Nelms v. Beckcom

118 So. 2d 170, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 898
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 1960
DocketNo. 4938
StatusPublished

This text of 118 So. 2d 170 (Nelms v. Beckcom) 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
Nelms v. Beckcom, 118 So. 2d 170, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 898 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants have appealed from an adverse judgment as the result of a collision between the automobile owned by plaintiff, Everett M. Nelms, and being driven at the time by his wife, Pauline Byrd Nelms, also a plaintiff herein, with the automobile belonging to and being driven by the defendant-appellee, Warren Beckcom, on a clear dry day at about 10 :00 a.m. on June IS, 1957. Suit was not filed until June 13, 1958, and answer was filed on August 29, 1958 but no effort was made by plaintiffs to bring the case to trial. At the request of defendant’s counsel, on December 8, 1958 it was fixed for trial for February 18, 1959, but continued at the request of plaintiff’s counsel until March, 1959, and on this date it was partially tried but left open for plaintiff to produce additional testimony by way of depositions and on April 29, 1959 it was finally submitted to the lower court on briefs.

The accident in question occurred in Vernon Parish on a rural dirt road, which had some gravel. This rural road runs north and south and was straight insofar as it might have affected the occurrence of the accident, however, there is a small hill just north of the place where the collision [171]*171occurred but this hill was sufficient distance from the point of collision so that it was not a contributing factor. This road was described by the witnesses and the trial court in its written reasons as being oval in the middle, that is, what is commonly known as “hog backed”, with but one set of wheel ruts approximately in the center which is usual with such roads. On each side of the travelled portion were sloping shoulders somewhat muddy due to recent rains. The ruts were semi-dry. Plaintiff-appellants car was going south and the defendant-appellee’s car was traveling north. The latter was a rural mail carrier and was alone in his car, while in the Nelms car were Mrs. Nelms, driving, and her twelve year old brother-in-law, Dwight Nelms, sitting to her right on the front seat, holding Mrs. Nelms’ sixteen month old baby on his lap.

According to Mrs. Nelms’ version, she was driving up this small hill and when she got nearly to the top she saw the Beckcom car coming north about forty feet away in the middle of the road and she realized that “she had to do something to get out of the road, so I pulled over to my side as far as I could get, put my brakes on and stopped, and he came on and skidded into my car, to the left of my car.” She also stated that this road at the point of collision was eighteen feet in width.

On the other hand the version of the defendant, Beckcom, is that he was driving north on this country road at about 20 to 25 miles per hour, with his wheels in the two ruts and as he approached the top of the hill he saw the Nelms’ car approaching when about 200 feet away and he immediately pulled to the right hand side of the road, “ * * * and checked my speed, but the car continued to come toward me. It didn’t give me any road or didn’t slow down, so, I pulled the car up, what I thought was out of the center of the road and brought it to a complete stop.” In spite of his having pulled over to his right and stopped, defendant Beckcom states that Mrs. Nelms continued to come on and her car never left the center of the road and struck his car on the left hand side, veered off and went into the ditch on the right hand side.

The defendant Beckcom’s version of the accident is corroborated by the physical facts as well as testimony of witnesses offered on the trial of the case. The District Court in well written reasons accepted his version rather than that of Mrs. Nelms, however, he thought that neither Mrs. Nelms nor Beckcom intentially misstated any facts while on the stand.

The left front fender of the Nelms car came in contact with the left side of the Beckcom car, beginning on the left front fender, lower part, with scratches and scrape marks to the rear of the front wheel and the side swiping becoming more pronounced as it went toward the rear of the car. It tore the outside of the front door loose where it joins the front fender, generally bent up the door, and also bent in the rear door to the rear of the post. This would seem to be the hardest impact. The Nelms car then apparently veered away from the Beckcom car, after striking it, to the right and went with its front end down in the sloping ditch. The Beckcom car after the accident was slightly at an angle to the right facing northeast and the rear end more toward the west, with the left rear wheel just to the right of the east rut. In other words, apparently Beckcom had pulled to his right in order to avoid the accident so that none of his wheels were left in the rut in the road.

The District Court decided the case upon the assumption, for the sake of argument, that Mr. Beckcom was negligent in such a manner as to contribute proximately to the accident, still he believed the plaintiffs were barred from recovery because, even taking Mrs. Nelms’ own version of the happening as correct, the conclusion was inescapable that she was contributorily negligent and that her contributory negligence contributed proximately to the happening of the accident. The crux of the [172]*172written reasons for judgment by the Judge of the lower court are as follows:

“Mrs. Nelms testified that not more than 40 feet separated the two cars when she first saw the Beckcom car approaching. She said she was traveling about 25 miles per hour and was sure Mr. Beckcom was traveling between 45 and 50 miles per hour. In order to make the illustration most favorable to Mrs. Nelms, let us suppose Mr. Beckcom was also traveling at the same rate of speed she was, or at 25 miles per hour. This would mean that the distance was being diminished between the two cars as if one was stopped and the other going at fifty miles per hour. At 50 miles per hour a car travels at the rate of 73 feet per second. She said that after she saw the Beckcom car, 40 feet away, she applied her brakes, turned to the right, drove her car into the ditch on the west side of the road and had come to a complete stop when her car was struck by the Beckcom car skidding into the front of hers. If she was right, she had only about one-half of one second to do all those things, obviously an impossibility. According to the best table available, at 50 miles an hour, an automobile will travel about 60 feet, while the driver of average reflexions is making up his mind in an emergency what to do and then taking the action necessary to execute the decision. In other words, granting that Mrs. Nelms is a person of average reflexions, if she is correct about the distance separating the cars when she first saw the Beckcom car, the collision necessarily had to occur before she could even have applied the brakes. The same chart referred to shows that, generally, it takes approximately 175 feet to stop a car, traveling at 50 miles per hour, after the brakes are applied. If there are any who doubt the approximate correctness of these figures, he has only to drive his car at 50 miles an hour and demonstrate it for himself. He will find that, at that rate, he can’t take his foot off the accelerator and apply his brakes before the car travels 40 feet. And most assuredly he cannot take his foot off the accelerator, move it to the brake pedal, apply the brakes and come to a complete stop in a distance of even twice forty feet, or even at 25 miles per hour, and even if he already knows what he is going to do and doesn’t have to wait until the muscles respond to the message telegraphed to them by the eye and by way of the brain’s central office.
“I am confident that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 2d 170, 1960 La. App. LEXIS 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelms-v-beckcom-lactapp-1960.