Millet v. Consolidated Companies, Inc.

160 So. 852, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 271
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1935
DocketNo. 15005.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 160 So. 852 (Millet v. Consolidated Companies, Inc.) 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
Millet v. Consolidated Companies, Inc., 160 So. 852, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 271 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This litigation results from an automobile collision which occurred at about 12:15 in the afternoon on October 19, 1932, at Gramercy, a settlement on the Mississippi river above New Orleans. At that point there is a junction between what is known as the “River road,” which, at that time, was also known as the Jefferson highway, and an intersecting road, which affords a connection between the said road and the so-called “Air-Line” highway.

The River road parallels the river and the connecting road joins it at a right angle but does not cross it.

The car of plaintiff, driven by her on the crossroad, approached the intersection as the truck of defendant was on its way up the River road. It was plaintiff’s purpose to turn her car from the intersecting road into the River road and to proceed down the latter. This required that she turn to her left, which was the direction from which defendant’s truck was approaching. Plaintiff avers that she had completed the turn and was on her way down the River road, when suddenly the approaching truck was swerved to its left and into her ear.. Defendant maintains, on the contrary, that plaintiff’s car had not completed the turn when the accident occurred, but that it had been driven without a prior stop into the path of i£e oncoming truck when the latter was already so near that it could neither be turned aside nor stopped.

Eor damage to her ear and for personal injuries and expenses, plaintiff claims $4,240.61. In the district court she obtained judgment for $1,177.61. Defendant has appealed, and plaintiff, by answer to the appeal,. seeks to have the award increased.

The two most important witnesses produced by plaintiff are herself and a young high school boy, Jess Matherne, who was riding with her at the time. They both state that, as they reached the river road, they looked down that road and saw defendant’s truck approaching. They both state that they believed that the track was sufficiently far away to permit of their crossing its path and assuming the desired position on the far side of the River road, and they 'both testified that they did so and that, after their car had completely crossed and had turned, the truck, suddenly and without warning, swerved to its left and crashed into their automobile.

But, though each stated that when their car reached the intersection the truck was still “a half of a city block away,” the record shows that each, on another occasion, had estimated- that distance entirely differ *853 ently. Miss Millet, the plaintiff, a young woman of education, who for several years had been employed as a school teacher, previously to the trial had signed a written statement in which she had said that when she first sau^ the approaching truck it was only fifty or sixty feet away. Her counsel, desperately seeking to overcome the effect of this statement, elicited from her the explanation on the witness stand that she did not know the length of a “city Mock” and that the claims adjuster, who had obtained the said statement, had told her that a block is only 100 feet long.

But her testimony shows that she had been to the city of New Orleans on numerous occasions and that she was quite familiar with distances and measurements. In fact, she states that when the claims adjuster told her that a city block was 100 feet long and wrote into her statement that the car was only 50 feet away, she knew that that was incorrect, but signed the statement without having it corrected. Her testimony on this point leads to the inevitable conclusion that she did make a statement to the effect that when she first saw the truck approaching it was only 50 or 60 feet away.

Matherne, who was riding with her, after first using the identical words which Miss Millet used on the stand, to wit, that the truck was a half a city block away when he first saw it, later stated that when they reached the crossing the truck was only about 70 feet away.

If it was only about 70 feet away, as Math-erne says, or if it was only 50 or 60 feet away, as plaintiff said in her statement, and if it was approaching at the very great speed that they both attribute to it, then very plainly the attempt of Miss Millet to cross in front of it was negligence, regardless of whether or not she was entitled to the right of way. In Murphy v. Star Checker Cab Co., 150 So. 79, 81, we discussed the extent of protection afforded to the “right-of-way” and quoted with approval from Kerns v. Lewis, 246 Mich. 423, 224 N. W. 647, in which the Supreme Court of Michigan said:

“ ‘While the law accords the right of way, it requires, as well, the exercise of at least “horse sense.” The statute does not authorize one, in approaching a highway crossing, to assume that in all events he may proceed without looking, or, if unable to see, without exercising precaution commensurate with reasonable prudence.’ ”

It is not necessary that we determine who had the right of way, even if that right was entirely with Miss Millet, and in view of the fact that she was manifestly entering and turning into a thoroughfare from a less important artery of- traffic, we cannot see how she could possibly have been entitled to that right, and even if defendant’s truck was approaching at too high a speed, still Miss Millet was plainly negligent in driving into its path when it was so near. We notice in the testimony of Miss Millet and also in the testimony of Matherne a very significant statement — that each believed that when the attempt was made to cross in front of the oncoming truck, there was time for the crossing to be completed. Miss Millet uses the expression “ * * * I figured I had enough time to get across * * Matherne said: “I thought she could make it myself, to the right side of the road, before the truck could hit her.” These statements show' plainly that both these witnesses realized that there was some causal connection between the attempt of Miss Millet to cross in front of the truck and the resulting crash. If, as Bliss Blillet contends, she had completed the crossing and was on her way down the River road, then there was no connection whatever between the fact that she crossed in front of the truck and the subsequent crash and there was no reason why each of the witnesses should have referred to the fact that he or she believed that “she could make it across.”

Much is made by plaintiff over the fact that, after the accident, the truck proceeded a short distance further up the road and then turned so that its front wheels stopped in the ditch alongside the road to its left, and she contends that this proves conclusively that the truck must have swerved to the left before striking her car. But the evidence shows that the steering gear of the truck was broken and that, as a result of this, after the crash the driver lost control of it.

Plaintiff confidently relies on the views announced in the case of Hamilton v. Lee (La. App.) 144 So. 249, 252. We do not think that the facts of this case bring it within the doctrine announced there, for there the proof showed that when the driver of the car on the intersecting road stopped and looked he could and actually did see for the distance of a full half block and he “knew he could traverse the intersection before any one who was further off, and who was observing the speed laws, could arrive at the intersection.” Here plaintiff well knew, if her testimony is cor *854

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Related

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188 So. 462 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1939)
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Bluebook (online)
160 So. 852, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millet-v-consolidated-companies-inc-lactapp-1935.