Parker v. Young
This text of 122 So. 2d 699 (Parker v. Young) 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.
Opinion
Rene PARKER
v.
Ernest YOUNG.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*700 Dalton J. Barranger, Covington, for appellant.
F. B. Cappel, Lacombe, for appellee.
Before ELLIS, LOTTINGER and LANDRY, JJ.
ELLIS, Judge.
This suit was instituted by Rene Parker against Ernest Young for the complete loss of a 1958 Ford car resulting from a collision with defendant's cow. The accident in question occurred on September 20, 1958, on U. S. Highway 190 near the town of Lacombe, Louisiana and the replacement value of the car was set at $300.
Judgment was rendered in the trial court in this amount for the plaintiff. The defendant has perfected a suspensive appeal from this judgment.
There are two main issues before this court on appeal. The first issue is whether or not the fact that defendant's cow was on Highway 190 at the time of the collision in question was the result of negligence on the part of the defendant. The second issue is whether or not the plaintiff's actions constituted such contributory negligence as would bar his claim for damage. Conversely, if the defendant should be found free of negligence and the plaintiff should be found negligent, then defendant's reconventional demand for the value of the cow should be allowed.
Plaintiff was driving along Highway 190 at about 10:30 p.m. on the night of September 20, 1958, when suddenly a cow darted from the left side of the highway into the path of his car causing an accident which killed the cow and damaged the car to such an extent that it was a total loss. Plaintiff was accompanied, at the time, by his wife and sister-in-law and both of them corroborated his testimony in all respects. Plaintiff's car was moving at approximately 40 miles per hour just prior to the occurrence of the collision and the cow was not noticed by either the plaintiff nor the other two occupants of plaintiff's car until it darted suddenly from the left into the path of the car.
*701 Counsel for defendant raised questions of whether or not plaintiff's lights were adequate and whether or not plaintiff saw what he should have seen and did what he should have done to avoid the collision. Suffice it to say that plaintiff did what he should have done to avoid the collision. Suffice it to say that plaintiff had a right to expect Highway 190 to be free of cattle on the night in question. LSA-R.S. 3:2801 prohibits the owners of cattle from knowingly, willfully, or negligently permitting such cattle to roam at large upon that particular highway as well as other highways designated in that statute. If plaintiff had been apprised of the fact that cattle were allowed to roam at large upon the highway in question then a higher duty of care would be placed upon him. Taking into consideration the applicable statutes and the facts surrounding the accident, it is felt that plaintiff was surprised by the sudden appearance of a dark cow on a dark night on a highway upon which no cow should appear under the law. It is felt that the trial court was not in error in finding the plaintiff free of such negligence as would constitute a proximate cause of the accident in question.
Having reached this conclusion, it must be decided if there was negligence on the part of the defendant, Ernest Young, and if so was it the type of negligence which is prohibited by the pertinent statutes. The final question is whether or not defendant's negligence, if proven, was the proximate cause of the accident in question.
The applicable portions of LSA-R.S. 3:2801 et seq. read as follows, to-wit:
LSA-R.S. 3:2801:
"There is hereby found and declared a necessity for a stock law embracing certain public highways of the state of Louisiana and necessity that its application be uniform throughout the state."
LSA-R.S. 3:2803:
"No person owning livestock shall knowingly, willfully or negligently permit his livestock to go at large upon the following public highways of this state:"Route Section
* * * * * *U.S. 190....Jct. US 90 near Miss. State Line to Jct. US 171 at Ragley"
No applicable Louisiana cases have been cited by either counsel under the quoted statutes, nor has this court been able to discover such cases in Louisiana Jurisprudence. To this extent, the issues before this court are apparently res nova. However, under the similar statutes prohibiting certain livestock from roaming at large upon paved, black topped or asphalt treated highways of Louisiana, Jurisprudential rules and interpretations have been evolved which seem both logical and applicable to the case at bar.
In the case of Ansardi v. Potter, La. App., 71 So.2d 347, 349, we find the following language:
"Plaintiff contends that defendant's negligence was the proximate cause of the accident, which he enumerates as follows:
* * * * * *
"(b) In violation of LSA-R.S. 3:2571 and LSA-R.S. 3:2851, which respectively provide:
"It shall not be lawful for horses, mules, cattle, hogs, sheep, or livestock of any description to go on the levees, or the space between the base of the levees and the drainage ditch, from and during the time that the water is against the levee * * *'
"`It shall not be lawful for horses, mules, donkeys, or asses to go on the paved, black-topped and asphalt treated highways of the state system and the rights of ways therefor * * *'
* * * * * *
"Defendant, in opposition thereto, insists that he was not guilty of any negligence in the premises; that he *702 exercised every reasonable precaution required by law or common prudence to preclude the possibility that the cow would escape through the substantial fence maintained by him for the purpose of confining his stock."
"The only question posed for our consideration insofar as the main demand is concerned, is one of fact and that is whether the defendant was guilty of any negligence in erecting or maintaining the fence enclosing his property and, if so, was this negligence the proximate cause of the accident?"
"In Raziano v. T. J. James & Company, La.App.1952, 57 So.2d 251, 254, we had occasion to review and discuss almost the identical question posed for our consideration by this case. In that case we said:
"Under the rules which emerged from the common law the owner of domestic animals possessed a duty which was absolute to keep them contained within his own premises and he was strictly liable for their trespass on another's land if he failed to do so. "Where my beasts of their own wrong without my will and knowledge break another's close I shall be punished, for I am the trespasser with my beasts." 12 Hen. VII, Keilway 3b Accord; McKee v. Trisler, 1924, 311 Ill. 536, 143 N. E. 69, 33 A.L.R. 1298; Drew v. Gross, 1925, 112 Ohio St. 485, 147 N.E. 757; Fox v. Koehnig, 1926, 190 Wis. 528, 209 N.W. 708, 49 A.L.R. 903. Therefore, the obligation rested on the owner of domestic animals to fence his stock in and no burden was imposed upon his neighbor to keep them out.'
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122 So. 2d 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-young-lactapp-1960.