Plauche v. Consolidated Companies

92 So. 2d 298, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 611
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1957
DocketNo. 8619
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 So. 2d 298 (Plauche v. Consolidated Companies) 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
Plauche v. Consolidated Companies, 92 So. 2d 298, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 611 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

GLADNEY, Judge.

This is an action to recover damages brought by the parents of twelve year old Rhett Matthew Plauche, who was killed in a fall from his horse. Negligence is the basis for the suit and made defendants are Russell Bourgeois, the driver of a truck, his employer Consolidated Companies, Incorporated, and its public liability insurer, The Travelers Insurance Company. After trial, judgment was rendered in favor of each of the plaintiffs and the defendants have appealed sus-pensively and devolutively.

The fatal accident which befell the boy occurred about eight o’clock on the morning of July 7, 1954. At the time Rhett and his older brother, Winnfield, were riding their horses over the Simmesport bridge which spans the Atchafalaya River and connects Avoyelles and Point Coupee Parishes. Simmesport in Avoyelles Parish is situated at the west end of the bridge. The two boys were on their way to Point Coupee Parish for the purpose of pasturing their horses. Simultaneously, Russell Bourgeois was driving a motor truck with trailer van attached, the property of Consolidated Companies, Incorporated, in the direction of Mansura, a town located in Avoyelles Parish. The truck and the horses met at a point about three hundred thirty-nine (339') feet from the western end of the bridge. It was near this point that Rhett’s horse became frightened and reared up causing its rider to fall and receive injuries from which death ensued almost instantly.

In support of their stated cause of action, plaintiffs allege the proximate cause of the accident is attributable to the negligence of Russell Bourgeois in three particulars :

First, he saw or should have seen that petitioners’ two sons were riding horseback and advancing in his direction on a long and narrow bridge, which imposed on him the duty of bringing his truck to a complete halt and await the passage of said horses before proceeding; secondly, he drove his truck trailer within close proximity to said horses and there suddenly applied his brakes and released them, causing a sudden hissing sound which frightened the horses; and thirdly, seeing the two horses had become frightened and excited and were prancing about on a narrow bridge, should not have proceeded with the movement of said truck trailer, leaving only a narrow passageway for the horses to advance toward the rear of said truck trailer.

The asserted defense rests upon the contention that the acts of Bourgeois were none other than acts of a reasonable and prudent driver and that the accident was an unavoidable one. And further, although it is admitted that Bourgeois did not prior to the time Rhett Plauche fell from his horse, bring his vehicle to a stop, it is expressly denied that the speed of the truck was unreasonable and that the air brakes were released thereby causing an unusual noise. Alternatively, contributory negligence on behalf of Rhett Plauche in several particulars is charged as being imputed to plaintiffs. We think it proper to observe at this point that the trial judge in stating his reasons for judgment, concluded:

“To sum it all up the Court finds-as a fact that the boys were traveling in single file and that in addition to the noises emanating from the steel plates, other unusual noises accompanied the passage of the truck. However, the resolution of these facts is not essential. The proximate and direct cause here was the flagrant— wellnigh deliberate — negligence of the driver, Bourgeois, in not bringing his truck to a full halt and the compounding of that negligence by his inexcusable inattention after the boys went by the cab.”

[300]*300The manner in which the bridge is constructed has an important bearing upon the issues presented herein. Exclusive of its approaches the bridge is 2,168 feet in length and its floor which is built level with the top of the railroad rails thereon, has a width of 16 feet 9Y2 inches. The ■structure is of concrete, wood and steel and was constructed primarily for railroad use, but provision has also been made to accommodate vehicular traffic and it now constitutes a part of Louisiana Highway No. 1. Four runways over the bridge are provided, consisting of steel plates laid lengthwise to form continuous strips, each approximately three feet in width. These runways accommodate two lanes of travel. The railroad rails are in the center of the bridge, and between the rails and steel plates the floor of the bridge consists of wooden decking. The sides of the bridge are guarded by three lines of three-inch (estimated) pipe placed horizontally and extending to a height of approximately four feet above the floor.

Rhett Matthew Plauche was bom December 31, 1942, and was one of the four children, two boys and two girls, of Dr. J. W. Plauche and his wife, Mrs. Juanita Fryou Plauche of Simmesport. He had completed the seventh grade in school and was a likable child, strong and well developed physically. The horse he was riding was about two and one-half years old and had been ridden by Rhett for approximately one and one-half years. The animal was not shod and was described as gentle. It appears that Rhett and his brother, Winnfield, fifteen months his senior, rode their horses frequently and together. they had previously crossed the bridge 'on horseback some three or four times. Their parents had forbidden them to cross the bridge unless they would dismount and lead their horses. Winnfield admitted disregard of these instructions.

Winnfield Plauche testified that on the morning of Rhett’s death, they had entered the west entrance to the bridge and were about midway of the first span when they observed the truck approaching. The two horses were being walked. At first he could not gauge the speed of the truck but as it got nearer he estimated it was traveling at a speed of from ten to fifteen miles per hour. As the truck came closer he could hear a noise being made as the tires of the truck rolled over the steel plates, and when the horses were within about twenty feet from the truck they got “shy and jumpy”. Winnfield says he then told Rhett to get close to the side rail. The truck passed. He related that when the horses were about midway of the truck it made a hissing sound which frightened Rhett’s horse, thereby causing the horse to jump to the right and rear up on its hind legs with its front feet against the rail; that Rhett fell from his horse and in doing so struck the body of the truck, and when this happened the horse was at the corner of the truck. After Winnfield had observed the condition of his brother, he led his horse back toward the end of the bridge and met his father, who had been informed of the accident.

Russell Bourgeois testified that he had been employed as a truck driver since 1948 and was accustomed to traveling over the bridge. He described his truck as being an International with Fruehauf trailer having a length of forty feet and a width of seven and one-half feet. The truck trailer has four sets of dual wheels and at the time under consideration was loaded. The vehicle is equipped with air brakes which make a noise when the brakes are released, due to air which is emitted underneath and near the middle of the trailer ■where the booster is located. He stated that he had entered the bridge on the eastern side, where the approach is curved and inclined, at a speed of about twenty miles per hour; that he observed the two horses approaching at some distance, whereupon he removed his "foot from the accelerator and thereafter did not apply his air brakes; that when he met the horses his truck' was moving at a speed of from ■ five to seven miles per hour; that [301]

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Related

Edelen v. Zurich Insurance
165 So. 2d 576 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
Baker v. Stolley
155 So. 2d 809 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1963)
Plauche v. Consolidated Companies
105 So. 2d 269 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
92 So. 2d 298, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plauche-v-consolidated-companies-lactapp-1957.