Morgan v. Lanz

195 So. 128, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 341
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1940
DocketNo. 2090.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 195 So. 128 (Morgan v. Lanz) 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
Morgan v. Lanz, 195 So. 128, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 341 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

An automobile accident which occurred on Highway No. 90 about six miles west of the City of Lake Charles at about one o’clock of the morning of July 31st, 1938, gave rise to this and two companion lawsuits, all three having been consolidated for the purpose of trial.

The automobile involved in the accident belonged to Charles Henry Lanz, Sr., and his widowed mother Mrs. H. W. Lanz. It was insured against loss for public liability by Traders and General Insurance Company of Dallas, Texas. At the moment of the accident it was being driven by Charles Henry Lanz, Jr., son of Charles Henry Lanz, Sr., and grandson of Mrs. H. W. Lanz, with their consent and permission. There was no other automobile or vehicle involved, the accident having resulted in the car turning over after young Lanz lost control of the steering wheel.

The plaintiffs, besides the one in the present suit, Henry G. Morgan, are Frank R. Yeatman, who is suing on behalf of his minor daughter, Stella Elizabeth Yeatman, who was a guest in the automobile, for the injuries sustained by her as well as for his own expenses in connection with her treatment, and Otto Schindler, suing for his minor son, Tommy Schindler, also a guest who sustained personal injuries,, as well as for the expenses incurred by himself, as his father, in connection therewith. The defendants are Charles Henry Lanz, Sr., and Traders and General Insurance Company. Plaintiff in this suit was also a guest in the car as was also Miss Ada McClure, who, however, was not injured, or if she *129 was, has not presented her claim for damages.

The petitions in the three suits all allege the same set of facts relative to the manner in which the car was being driven and how it overturned and all contain the same charges of negligence against the driver on which the plaintiffs base their demand for damages.

They allege that on the morning of July 31st, 1938, between twelve o’clock mid-night and one o’clock A. M. the occupants of the car accepted the invitation of Charles Henry Lanz, Jr., to ride back to Lake Charles from the Maywood Club in an Oldsmobile Sedan automobile, and that he immediately drove the said automobile eastward toward Lake Charles on Highway No. 90 for a distance of approximately one-half of a mile from the Maywood Club, when it ran off the lefthand or north side of the pavement, turned over several times, finally stopping on the north shoulder of the highway.

Negligence is charged against the driver in the following particulars: (a) Suddenly and quickly bringing the automobile to a speed in excess of sixty miles per hour and not having it under proper control; (b) swerving it from one side of the highway to the other, while driving at the said rate of speed; (c) driving from the concrete portion of the highway to the left hand shoulder at an improper place where the shoulder was much lower than the pavement, at said excessive speed; and (d) applying the brakes suddenly, unnecessarily and improperly while driving at such speed and causing the car to turn over.

The demand of the plaintiff in this suit, Henry G. Morgan, is for the sum of $76,-894.46; that of Otto Schindler, for the sum of $21,000 for the use and benefit of his minor son, Tommy, and $1,462 for his individual account, and that of Frank R. Yeatman, $35,000, on behalf of his minor daughter, Stella Elizabeth, and $927 for his own account.

The defendant, Traders and General Insurance Company, filed an exception of no cause or right of action based on the proposition that it was not the insurer of its co-defendant, Charles Henry Lanz, Sr., as the policy of insurance issued by it was in the name of the “Estate of H. W. Lanz”, but it appearing that that was merely a trade name and that to the knowledge of the insurance company, the insured car belonged to both Mrs. H. W. Lanz and Charles H. Lanz, Sr., the exception was correctly overruled. We deem it proper to state here also that the defendant insurance company does not seem to be pressing its exception before this Court.

The answers of the defendants, which, like the petitions of the plaintiffs, are the same in each case, all three containing a denial of the charges of negligence made against the driver of the automobile and setting up,' as an affirmative defense, the plea of sudden emergency. It is alleged that the driver of the car was confronted with several pedestrians who appeared suddenly on the paved portion of the highway and that at the same moment, a car approaching from the opposite direction with glaring headlights, so obscured his vision that despite his prudence and careful driving, when he attempted to dodge the pedestrians the car swerved off of the pavement on to the shoulder of the highway and turned over.

As an alternative defense in the event the driver should be held to have been negligent, defendants plead contributory negligence on the part of all the occupants of the car, alleging in support of the plea that they had been out with the driver all evening, all having drank intoxicating liquors and that the driver’s inebriated condition was well known to all of them but they nevertheless acquiesced in his conduct and in the manner in which he had been driving the car from place to place early in the evening. Such negligence, it is urged, stands as a bar to their recovery.

There was judgment below in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants, in solido, in each suit, as follows: In favor of Henry G. Morgan in the sum of $6,625; in favor of Frank R. Yeatman in the sum of $4,000 on behalf of his minor daughter, Stella Elizabeth, and the sum of $427 on his own behalf and in favor of Otto Schindler in the sum of $2,000 on behalf of his minor son, Tommy, and $376 on his own behalf. All judgments carry legal interest from the date of judicial demand, with costs. The defendants have appealed and plaintiffs have answered, each asking for an increase in the amount of the award.

The driver of the automobile, young Charles Lanz, Jr., was so seriously injured in the accident that on the day of the trial of the case, eight months thereafter, he had not recovered sufficiently to be able to testify. His memory of what happened that night seems to be a blank. *130 The events of the evening as recounted by the other occupants of his car indicate an occasion of a party of young people, pleasure bent, enjoying themselves in the typical modern way. The party originally consisted of more than those who occupied the ill-fated automobile at the time of the accident. They all met, more or less accidentally, early in the evening at a place called the Bungalow, from there went to another place called Kent’s corner, where they met other friends and from there they went to the Maywood Club where they continued to amuse themselves by dancing and drinking. The young ladies all, except one, drank nothing but soft drinks and the one who partook of other drinks, drank' but very little. The boys drank mostly beer, some of them, however, took three or four drinks of whiskey over the whole evening. The testimony is convincing to us, as it was to the trial Judge, that none of these young people drank to any excess that night.

The party got ready to leave Maywood Club around twelve o’clock and, whether by design or not, that being immaterial, the five already named as occupants of the Lanz car got into that car to go back to Lake Charles.

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Related

Bodan v. AMERICAN EMPLOYERS'INSURANCE COMPANY
160 So. 2d 410 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
Brown v. Liberty Mutual Insurance
96 So. 2d 922 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1957)
Cutrer v. Jones
9 So. 2d 859 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1942)
Yeatman v. Lanz
195 So. 133 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)
Schindler v. Lanz
195 So. 133 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 128, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-lanz-lactapp-1940.