Meek v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.

244 So. 2d 661, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6427
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1971
DocketNo. 11551
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 244 So. 2d 661 (Meek v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.) 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
Meek v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 244 So. 2d 661, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6427 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

AYRES, Judge.

This is an action in tort wherein plaintiff Mrs. Mattie Frances Addison Meek seeks to recover damages for personal injuries, pain, suffering, and disabilities sustained in a motor vehicle collision near [663]*663noon of October 23, 1968, at the intersection of Greenwood and Jewella Roads in the City of Shreveport. Plaintiff’s husband, Billy Duane Meek, joined as a party plaintiff, seeks reimbursement of hospital and medical expenses incurred in the treatment of his wife’s injuries and judgment for damages to the family automobile.

Greenwood Road, a segment of U. S. Highway 80 which traverses the City of Shreveport from east to west, is a main 4-lane thoroughfare. Jewella Road is likewise a 4-lane north-and-south thoroughfare as it traverses the city. Movement of traffic through the intersection of these two streets is governed by conventional electric signal lights.

Three vehicles were involved in the collision. Mrs. Meek, who approached the intersection from the north on Jewella, stopped her Plymouth Valiant on the inside southbound traffic lane in obedience to an unfavorable signal light. While her vehicle was thus stopped an Oldsmobile driven by John Douglas Henson northerly on Jewella proceeded into and attempted to cross the intersection. Coincidentally with Henson’s entry in the intersection, a 2-ton International dairy truck owned by Sanitary Dairy Products, Inc., driven by Fairy Baker, an employee of Edgar F. Greer, d.b.a. Ed Greer’s Gulf Service, approached the intersection from the east on Greenwood Road, proceeded into the intersection and struck the Henson automobile on its right rear panel as it was crossing the inner westbound traffic lane of Greenwood Road, the lane occupied by the truck. The Henson vehicle, by force of the impact of the collision, spun around and struck the Meek Plymouth as Mrs. Meek continued to await a change of signals to permit her entry and left turn in the intersection. Thus Mrs. Meek sustained the injuries for which she seeks to recover damages.

Made defendants were Henson and his insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company; Fairy Baker, his employer, Edgar F. Greer, d.b.a. Ed Greer’s Gulf Service, and Greer’s insurer, Casualty Reciprocal Exchange; and Sanitary Dairy Products, Inc., and its insurer, The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company.

Negligence charged by plaintiffs to each of the two drivers of the alleged offending vehicles, Henson and Baker, consists of (1) failure to obey the traffic light, to keep their vehicles under control, or to yield the right of way, and (2) proceeding at excessive speeds. In addition, Henson was charged with executing a dangerous left-turn maneuver in the face of oncoming traffic.

An exception of no cause of action on behalf of Sanitary Dairy Products, Inc., was sustained. A judgment of dismissal of plaintiffs’ action as to this defendant was signed and filed February 4, 1970. No appeal was taken from that judgment; hence that defendant is not before the court.

The trial court, after a hearing on the merits of the case, concluded that Henson’s negligence in ignoring a red signal light and proceeding into the intersection at an excessive rate of speed was the sole cause of the accident. There was judgment accordingly in favor of Mrs. Meek against the defendants Henson and State Farm, in solido, for the principal sum of $10,000.00, the policy limit of coverage for one person in one accident, and against Henson alone for an additional principal sum of $5,000.00; and in favor of Billy Duane Meek against the same defendants in solido for $100.00, and in his favor against Henson alone for an additional sum of $2,327.05. Plaintiffs’ demands against defendants Baker, Greer, Greer’s insurer, and The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company were accordingly rejected.

From the judgment thus rendered and signed, the defendant State Farm appealed suspensively and devolutively. Plaintiffs and Henson likewise appealed but only devolutively. Plaintiffs seek, by their ap[664]*664peal, to hold liable the defendants exonerated in the judgment and an increase in the award made by the trial court.

The defendants Henson and State Farm assign as errors the conclusions of the trial court (1) that Henson ignored the red traffic signal light and crossed into the path of the truck which had a favorable light, (2) that the speed of the Henson vehicle was so excessive as to impose upon the driver of the truck no obligation to await the clearance of the intersection before entering it, (3) that the aforesaid action on the part of Henson made it impossible for defendant Baker to do anything other than what he did, that is, to continue his travel into the intersection, and (4) in relying upon circumstantial evidence, contrary to direct evidence, with reference to the status of the traffic light facing Henson and as to the speed of his automobile. These defendants accordingly assert Henson’s freedom from fault and join plaintiffs who assert that Baker was likewise at fault.

Mrs. Meek alleged and testified that Henson approached the intersection from the west on Greenwood Road and attempted a left turn northward into Jewella. In this she was obviously mistaken. From the testimony of all other witnesses it must be concluded Henson approached the intersection from the south on Jewella with the intention of proceeding northerly through the intersection.

Notwithstanding the testimony of Henson and his witness, Bobby Dale Pres-son, the testimony from all other witnesses makes it clear that Henson entered the intersection on a red light. Presson testified he observed Henson’s car when Henson was a distance of approximately 300 feet south of the intersection, at which time the light was green. However, Pres-son did not thereafter make further observation of the light; hence he was not in position to know or to testify as to the status of the light when Henson entered the intersection. Presson’s testimony was weakened by the fact that he saw Mrs. Meek stopped at the intersection while she was awaiting a change of lights to a favorable signal to proceed into the intersection. If the light was unfavorable to Mrs. Meek, then it was unfavorable on the opposite side to Henson. Although there had been some malfunctioning in the light theretofore, it was operating normally on the day of the accident, as testified by an investigating officer of the city who made special observation of it at the time of the investigation of the accident. Moreover, at the scene of the accident, in the presence of several persons Henson stated that he ran a red light.

The liability of Baker and of the other defendants exonerated in the judgment of the trial court is primarily dependent upon a resolution of the question of Baker’s negligence in not according Henson the right of way and the opportunity of completing his movement through the intersection. Thus it is contended that Henson entered and pre-empted the intersection before Baker’s entrance therein. Reliance is placed on the fact that Henson traveled farther into the intersection than Baker prior to the collision. No doubt this is true. The record establishes that Henson traveled less than three-fourths the width of the street as compared to less than one-half thereof by Baker. The greater speed of Henson, it would appear, accounts for at least a portion of the greater distance traveled by Henson. Inasmuch as neither Henson nor Baker claimed to have seen the other until momentarily before the collision, neither could testify with respect to priority of the entrance of the other into the intersection.

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Related

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342 So. 2d 1145 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1977)
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Bluebook (online)
244 So. 2d 661, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meek-v-state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-co-lactapp-1971.