Murray v. Volkswagen Mid-American, Inc.

297 So. 2d 236, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4404
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1974
DocketNo. 4559
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 297 So. 2d 236 (Murray v. Volkswagen Mid-American, Inc.) 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
Murray v. Volkswagen Mid-American, Inc., 297 So. 2d 236, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4404 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinions

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

Mr. and Mrs. Maxey W. Murray instituted this suit for damages for the death of their 11 year old daughter, Teresa Renee Murray, who fell out of a Volkswagen bus and thereafter was struck by an automobile being driven by Cecil Edwards. The defendants are Volkswagen Mid-America, Inc.; Allstate Insurance Company (insurer of Rev. Joseph Sharp) ; Dixie Automobile Insurance Company (insurer of Mrs. Sandra Simpson); Lester Edwards (father of the minor, Cecil Edwards) ; and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (insurer of Edwards) .

Prior to trial the suit was dismissed as to Volkswagen Mid-America, Inc. Judgment on the merits was rendered by the trial court in favor of the remaining defendants. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The questions presented are: (1) Was the owner of the Volkswagen bus negligent in allowing children to be transported in it? (2) Was the driver of that bus negligent? (3) Was the driver of the automobile which struck and fatally injured plaintiffs’ daughter negligent?

The accident occurred at about 9:50 P. M. on September 10, 1971, at the intersection of Louisiana Highway 1 and Dixie Lane, an inferior street, near Alexandria. Immediately prior to that time, plaintiffs’ daughter, Teresa, was riding in a Volkswagen bus owned by Rev. Joseph Sharp and being driven east on Dixie Lane by Mrs. Sandra Simpson. Teresa fell out of the bus on the highway shortly after the bus had entered the above intersection, and while the driver was attempting to turn to her left, or north, on the highway. A few moments after she fell, the child was struck by an automobile owned by James M. Bruninekx and being driven by Cecil Edwards, a minor. She sustained injuries as a result of that accident, which caused her death shortly after it occurred.

In the late afternoon and on the aforementioned date Mrs. Simpson went to the [239]*239Air Base Road Baptist Church in Alexandria, Louisiana, to transport six or seven girls from the church to a church party which was being given at the home of Mrs. Shirley DeSoto, on Dixie Lane, in Alexandria. A 1962 Volkswagen bus owned by Rev. Joseph Sharp, pastor of the above mentioned church, was used to transport these children. Mrs. Simpson and the children, all of whom were about 11 years of age, boarded the bus at the church, and Mrs. Simpson drove it safely and without incident to the DeSoto home on Dixie Lane. The vehicle was being driven with the full knowledge and consent of the owner, Mr. Sharp.

There were three doors on the right side of the Volkswagen bus. The front door was located above the right front wheel, and there were no defects in that door. The middle door and the rear door of the bus were located almost in the center of the right hand side of the vehicle. The hinges of the middle door were located .toward the front of the bus, and the hinges on the rear door were located toward the rear. There was no post between these two doors, and when both doors were open a large opening was formed on the side of the bus, facilitating the loading or unloading of that vehicle.

The rear door was equipped with only one handle, located on the inside of the bus. When the rear door of the bus was closed and the handle turned to the locked position, a mechanism inside the door caused metal locking pins or rods at the top and bottom of the door to move so that the ends of those rods became inserted into holes or recessed areas in the top and bottom of the body of the bus. These metal pins, when properly moved into this locked position, held the rear door securely closed until the door was unlocked by turning the handle of that door inside the bus. There were no defects in the locking mechanism of the rear door of the bus involved in this accident.

The middle door of the bus was equipped originally with two handles, one on the inside and the other on the outside of that door. It also was equipped with metal pins or rods at the top and bottom of the door, which were designed to move when either handle was turned and to lock that door as did the pins in the rear door. In addition to these pins, however, the middle door was also equipped with a spring lock, or a latch or bolt, located on the outside edge of the door, about midway between the top and bottom of it, and this spring lock was designed to latch or secure the middle door automatically when that door was closed, or slammed shut. There was a recessed place, sometimes called a “striker plate”, in the front edge of the rear door, and that plate served as a part of the locking mechanism of the middle door. When the middle door was closed, the plunger or bolt in the spring lock would strike the striker plate, causing the bolt to be pushed back momentarily and then to slip into the hole or recessed part of the striker plate, thus latching or holding the door in its closed position. The turning of the inside or the outside handles of the middle door ordinarily would cause the metal pins as well as the spring latch to retreat, and thus allow the door to be opened.

On the bus involved in this accident both of the handles on the middle door were missing, and it thus was impossible to activate the locking pins or rods on that door, without using a screw driver or some other tool for that purpose. No such tool was used on the day this accident occurred, so the only operating mechanism which served to keep the middle door closed was the above described spring latch or spring lock on that door. In order to close the middle and rear doors of this bus, it was necessary first to close and lock the rear door by activating the locking pins, and then to close the middle door by slamming it or by using a knife or some other thin object to hold the spring plunger or bolt in until the door was closed.

Rev. Sharp and Mrs. Simpson were present when the children were loaded into the bus at the church. Mr. Sharp was [240]*240aware of the defect in the locking mechanism of the middle door of the bus, and at that time he cautioned Mrs. Simpson in general about checking the doors to see that they were closed before moving the bus. He explained to her how to latch the doors, and particularly how to see that the locking pins in the rear door were properly positioned and how to get the spring latch engaged in the striker plate. Mrs. Simpson instructed the girls at the church to enter and leave the bus only by the front door, and directed them not to use the middle or rear doors at any time.

Teresa Murray was not at the church at the time the first group of girls entered the bus, so she did not receive the above mentioned instructions about the doors. Mrs. Simpson drove by the Murray home and picked Teresa up en route to the party.

Upon their arrival at the DeSoto home the children exited through all of the doors of the vehicle, despite the fact that they had been instructed not to use the middle and rear doors. Mrs. Simpson told the children again at that time to not use the rear and middle doors of the bus at any time, and Teresa was present when that instruction was given. After the children had gotten out of the bus at the DeSoto home, Mrs. Simpson proceeded to close and to lock the middle and rear doors of the bus as she had been instructed. She then left the DeSoto home in another vehicle to return to the church, but according to a prearranged plan she returned about the time the party was over for the purpose of driving the children back to their homes or to the church.

After Mrs. Simpson returned, the children re-entered the bus for the return trip.

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297 So. 2d 236, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-volkswagen-mid-american-inc-lactapp-1974.