Morgan v. Whittington

191 So. 2d 911, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 4816
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1966
DocketNo. 6777
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 191 So. 2d 911 (Morgan v. Whittington) 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. Whittington, 191 So. 2d 911, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 4816 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

REID, Judge.

Plaintiff Mrs. Delma Morgan brought suit against W. J. Whittington, Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., the liability insurer of her husband William W. Morgan, as a result of an accident which happened on or about March 12, 1964 at or about 5:00 P.M. on Louisiana Highway No. 43 in Livingston Parish about three and a half miles north of the city limits of Albany, Louisiana.

Plaintiff was riding as a guest passenger in her husband’s 1964 Ford pickup truck proceeding south on said Highway 43. Her husband, William W. Morgan, was being followed by the defendant W. J. Whittington driving a 1957 Volkswagen automobile. Morgan was talking with his wife when he realized that he had passed a driveway in which he had intended to turn. He applied his brakes, slowing down, getting ready to turn into another .driveway to back out and return to the driveway where he had originally intended to turn.

Whittington started to pass the pickup truck when he observed a car approachihg and attempted to pull back behind the Morgan vehicle, colliding with the rear thereof. Mrs. Morgan received injuries which will be discussed later.

There was a companion suit filed by W. J. Whittington against the Employers Liability Assurance Corp. Ltd., seeking damages alleging that the accident happened as a result of negligence of Morgan, stopping suddenly without giving the proper warning. This case was tried jointly with the instant case but no appeal seems to-have been taken, and the only matter before this Court is the appeal by the Employers Liability Assurance Corporation from the judgment rendered by the Lower Court in the amount of $7500.00.

[913]*913Defendant, Employers Liability Assurance Corporation answered denying any negligence on the part of Morgan and in the alternative plead contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Morgan, under the facts to be proven in this case.

The appellants complain of two errors by the Trial Court: First, in determining that Morgan was guilty of negligence proximately causing the accident, and second, abusing his discretion in making an excessive award to the plaintiff for the injuries which she allegedly suffered, received in the accident sued upon.

Morgan testified that he was driving along talking with his wife and he realized that he had passed the driveway in which he intended to turn. His testimony regarding the accident is as follows:

“All right, I was going south. I had started to Miss Aydell Stewart’s, my wife and I was driving along talking. I passed her driveway but Louis Kin-chen’s driveway was just south of it and I said, well I will just slow down. I had looked down in my mirror and seen this car in the back of me — you come down a hill and then you raise a little incline but not as much as you-do coming off and I come off of that hill. And when I seen I had passed her driveway I stepped on my brakes to slow down and get down low enough and let this car come around me. I never noticed the oncoming car. I don’t yet remember seeing it myself. But I stepped on my brake to let him come around and when I pulled my truck down why he hit me. I was going to let him come around before I reached the driveway that I was going to turn in on, you see,'so I could make a'swing to come on in it.
******
Q : Mr. Morgan did you give any signal whatsoever that you were going to slow down ?
A: I told the cop I didn’t give no arm signal but my brake lights was on and I turned my blinker on when I got on my brakes.
Q: How far was this car behind you when you seen it?
A: When I looked down in my mirror and seen it?
Q: Yes sir.
A: The first time I saw it, it was about 200 yards and then when I glanced down in my mirror again, I would say it was about 200 feet.
Q: Let me ask you this, how fast were you travelling before you stopped your car or slowed it down?
A: Well, as a guess, I would say I trav-elled about 40 or it could have been more, or it could have been less. I wasn’t watching the speedometer.
Q: In other words, you stopped the car pretty suddenly ?
A: Yes sir. It wasn’t completely stopped, it was still moving but I brought it down.
Q: To two or three miles an hour, is that correct ?
A: Well, two or three miles an hour is real slow but definitely I don’t know, just how slow it was.
Q: Well, hadn’t you almost come to a stop?
A: Pretty near it.
Q: .You didn’t start stopping your car • until the man was about 200 feet from you, is that correct?
A: Well, when I stepped on my brakes I wasn’t looking at my light. The last time I had noticed him he was about 200.
■ Q: In other words he could have been closer when you started stopping?,
[914]*914A: I couldn’t say about that because when I stepped on my brakes I never looked in the mirror.
Q: You did not see the car coming in the opposite direction ?
A: I didn’t.”

As opposed to this we have the testimony of Mr. Whittington as a statement about how it happened:

“Well, I was traveling along, just a normal speed. I don’t know just exactly how fast and I pulled over to pass Mr. Morgan and this car was coming and I saw it was coming in such a speed that I had to do something so I fell in behind Mr. Morgan and when I did he set her down in front of me.
Q: When you fell behind him, how far back were you?
A: I was about two or three car lengths behind him and he just set down right there, he slid about IS foot and let it roll I imagine, making two or three miles an hour when it was rolling, after he set her down.
Q: And what happened then?
A: I just hit him, that is all.
Q: You rear ended him?
A: Yes sir.
Q: Was oncoming traffic coming around the curve ?
A: There was a little curve and this car was making such a speed there wasn’t any way for a man to pass him and he didn’t give me any sign at all or nothing, he was going to set her down.
Q: Any arm signal?
A: No sir.
Q: Give you a light signal?
A: The tail light might have come on, I don’t know, I didn’t see any tail light. He just set her down right there in the road.
Q: You are positive he didn’t give you any signal?
A: No, no signal at all.”

Plaintiff produced two other witnesses Trooper James C. Stone and Gariel White. Trooper Stone testified that the Morgan vehicle had slowed to approximately three miles per hour about 330 feet from the driveway.

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 2d 911, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 4816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-whittington-lactapp-1966.