Murphy v. Martinez

245 So. 2d 1, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6330
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 1971
DocketNo. 8177
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 245 So. 2d 1 (Murphy v. Martinez) 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. Martinez, 245 So. 2d 1, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6330 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

PICKETT, Judge.

This is an action for damages instituted by the parents of an eight and one-half-year-old child who was struck and killed by an automobile owned and driven by Hu-lon N. Martinez. The plaintiffs are Andrew S. Murphy and his wife, Ethel Lobell Murphy, and the defendants are Hulon N. Martinez and the latter’s insurer, State Farm Automobile Insurance Company. After a trial on the merits, the trial court rendered judgment against the defendants, severally and in solido, and in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $10,000.00, to each parent for the death of their minor child, plus the sum of $1,493.65 to Andrew S. Murphy for funeral and burial expenses, and $150.00 for expert witness fees, with legal interest from June 18, 1968, until paid. The judgment limited the liability of the State Farm Automobile Insurance Company to $10,000.00 in principal, in accordance with its policy limits. From this [2]*2judgment the defendants have appealed, and the plaintiffs have answered the appeal asking for an increase in the award for the death of their son.

The accident occurred about 5:00 to 5:30 p. m., on November 25, 1967, on Louisiana Highway No. 444, in Livingston Parish, Louisiana. The highway at that point is a straight, level, black-topped two lane highway running east and west, the hard surfaced portion being 22 feet and 2 inches wide, and the road right of way was 75 feet and 8 inches wide. The accident occurred near the home of Mrs. Joyce Lobell. Exhibit P-6 filed in evidence by the plaintiffs shows that the Lobell home is on the south side of Highway 444. The home of the plaintiffs is on the north side of the highway and 467 feet west of the Lobell home. There is a pasture entrance on the north side of the highway 217 feet west of the Lobell driveway.

Immediately before the accident the plaintiffs’ child, Dale Murphy, had been visiting at the home of Mrs. Joyce Lobell. The evidence shows that Dale Murphy rode his bicycle into the north, or west bound lane of the highway at or near Mrs. Lobell’s home, and that he was struck by an automobile owned and driven by Hulon N. Martinez. The little boy’s body and bicycle was carried by the automobile to approximately midway between the pasture entrance and the driveway of the plaintiffs, and deposited in the west bound traffic lane. The Martinez vehicle was stopped at the plaintiffs’ driveway.

Mr. Martinez testified that he had lived in Livingston Parish all of his life and that he was familiar with the roads in that area. He said that immediately before the accident he was proceeding westerly in the north, or west bound traffic lane of Highway 444, with his bright lights on. He saw the Murphy boy on the bicycle just a split second before his vehicle struck him. The boy was right in front of his left headlight, and was angling toward the west. His vehicle struck the child a little ways west of the Lobell driveway. He said he applied his brakes so that they took effect at about the moment the child was hit, and then he released the brakes and finally came to a complete stop at the Murphy driveway. He said the child fell from his automobile near the center line in the highway. Martinez said he was right at the child when he first saw him, but that he could not say just how many feet the boy was in front of his vehicle. He admitted that immediately after the impact he knew what he had struck. However, he did not explain why he continued on down the highway a distance of some 460 feet after the impact before he stopped his vehicle.

The plaintiffs contend that Mr. Martinez admitted immediately after the accident that he did not see the Murphy child before he hit him. James A. Little, one of the defendants’ witnesses, testified that Martinez, immediately after the accident, grabbed him and said, “I didn’t see him, I didn’t even see him.” Mr. Arthur Little, Jr., said the defendant Martinez told him immediately after the accident that he did not see the child. Trooper Burl Bush, the Highway Patrolman, who investigated the accident, and a witness for the defendants, said the defendant Martinez made the statement to him that he did not see the child, nor did he see the bicycle. Mrs. Joyce Lobell, said she was one of the first persons to arrive where Mr. Martinez was after the accident and that Martinez asked her what he had hit. Mrs. Ethel Lobell Murphy, the mother of the dead child, testified that immediately after the accident, he said to her, “Lady I’m sorry, I didn’t see your child. * * * I didn’t see your child. * * * I thought I had lost my muffler and tailpipe. * * * I’m sorry I didn’t see him.” When questioned on cross examination about whether he had made the foregoing statement to Mrs. Murphy, Mr. Martinez, answered:

“As well as I can remember I don’t recall telling her that. If I did what I [3]*3meant by that I didn’t see the boy until I had hit him. If I told her that * * *
I was pretty shook up then.”

The evidence shows that there were scraped places in the black-top on the highway that seemed to have been made by the bicycle as it was dragged along the roadway by the defendant’s vehicle. The first scarred place was near the entrance to the Lobell driveway. The evidence convinces us that the point of impact of the Martinez vehicle and the Murphy child and his bicycle was in the west bound traffic lane of the highway, either in front of the Lobell driveway or a little ways west thereof. There is no testimony as to when or where the child entered the highway.

The boy was last seen before the accident in the Lobell driveway. Therefore, he had to travel from the Lobell driveway across the south side of the highway right of way, the east bound traffic lane and to a point at least five feet north of the center line of the highway into the west bound traffic lane thereof.

It is clear from the evidence that Mr. Martinez either did not see the Murphy child before his vehicle struck him, or that if he did see him, it was at a time that he did not, or could not, take evasive action to avoid the accident. The question now remains is whether or not Mr. Martinez was negligent in failing to see the Murphy child travel from the Lobell driveway to the point of impact, and in not bringing his vehicle to a stop, or taking other evasive action to avoid the accident.

Mr. Martinez testified that he was traveling at the rate of 40 to 50 miles per hour at the moment of impact. He met another vehicle some 200 or 300 feet east of the point of impact. When he met the other vehicle he dimmed his lights, but immediately after meeting the other automobile he snapped his lights back on the high beam.

Therefore, according to his evidence from a distance of at least 200 feet east of the point of the accident, he had a clear view of the road ahead, as well as the right of way. There were no other vehicles preceding or meeting him. There was nothing to obscure his vision from the fence corner near the Lobell driveway out to the highway except a utility pole or post which is 3 feet and 4 inches nearer the highway than the fence corner. Mr. Ray Heard, the Supervisor of the Louisiana State Police Crime Laboratory, who was qualified as an expert in accident investigations, testified that he conducted a number of tests at the scene of the accident comparable to the conditions at the time of the accident. He said that based on Exhibit P-1, it is 29 feet from the utility post to the south edge of the pave.ment; and that the paved portion of the road is 22 feet and 2 inches wide. Hence, from the post to the center-line of the highway is 40 feet.

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Bluebook (online)
245 So. 2d 1, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-martinez-lactapp-1971.