Perry v. Herrin

215 So. 2d 167
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 1969
Docket2398
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 215 So. 2d 167 (Perry v. Herrin) 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
Perry v. Herrin, 215 So. 2d 167 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

215 So.2d 167 (1968)

David PERRY et al., Plaintiffs and Appellees,
v.
Willie HERRIN et al., Defendants and Appellants.

No. 2398.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

October 31, 1968.
Rehearings Denied November 20, 1968.
Writs Granted January 20, 1969.

*168 Watson, Brittain & Murchison, by, Jack O. Brittain, Natchitoches, for defendant-appellant-appellee, State Farm.

Roy & Roy, by, Chris J. Roy, Marksville, for defendant-appellant-appellee, Herrin.

Stafford & Pitts, by, John L. Pitts, Alexandria; Norman L. Sisson, Louisiana Dept. of Highways, Baton Rouge, for Dept. of Highways, defendant-appellant-appellee.

Gold, Hall & Skye, by, James D. Davis, Alexandria, for plaintiff-appellee, Perry.

En banc on reargument.

CULPEPPER, Judge.

This case is consolidated for trial and appeal with Herrin v. Perry, et al., 215 So.2d 177, in which a separate decision is being rendered by us this date. Both suits arise out of a head-on collision between two pick-up trucks, one being driven by Willie Herrin and the other by Mrs. Luerine Perry, near a point where a sign repair truck of the Louisiana Department of Highways was parked on the highway.

In the present suit, Mrs. Luerine Perry and her husband, David Perry, individually and on behalf of their 20 month old daughter, who was a passenger in the Perry vehicle, named as defendants, (1) Willie Herrin, (2) his liability insurer, Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, (3) the Louisiana State Department of Highways,[1] and (4) Royal Indemnity Company, the liability insurer of the Louisiana State Department of Highways (whose coverage is limited to $20,000 per person and $100,000 per accident.)

In the companion suit, Willie Herrin has named as defendants: (1) David Perry, (2) the Louisiana State Department of Highways and (3) its insurer, Royal Indemnity Company.[2] In the alternative, *169 Herrin seeks to recover from his own insurer, Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, under the uninsured motorists clause, in the event the party defendant found responsible for this accident has no insurance. (Apparently Perry has no insurance.)

The district judge found the crew of the Highway Department truck negligent in obstructing the highway. He also held Herrin negligent in passing the highway truck at a time when the oncoming Perry vehicle was too close for safety. Mrs. Perry was found free of negligence. Accordingly, the Perrys were granted judgment against all of the defendants in the present suit, except the Department of Highways, which was dismissed on an exception of immunity. All defendants cast in the Perry suit appealed. The Perrys answered the appeal, seeking only an increase in the awards. The Perrys do not urge the dismissal of the Department of Highways was error. (Apparently because they think the Department's $20,000 insurance coverage is adequate for their claims.) Hence this issue is not before us in the Perry case.

Herrin's suit was dismissed after trial. He has appealed.

The scene of the accident is on Louisiana Highway No. 457, also known as Latanier Road, a two-way, two-lane, blacktopped secondary road, running generally north and south through a rural farm area. The asphalt pavement is 20 feet wide with shoulders on each side of about 5 feet. For at least ¾ of a mile south of the scene, the road is straight, but immediately north of the scene it curves gradually to the west and there is a curve sign on the east shoulder about 500 feet south of the curve. The speed limit is 60 miles per hour.

The accident occurred on March 14, 1966 at about 11:30 a. m. Rain had fallen earlier in the day and the pavement was wet, but it was only "misty" at the time of the collision.

A sign repair crew, 3 employees of the Department of Highways, had parked their truck, headed north, on the east side of the highway, about 6 feet north of the curve sign, which they intended to change to a larger size. A preponderance of the evidence shows that the left-hand wheels of the truck extended out into the northbound lane of traffic, partially obstructing it. A northbound vehicle had to go partially into the west lane of traffic to pass the truck.

The plaintiff, Willie Herrin, is the only eyewitness to the collision. Mrs. Perry could remember nothing about the accident. The 3 Highway Department employees were in the cab of their truck. They heard Herrin pass and heard the collision, but their windshield was fogged and they saw nothing.

Herrin's version of the accident is as follows: He had just left his dairy farm, located a short distance south of the scene of the accident, and was driving in a northerly direction at a speed of 40 to 45 miles per hour. He saw the Highway Department truck parked on the pavement about ¾ of a mile ahead. As he approached the truck, he slowed down and blew his horn as a precaution for any workmen who might be around the truck. Then he moved into the passing lane, observing for any oncoming traffic and for any workmen around the truck. When he had reached a point so close behind the parked truck that he was "committed to pass" he saw the Perry vehicle coming around the curve ahead.

Herrin says the Perry truck appeared to be "coming pretty fast". He accelerated, passed the Highway Department truck and returned to his own lane of travel. It appeared to Herrin that the Perry truck "got faster" and, as Mrs. Perry left the curve, she angled into Herrin's lane of traffic and struck him there.

The vehicles collided left front to left front. Neither truck moved far after the *170 impact. Herrin's vehicle went off head first into the ditch on the east of the highway. The Perry vehicle spun counter-clockwise and came to rest facing generally northeast in the west lane of traffic.

The first issue is the negligence of the Highway Department crew. The trial judge correctly found they had violated LSA-R.S. 32:141. They left their truck parked on the main traveled part of the highway for over 30 minutes, without any attempt to protect traffic, when it was practicable to park off the highway.[3]

The crew testified they stopped here to change the curve sign to a larger size. They did not park farther on the shoulder for fear of bogging down. They stayed in the parked truck for over 30 minutes because it was raining. Statements of other witnesses show that although it was "misty", there was not enough rain for anyone else to stop working or even to use their windshield wipers. About 114 steps south of the place where the highway truck was parked, there was a driveway on each side of the road where the truck could easily have parked entirely off the highway.

Furthermore, under the general rules of negligence, the parking of this truck on the main traveled portion of the highway, within about 500 feet of a curve, in wet weather, created a reasonably foreseeable risk of harm to other vehicles. We have no difficulty in finding that the Highway Department crew was negligent.

The Highway Department's negligence was clearly a legal cause of the accident. The truck was parked on the pavement in violation of a safety statute which seeks to protect against the very type of hazard which caused this collision. And, if the truck had not been thus illegally parked, the collision would not have occurred. Any subsequent or intervening negligence on the part of Mrs. Perry or Herrin, does not relieve the Department of liability for its own negligence.[4]

The next issue is the negligence of Willie Herrin.

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Related

Morrison v. Clearview Medical Plaza
357 So. 2d 1386 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1978)
Johnson v. Travelers Indemnity Company
309 So. 2d 357 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
Stewart v. Lewis
292 So. 2d 303 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Key v. Allstate Insurance
255 So. 2d 438 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
Herrin v. Perry
228 So. 2d 649 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)
Perry v. Herrin
217 So. 2d 407 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1969)
Herrin v. Perry
215 So. 2d 177 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 So. 2d 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-herrin-lactapp-1969.