Mills v. Moore

166 So. 169, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 83
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1936
DocketNo. 5193.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 So. 169 (Mills v. Moore) 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
Mills v. Moore, 166 So. 169, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 83 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff’s Chevrolet coach and a truck owned by defendant R. L. Moore, Jr., collided on the concrete highway between the cities of Monroe and Bastrop, La. This suit was instituted to recover the amount expended in repairing injuries to the coach, an amount paid for hire of automobiles while the coach was out of service, and for alleged general depreciation in value thereof because of the collision.

The collision occurred in the daytime, in an intersection of a gravel road with said highway. The gravel road, pointing westerly, intersects the highway from the south at an angle of about 45 degrees, but does not extend beyond it. Plaintiff’s car, occupied by himself and his chauffeur, was traveling at a rapid speed westerly. The truck, driven by Charlie McHenry, Moore’s agent, entered the highway slowly from the gravel road. Plaintiff charges that the truck entered the highway directly in front of his automobile in a highly careless and negligent manner, without its driver stopping or looking to ascertain if any traffic was approaching from either direction and without giving any attention whatever to conditions then on the highway about him; that when his own car was approximately 25 yards from the intersection, he and his chauffeur noticed the truck approaching the highway, butfessumed that it would obey the law and stop before entering thereon, *170 and therefore continued to drive towards the intersection, and that when he was ten or twelve yards therefrom, the track was driven upon the concrete and undertook to gain the right side thereof by cutting diagonally across the road in front of petitioner’s oncoming car; that the brakes on the coach were instantly applied, its horn blown the moment the impending collision was apparent, and its-front wheels cut sharply to the right, in an effort to avert the collision, but without avail.

The above-enumerated acts of negligence by the truck’s driver are the basis of plaintiff’s suit to recover.

Defendant denies that his driver was negligent in any manner, and alleges that the accident was due solely to the excessive rate of speed of plaintiff’s car (averred to have been 70 miles per hour), and the highly reckless and dangerous manner in which it was then being operated; that the driver did not have proper control thereof; and •that he and plaintiff were not keeping a proper and careful lookout. He affirmatively alleges that McHenry brought the truck to a complete stop at the intersection while he and the passengers thereon looked carefully in both directions along the highway, and, not seeing any vehicles approaching, proceeded to drive the truck onto the highway, but as plaintiff’s car, which had about that time turned a curve in the road some 100 yards distant, was traveling at such a rapid speed, McHenry did not have sufficient time to completely straighten the truck out on the highway before it was run into by the coach; that the first knowledge the occupants of the truck had of the presence of the coach was when it ran into the truck and wedged itself between the guard rails and the truck. In the alternative, plaintiff's own contributory negligence, in the respects mentioned, is pleaded in bar of his recovery herein, and it is also pleaded that he had the last clear chance to avoid the accident and failed to do so. In reconvention, defendant sues to recover cost of repairing the damage done his truck by the collision.

The lower court gave plaintiff judgment against Moore and McHenry in solido for cost of repairs to his car and for amount expended for hire of transportation while his own car was being repaired. Defendants appealed.

In brief, plaintiff as.jp for an increase in the amount of the judgment. As the increase is not prayed for in answer to the appeal, we are powerless to alter the judgment in appellee’s favor, even though error of lower court be disclosed. Code of Practice, art. 889; Hollingsworth v. Atkins, 46 La.Ann. 515, 15 So. 77; Commercial Bank v. Shanks, 129 La. 861, 56 So. 1028; Nurdin v. Bouanchaud, 152 La. 853, 94 So. 420; Graff v. Fazende, 172 La. 441, 134 So. 387.

Opinion.

Plaintiff and- his chauffeur testified that the truck did not stop before attempting to cross the highway. Defendants’ evidence is to the contrary. Plaintiff’s counsel, in brief, concedes that the truck did stop. We think this is in keeping with the preponderance of the testimony on the question. Plaintiff’s case, in the lower court, was, in the main, developed upon the theory that the truck did not stop before trying to cross the highway.

The truck carried a load of 3,000 pounds of loose seed cotton. The driver and two other men occupied its only seat. The load was so arranged that the driver’s view to his right was to some extent obscured. He approached the highway in middle gear, going upgrade slowly, and stopped a few feet from the edge of the concrete to allow two cars, one going east and the other west, to pass. McHenry then looked to his left and observed that the road was clear, but not being able to see down the road to his right, asked the off man on the seat to do so for him. This man did as requested and announced to McHenry that the road- was clear in that direction. The truck was then slowly put in motion to cross to the opposite side of the highway, but before completing the gradual left turn necessary to do so, the collision occurred. When this happened, the tru.ck was diagonally across the northern half of the road; its right front wheel being about one foot from the edge of the concrete and four feet from the guard rail which parallels the concrete. The rear end of the truck possibly extended slightly across the center line of the highway. The coach, its speed materially reduced, drove into the angle formed by the guard rail and the truck, and rested after ramming the truck’s right front fender and running board. Its right side was jammed against the rail. All of its fenders were injured.

On account of a left-hand curve in the highway about 100 yards towards the east, cars traveling westerly cannot be seen beyond that distance from the locus of the accident. Plaintiff and his chauffeur say that as their car turned this curve they ob *171 served defendant’s truck moving slowly towards the highway, some 35 feet therefrom. The chauffeur states that he was about 30 yards from the truck when he realized it was not going to stop before entering the highway. In this he is in error as skid-marks, caused by application of his brakes, began 49 yards from the locus of the accident. Only one wheel left a sign on the concrete, indicating that the brakes were not all functioning efficiently. Before applying the brakes the car was traveling at a speed estimated at from 35 to *50 miles per hour. One witness says it was making 70 miles when it passed him not 100 yards from the accident. It is safe to conclude that its speed was at least 45 miles per hour. This is a velocity of 66 feet per second. Plaintiff was hurrying to fill some political speech-making appointments in Ouachita and Jackson parishes.

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 169, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-moore-lactapp-1936.