Peeples v. Dobson

99 So. 2d 161
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 26, 1957
Docket8741
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 99 So. 2d 161 (Peeples v. Dobson) 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
Peeples v. Dobson, 99 So. 2d 161 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

99 So.2d 161 (1957)

John Herbert PEEPLES, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
E. P. DOBSON et al., Defendants-Appellants,
Maryland Casualty Company, Intervenor-Appellee.

No. 8741.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

November 26, 1957.
Rehearing Denied December 19, 1957.
Writ of Certiorari Denied February 10, 1958.

*163 Meadors, Shaw & Meadors, Homer, for plaintiff-appellant.

A. K. Goff, Ruston, for defendants-appellants.

Frank M. Dougherty, Homer, for intervenor.

GLADNEY, Judge.

John Herbert Peeples, an employee of the Department of Highways of the State of Louisiana, while driving one of its trucks, sustained personal injuries, and for the recovery of damages occasioned by the accident he has instituted this suit. Made defendants *164 were E. P. Dobson, the owner of a gasoline transport truck, his insurer, Manufacturers Casualty Insurance Company, and Velma H. Dobson, the driver of the Dobson truck. Maryland Casualty Company, the workmen's compensation insurer for the Department of Highways, intervened in the proceedings, claiming reimbursement for compensation and medical expenses paid to plaintiff. Following trial before a jury, a verdict was returned in favor of Peeples, holding Velma H. Dobson and Manufacturers Casualty Insurance Company liable in solido for $20,000. The verdict awarded the sum of $2,414.75 and attorney's fees of $500 in favor of the intervenor to be paid out of plaintiff's award. The verdict denied plaintiff's demands against E. P. Dobson. Judgment in accordance with the verdict of the jury was rendered. Velma H. Dobson and Manufacturers Casualty Insurance Company, being aggrieved by the judgment, have appealed. Likewise, the plaintiff has appealed from the decree insofar as it rejected his demands against E. P. Dobson. After the transcript of the proceedings had in the trial court was filed in response to the appeal in this court, plaintiff has answered the appeal praying for an increase in the amount of the award to the sum of $80,000.

The petitioner alleged that on April 4, 1956, Velma H. Dobson, an employee of E. P. Dobson acting within the scope of his employment, was driving a 1952 model Ford gasoline truck in a northerly direction on Louisiana Highway No. 4 between Ringgold and Castor, proceeding in the direction of the Town of Ringgold; that the gasoline truck was heavily loaded and equipped with tires so worn that they constituted a grave and serious traffic hazard; that about 2:30 o'clock P.M. on the date mentioned, Velma H. Dobson approached the crest of a hill approximately five miles from the Town of Ringgold on the aforesaid highway; that at the same time John Herbert Peeples was driving a 1954 International dump truck, the property of the Department of Highways, in a southerly direction and meeting the truck driven by Dobson; that as Peeples drove his dump truck up the hill on a gradual incline, he saw the truck being driven by Dobson swerve from its proper traffic lane into the lane occupied by Peeples' truck; that the gasoline truck continued to come down the road toward the dump truck in the wrong lane of traffic, apparently out of control; that when it became apparent that the Dobson vehicle was not going to get back into its own traffic lane and would collide with the dump truck, plaintiff swerved his dump truck to the left hand side of the road and entered the ditch on that side, in an effort to avoid a headon collision, and that plaintiff sustained serious injuries to himself as a result of the dump truck running into the ditch.

In response to plaintiff's petition it is alleged by the defendants that just prior to the accident Velma H. Dobson was driving the truck above described northerly along the hard surfaced blacktopped highway between Castor and Ringgold, Louisiana, about four or five miles south of Ringgold, at a speed not greater than 30 miles per hour, and had just traversed the crest of a hill when the left front tire of the vehicle blew out, thereby causing the truck to leave its right traffic lane and proceed into the left traffic lane, despite all efforts of the driver of said vehicle; that at the time of the blowout, the truck being operated by Peeples and traveling south on the highway, was more than 500 feet from the Dobson truck; and that Velma H. Dobson was able to bring his vehicle to a virtual standstill at a point more than 171 feet from the point where Peeples' truck was driven across the highway into a ditch on the east side thereof. Further allegations are to the effect that the tire which blew out had recently been inspected and there were no indications or evidence whatsoever that said tire would blow out suddenly and without warning. Further answering, and in the alternative, defendants charge Peeples was contributorily negligent, specifying that plaintiff did not have his *165 vehicle under proper control; that the brakes of the dump truck were defective; that plaintiff was not keeping a proper lookout; that prior to the time plaintiff drove his car into the ditch there was ample space on the highway upon which the dump truck could have been brought to a stop before reaching the point where the gasoline truck was practically at a standstill; and that plaintiff did nothing until he suddenly drove the truck off the highway, having driven it 300 feet after having seen the sudden emergency into which the driver of the gasoline truck had been placed by the sudden blowout.

Upon the trial the testimony of three eyewitnesses was taken. These included the driver of each truck and Ruben Blackwell, the driver of a third truck, and an employee of the Department of Highways. At the time the dump truck of Peeples crashed into the ditch, Blackwell was following Peeples in a similar truck with a distance of approximately 70 yards being maintained between the two vehicles. Testimony was given by A. E. Whitman, Tom Martin, Jr. and Herman Culpepper as to tire marks upon the surface of the highway and other evidence of a physical nature found upon their arrival at the scene of the accident shortly after it had occurred.

Testimony disclosed that weather conditions were good, the surface of the highway was dry and visibility was excellent. From the crest of the hill near the top of which the tire blowout occurred, and proceeding northerly toward Ringgold, the highway is comparatively straight for several thousand feet. The hill gradually slopes downgrade toward the north for a distance of from 750 to 900 feet from its crest. At the foot of the slope, the highway to the north is level and straight for a considerable distance to the north. Photographs placed in the record indicate the presence of ditches on either side of the highway near the locus of the accident approximately five or six feet deep. The paved portion of the highway is 18 feet in width and the road has shoulders, each of which is three feet in width. Pine trees of substantial size grow along the side of the ditch west of the highway for some distance north of the point of the accident.

An examination of the testimony discloses sharp differences only with respect to the condition of the tire prior to its blowout; the distance separating the two trucks driven by Robson and Peoples at the time when Peeples turned his truck to the left side of the highway and ran it into a ditch; and finally, there is some marked difference in the testimony between Dobson and Peeples as to the speed of the Dobson truck at the time of the blowout and its velocity as it continued to a point of rest north of the locus of the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 2d 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peeples-v-dobson-lactapp-1957.