Murphy v. Hartley

144 So. 785
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
DocketNo. 4353.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 144 So. 785 (Murphy v. Hartley) 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
Murphy v. Hartley, 144 So. 785 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

DREW, J.

Plaintiff instituted this suit to recover for damages to his automobile growing out of a collision between his automobile, driven by ■his wife, and the automobile of C. P. Hartley, driven by his, daughter, Elizabeth Hartley. He alleged that on October 3, 1931, at approximately 5:30 p. m., his automobile was traveling east on Stubbs avenue in the city of Monroe, when it-was run into and struck by the car of defendant, which was traveling north on North Sixth street. He alleged the accident occurred in the intersection of these two streets. He further alleged that the driver of his car, on approaching the intersection, brought the ear to a stop and looked both north and south on- North Sixth street for on-coming traffic, and, seeing none, proceeded to cross, and when about three-fourths across the intersection, his car was run into and struck by defendant’s ear. He alleged that defendant’s car was traveling 45 miles per hour, in violation of an ordinance of the city of Monroe, and that the driver of defendant’s car was not keeping a proper lookout, and that these acts of negligence on the part of Elizabeth Hartley were the cause of the accident. He prayed for judgment in solido against the owner of the car and Elizabeth Hartley, the driver of the car, in the sum of $415.30, consisting of the items of $315.30, cost of repairing the car, and $100 for loss of use of the car for 20 days.

Defendants admitted the accident as alleged, denied the charges of negligence made against them, and averred that plaintiff’s car was slowed down before entering the intersection and that defendant expected it to come to a stop, or for the driver to place it under control, as North Sixth street is a right of way street; that defendant’s car was in full view of the driver of plaintiff’s car; that, after slowing down the car, it was again speeded up, thereby causing the collision at about the center of the intersection. They averred the collision was caused solely by the gross negligence of plaintiff’s driver in not obeying the ordinance of the city of Monroe with reference to operating automobiles; that, after plaintiff’s car had slowed up, defendant believed and had a right to believe that the driver of plaintiff’s ear was going to permit defendant’s car to cross the intersection.

Defendant reconvened and prayed for damages for Elizabeth Hartley in the sum of $1,-014, for injuries received and ambulance and hospital bills, and for O. P. Hartley in the sum of $201.50 for damages to his car and expense of hospital and medical bills paid by him for treatment of his wife, a passenger in the car, and who was injured.

The lower court rendered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $263.65 for damages to the automobile, and rejected the reconvention demands of defendants. From this judgment defendants have appealed, and plaintiff has answered the appeal praying that the judgment be increased to the amount sued for. *786 North Sixth street, which runs north and south, is 27 feet wide, and ‘Stubbs avenue, running east and west, is 30 feet wide. The intersection is the space common to intersecting streets where they join, and not the point where the paths of two automobiles approaching the intersection would cross each other. Huddy’s Encyclopedia of Automobile Law (9th Ed.) vol. 3-4, p. 240.

This includes the space in the two streets from where the curb begins to curve on one side to the same point on the other and, according to the map filed in evidence, drawn to a scale of one inch equaling 5 feet, we find the width of the intersection, east and west, is practically 50 feet and the width north and south is practically 55 feet. From the inside of the sidewalk line on the west side of Stubbs avenue, the point closest to the street, where one would stop and look for approaching traffic, to the sidewalk on the west side, is 56 feet, and to a point in the intersection to where one crossing the intersection would be out of the path of any one traveling north on North Sixth street is practically 45 feet. The collision was at a point in the southeast corner of the intersection, as testified to by all witnesses.

Mrs. Murphy, the driver of plaintiff’s car, and her companion, Mrs. Harper, who was in the car with her, fix the point of collision from 8 to 10 feet east and south of the center of the street. All other witnesses fix it even farther east and south of the center of the street, with the exception of Miss Elizabeth Hartley, who fixed the point of collision east of the center of the street, but north of the center. Mrs. Hartley, who was in the car with her daughter, Elizabeth, first fixed the point of collision 25 feet east of the center of the street and nearly out of the intersection into the east end of Stubbs avenue. She later changed her testimony, and finally said she did not know exactly where the collision occurred.

Plaintiff’s car had to travel 45 feet from the time it entered the intersection to clear the path of defendant’s car, and the shortest distance any witness claims it had traveled, according to the designated place of the collision on the map, is 35 feet. In other words, plaintiff's car had to travel, after entering the intersection, practically three-fourths of the distance necessary to clear the path of defendant’s car. This is figured from the front end of the car, which would have made the back end of the car near the center of the ' intersection. On the other hand, defendant’s ear, after entering the intersection, had traveled about 20 feet and, at the most, not over 25 feet, before reaching the point of collision. If both cars had been. traveling at the same ■ rate of speed; it would necessarily follow • that plaintiff’s car had entered the intersection and was 10 to 15 feet in the intersection before defendant’s car entered it. But the evidence does not show they were traveling at the same rate of speed.

Miss Elizabeth Hartley, the driver of defendant’s car, testified that nlaintiff’s car was traveling about 15 miles per hour when it arrived at the intersection, that it slowed up at the intersection, then started up again, and that defendant’s ear was traveling 25 miles per hour and continued at this speed. If this can be taken as true, by simple calculation we find that, at the time plaintiff’s car entered the intersection, defendant’s car was 38 feet from the intersection and 58 feet from the point of collision, provided plaintiff’s car continued at 15 miles per hour, which is not the evidence.

Plaintiff slowed up nearly to a stop, put her car in first gear, then proceeded across, and had just changed to second.gear when the collision occurred. The testimony is that plaintiff’s car was traveling about 8 miles per hour, which, if holding defendant was only traveling 25 miles per hour, would have made defendant’s car 85 feet from the intersection when plaintiff entered the intersection. We do not find the speed of defendant’s car to have been 25 miles per hour, as the preponderance of the testimony is to the effect that it was much faster, and which testimony is borne out by the physical facts.

Miss Elizabeth Hartley testified that when within 60 feet of the intersection, traveling at 25 miles per hour, she saw plaintiff’s car 60 feet from the intersection, traveling 15 miles per hour; that plaintiff’s car slowed up, then started up again and the collision occurred. Plaintiff’s car, traveling at 15 miles per hour, would have had to travel 95 feet to 105 feet, while defendant’s car, at 25 miles per hour, was traveling 80 feet. This is impossible.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-hartley-lactapp-1932.