Penton v. Snell

8 La. App. 648, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 213
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 La. App. 648 (Penton v. Snell) 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
Penton v. Snell, 8 La. App. 648, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 213 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

Omnibus No. 12, of the Hammond Stage Lines belonging to Martin Penton, was struck and badly damaged by an automobile belonging to and driven by O. C. Snell, in a collision on the Baton Rouge and Hammond Highway, about three miles east of Denham Springs. Penton alleges that the collision was due to the negligence and carelessness of said Snell in driving his car, and that he is therefore responsible for the damage done to his omnibus. That Snell was driving at an excessive speed, that his brakes were not in good condition, that immediately after the occurrence he admitted that the fault was his and promised to make good the damage, etc.

Defendant denies the negligence alleged against him. He. alleges that the collision was due to the negligence and carelessness of the driver of plaintiff’s omnibus. That it was being driven faster than the law permits. That if plaintiff’s driver had. kept on the right side of the road coming east, the side on 'which he belonged, the omnibus and defendant’s car would have passed each qther in safety. Defendant alleges that ás he turned a curve in the road and came in sight of a bridge, he saw plaintiff’s omnibus coming on the other side, each being at the time about the same distance from the bridge. That upon seeing the omnibus he immediately applied his brakes, but for some reason unknown to him, they stuck and would not work. That his car, as a result, zig-zagged back and forth across the road. That just as he got back to the right side of the road going west, [plaintiff’s omnibus came across the bridge at an excessive speed and struck and demolished his automobile. That plaintiff’s driver had already seen that defendant’s automobile was out of control before he entered, on the bridge, and in time to have stopped on the western side of the bridge. That plaintiff’s driver, should, under the circumstances, have stopped on the western side of the bridge, and not have entered on it until defendant had righted his car. That if plaintiff’s driver had pursued this course, the'~collision would not have occurred.

Defendant alleges the loss of his automobile, loss of time, and personal injuries, a to.tal of $2500.00, which he claims of plaintiff in re convention.

The district judge giving reasons in writing, rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff as prayed for, except as to the item of $1000.00, claimed by plaintiff on account of depreciation in value of his omnibus, due to the fact that it had been in a collision. The Court reduced this item to $350.00, and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $1350.00.

Defendant appealed.

There is a conflict in the evidence as to the speed at which defendant was running at the time he applied his brakes in his effort to stop before getting to the bridge over which plaintiff’s omnibus was crossing at the time. The highway was about 25 feet wide, but the bridge was only about 16 feet wide and 25 or 30 feet long. The omnibus and the automobile could have passed each other on the bridge in safety, by each going slow and keeping to their respective sides, hut in the emergency of the moment neither felt that it was possible to do so. Defendant’s conduct indicates that his first impulse was, that by running fast he would get to the bridge and cross it first, but as he got within 100 feet of the bridge, he saw that [650]*650the omnibus had already reached it, and was, on it, coming across. He then undertook to stop. He applied his brakes suddenly and hard, and cut off the power, but the speed of his automobile was so great that it kept up its momentum, skidding, zig-zagging and swerving back and forth from one side of the road to the other under the brakes, until it struck and demolished itself against the omnibus, just after the omnibus had left the bridge. Two witnesses apparently without interest to mis-state the facts were on the highway going west about a mile apart. Defendant passed them going west so quick, about four or five miles east of the bridge in question, that they each, judging by the speed at which they were running, estimated that defendant was running at the time 40, 45 or 50 miles an hour.

Mr. Snell says that at the time he put his foot on his brakes to stop, he was going 25 miles an hour by his speedometer. A party riding with Mr. Snell says in one part of his evidence, that Mr. Snell in his opinion, was driving on the road about 25 miles an hour, but in another place, he says that he never paid any attention to the speed they were going. Defendant expressed the belief that the zigzagging and swerving 'which took place, was due to something getting in his brakes. A piece of gravel, he says, might have gotten under one of his brake bands. In one place he says that his left brake caught; in another that his left brake held and his right would not hold; and in another, that they stuck. He says that his son fixed his brakes about three days before the occurrence. His son, an automobile mechanic, testifies that he did fix the brakes as his father claimed. It was late in the evening when the collision took place. Defendant had been driving all day and his brakes had worked all right every time they were aipplied, except on this occasion. Mr. Snell, speaking of his effort to stop, says:

“When I reached about 100 feet of the bridge or when I first spied the bus, I pulled my foot off the accelerator and mentioned to Mr. White, there conies the bus hogging the road. I removed my foot' from the accelerator when I first saw the bus, and when I came within about 100 feet of the bridge, I said to White, we are going to hit the bridge together. I just started to slow up, I put my foot on the brake and immediately I went to zig-zagging across the road as my right hand left hand wheel brakes, etc.”
"Q. When did you apply the brakes?
“A. Approximately 100 feet from the end of the bridge.
“Q. What happened when you applied the brakes?
“A. The left wheel front wheel brake caught and throwed me left, I pulled my foot off and pulled back to my side, put in on again and it did the same thing.
“Q. What were you trying to do?
“A. Check up my speed and keep from being on the bridge at the same time as the bus was.”

The result of- the impact, when defendant’s car, a six cylinder sedan, after zig-zagging and swerving back and forth across the road several times under as many applications of the brakes, struck the omnibus, is the most satisfactory evidence of the speed at wbich defendant was running at the time he applied the brakes and tried to stop. Defendant’s car was crushed by the impact into a complete wreck, and the omnibus was badly damaged.

We are satisfied that at the time defendant came within 100 feet of the bridge and tried to stop, he was running close to 50 miles an hour. The highway is graveled, and, it is possible that something did get under one of defendant’s brake bands, but we think it more likely, that the gravel, under the force exerted against it when the brakes were applied, did not hold as [651]*651firm in some places as it did at others, and that the swerving was due to that cause. Defendant says that at the moment he applied the brakes the zig-zagging commenced, the moment he took his foot off, the car righted itself, the moment he reapplied the brakes, the swerving and zigzagging re-commenced, etc.

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Related

Martens v. Penton
130 So. 354 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 648, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penton-v-snell-lactapp-1928.