the same defenses and pleas as are urged by their codefendants, insofar as applicable. In addition, these defendants' plead that Bowers, McKnight and plaintiff herein were returning from a trip to Baton Rouge, where they had gone on a joint mission and adventure, and because of this the negligence of Bowers, in the operation of his car prior to and at the moment of the accident, is imputable and should be imputed to plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s demand was rejected and his suit dismissed at his cost. He appealed to this Court.

The record is unique in that, while questions of fact are involved, it is barren of testimony from the mouths of witnesses. Not one testified on the trial. The facts are, in the main, not contradicted. These were established by ex parte written statements of highway patrolmen, of defendant Matt and other witnesses, by maps, pictures, etc., and stipulations of counsel in Court.

The headquarters of the Department of Highways in Alexandria, Louisiana, on being advised that a collision between motor vehicles had occurred in Livonia, Louisiana, and that one of the drivers, in his vehicle, had fled the scene, immediately set in motion means to apprehend him, if possible. To this end the two named troopers and Sergeant Penny were assigned to establish a block on United States Highways Nos.

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Sutter v. Travelers Insurance Co.
167 So. 2d 517 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
Briley v. North River Insurance
161 So. 2d 449 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
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68 So. 2d 652 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)
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McKnight v. Tatman
53 So. 2d 191 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 2d 187, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccain-v-tatman-lactapp-1951.