Nicolle v. Roberts

117 So. 2d 622
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 18, 1960
Docket21331
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 117 So. 2d 622 (Nicolle v. Roberts) 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
Nicolle v. Roberts, 117 So. 2d 622 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

117 So.2d 622 (1960)

Edgar Francis NICOLLE
v.
Jack ROBERTS and All-State Insurance Company.

No. 21331.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

January 18, 1960.
Rehearing Denied February 15, 1960.

*623 Titche & McDermott, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

Brierre, Tooley & Stephenson, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants.

McBRIDE, Judge.

About 11:15 a. m., on November 8, 1957, a collision occurred between an automobile owned and driven by Edgar Francis Nicolle and the car owned by Jack Roberts which was being driven by his wife, at the intersection formed by Fourth and Urbandale Streets in Marrero, Jefferson Parish. Each of the vehicles sustained damage, and it is claimed Pamela Roberts, a young child who was a passenger in the Roberts car, was injured.

Nicolle brought this suit against Roberts and his liability insurer claiming of them in solido the sum of $503, representing property damages accruing to plaintiff as a result of the accident, it being alleged that the accident was the result of negligence on the part of Roberts' wife in entering Fourth Street from Urbandale Street in an imprudent manner and without keeping a proper lookout.

The defendants deny any negligence on the part of Mrs. Roberts and affirmatively allege that the accident was caused solely and only through the fault of Nicolle in several enumerated respects. Alternatively, they charge Nicolle with contributory negligence, one of the specifications being that Nicolle, who was driving on Fourth Street, did, contrary to the provisions of the State Highway Regulatory Statute, pass another automobile at the Urbandale Street intersection and negligently crash into the Roberts car as it was being driven from Urbandale Street into Fourth Street. The defendants also filed a demand in reconvention against Nicolle in which they assert a claim for the damages to the Roberts car, it being alleged that defendant Allstate Insurance Company was the collision insurer of Roberts' car and had paid $127.33 of the damages sustained by the vehicle and that Roberts himself paid $50 of the damage. Roberts, on behalf of his minor daughter, also claimed in reconvention the sum of $250 for personal injuries said to have been suffered by the child.

After a trial below, the court rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $445 against the defendants in solido; the demands in reconvention were dismissed. Allstate Insurance Company and Roberts, the latter both individually and on behalf of his minor child, appealed suspensively to this court.

A description of the locus in quo is that Fourth Street is a heavily-trafficked highway having a concrete surface accommodating a two-way movement of traffic. Said highway runs roughly in an east-west direction and parallels the Mississippi River. Urbandale Street is an inferior thoroughfare having a gravel surface and runs at a right angle to Fourth Street. Urbandale Street meets Fourth Street but does not cross it. The meeting of the two streets forms an "Intersection." See LSA-R.S. 32:1(9). The movement of vehicles at the intersection is controlled by semaphore signals—facing traffic on Fourth Street is a blinking yellow light; motorists on Urbandale Street approaching Fourth Street are confronted by a blinking red light.

Mrs. Roberts was driving northwardly on Urbandale Street and intended to negotiate a left turn into Fourth Street. She stopped at the threshold of Fourth Street in obedience to the blinking red light, but it is clear from the testimony that her view of traffic conditions on Fourth Street was obliterated by reason of the fact that a large tandem-type trailer truck had stopped on Fourth *624 Street at the edge of the intersection to her left and a bus was stopped on Fourth Street at the other edge of the intersection to her right. Thus, to get into Fourth Street Mrs. Roberts was required to pass between the two stopped vehicles without having the benefit of a view of the existing conditions on the street into which she intended to turn. Notwithstanding such handicap and the dangerous potentialities of her maneuver, she took a chance and drove into Fourth Street with the result that just as the front of her car had almost traversed the eastbound lane on Fourth Street, it was run into by the car of plaintiff. It is undisputed that the right headlight of plaintiff's car came into contact with the left headlight on the Roberts car.

It is with little difficulty we find that Mrs. Roberts was highly negligent. She entered Fourth Street under the most dangerous circumstances, and it was impossible for her to keep any lookout whatever. She would have been as safe in making entry into the highway had she been blindfolded.

Turning now to the actions of plaintiff, we must observe that our brother below was in error in making the statement in his reasons for judgment that "plaintiff was driving his automobile in a reasonable manner." Plaintiff, moving eastwardly, was following the aforementioned large tandem-type truck, and he declares that as he approached the intersection, the truck "pulled" over onto the right shoulder of the highway; that he swerved to the left of the truck to miss and pass it; that when he reached a point even with the cab of the truck, the Roberts car entered the intersection and the accident ensued despite the fact that he immediately applied his brakes.

The plaintiff pretends the truck was on the shoulder of the road when he attempted the passage thereof and that he was in the east lane when the crash came, but this does not appear in keeping with the facts as we find them. There is testimony emanating from two witnesses, one a police officer, to the effect that when they reached the scene soon after the accident, the truck in question was stopped squarely in the eastbound lane of Fourth Street. Plaintiff's own testimony also attests that fact for he states: "The point of impact was about two feet on the righthand side of the center line going east." Taking into consideration the circumstance that plaintiff's right headlight was struck, this could only mean that plaintiff's car was not in the eastbound lane but it was moving eastwardly in the westbound or opposite lane, and that only two feet of the right side of the car were located in the eastbound and proper lane. We do not believe the truck was on the shoulder of the road and are convinced that plaintiff went into the opposite lane to pass the truck when it had just about reached the intersection. The yellow light facing plaintiff should have forcefully brought home to him that the intersection was dangerous and caution should have been exercised.

It being well established that plaintiff attempted to pass a vehicle at a street intersection, we think this constitutes negligence. Such an act is specifically prohibited by law. LSA-R.S. 32:233, subd. E provides as follows:

"The driver of a vehicle shall not, under any circumstances, overtake or pass another vehicle proceeding in the same direction at any railroad grade crossing or any intersection of the highway, unless permitted or instructed to do so by a duly authorized traffic or police officer."

This section prohibiting passing a vehicle at a highway intersection is applicable to the streets of a city. Parker v. Home Indemnity Co. of New York, La. App., 41 So.2d 783. The courts have held that it is negligence per se for a motorist to pass a vehicle going in the same direction at an intersection. Herget v. Saucier, 223 La. 938, 67 So.2d 543; Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co., La.App., 107 So.2d 859; Crawley v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 So. 2d 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicolle-v-roberts-lactapp-1960.