Ponder v. Ponder

157 So. 627
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 1934
DocketNo. 4898.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 So. 627 (Ponder v. Ponder) 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
Ponder v. Ponder, 157 So. 627 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff was injured when an automobile owned by her father and mother, operated by the former, overturned in the nighttime on a sharp curve in the graveled highway between Campti and Natchitoches, La. The palmar surface of the terminus phalanges of the middle and ring fingers of the left hand was cut by flying glass. She brings this suit against her father, mother, and the Home Indemnity Company of New York, insurer, to recover the following named items of damages to her, as a direct result of said injury:

Doctors’ bills. $15.00

Pain and suffering, past and present . 500.00

Loss of earning capacity as music teacher. 9,485.00

Total . $10,000.00

Plaintiff’s father, A. M. Ponder, after deciding that he would attend a football game at Natchitoches the evening of October 28, 1932, invited his wife, his daughter (the plaintiff), and a friend by the name of Dupont to accompany him on the trip in the family car. These parties were in the car when the accident occurred. Plaintiff and her mother were on the rear seat. Ponder admits that the road between Campti and Natchitoches was well known to him. It is not disputed that he was driving the car at a speed not in excess of 35 miles per hour when it turned over, and it is conceded that he is a careful and competent operator of automobiles. He says, and it is not seriously disputed, that the reason the car upturned was because he entered the sharp curve, going at said speed, before he knew he was approaching it, and, we deduce, from his effort to keep the car under control and at the same time stay on the road. The presence of loose gravel at the spot probably contributed secondarily to the result. He states he well knew this dangerous curve was in the road, but thought he had already passed it.

Plaintiff alleges and testifies that she well knew her father was familiar with the road on which they were traveling when the accident occurred, and that she was not familiar therewith. Her right to recover, as alleged, is based upon the fact that she was in the car as an invited guest, and that the accident, with resultant injury to her, was caused by and due to the father’s carelessness and negligence, in view of his knowledge of the road conditions, in not keeping a proper lookout ahead to observe said sharp curve in time to successfully negotiate it, and to the fact that he erroneously believed he had passed said curve.

The insurer and A. M. Ponder filed exceptions of no cause and no right of action, which were overruled. All defendants in their answers deny that plaintiff was an invited guest of her mother and father when she was injured, and aver that she assisted in planning the trip to Natchitoches and had as much interest in the trip as either of her parents; that there was nothing in the condition of the roadway or in the appearance of the surface of the road to indicate that there was any danger of the car skidding and that the skidding of the car occurred without fault on the part of A. M. Ponder, and does not constitute negligence; that A. M. Ponder, after the car began to skid, did everything a careful and prudent driver should have done in the cir *629 cumstances to retain control of the automobile and prevent an accident.

Issuance of the insurance policy on the Ponder car is admitted. Liability thereunder for damages sued for by plaintiff, if any be due her, is not seriously denied. All other material allegations of fact in the petition are denied. They further plead:

“27. That in the alternative and only in the event it should be found that A. M. Ponder or Mrs. A. M. Ponder were in any way negligent (which is not admitted hut specifically denied), defendant pleads that plaintiff was guilty of independent contributory negligence in that she was familiar with the road on which the automobile was being operated and did not protest or warn her father, A. M. Ponder, that he was driving too fast or driving in a careless and reckless manner.

“28. That further, in the alternative, defendant pleads that plaintiff and her parents were engaged in a joint venture and any action of negligence on the part of either A. M. Ponder or Mrs. A. M. Ponder is attributable to plaintiff.”

The trial court awarded plaintiff judgment against A. M. Ponder and the Home Indemnity Company of New York, in solido, for $515, rejected her demand against Mrs. Ponder, and. specifically rejected her demand for damages for loss of earning capacity as a teacher of music. From this judgment, plaintiff has appealed. She only complains of the inadequacy of the amount of damages given her, not of the rejection of her demand as against Mrs. Ponder. In answer to this appeal, the Home Indemnity Company reurges the exception of no cause and no right of action filed by it in limine, and overruled; and in the alternative, should this relief not be granted, that company, joined by A. M. Ponder, prays that the judgment be reversed and plaintiff’s demands rejected; and further, in the alternative, they pray that the judgment he reduced to $250.

The exception of no cause and no right of action is not touched on in defendants’ brief. We assume it has been abandoned. It will be so treated.

We have studied the record in the case quite thoroughly. The trial judge gave lengthy written reasons for the conclusions reached by him on all points in the case. We concur in these conclusions. After paraphrasing the pleadings and stating the position and contentions of both sides, as we have done hereinabove, the judge a quo says:

“I think the plaintiff’s position is the correct one. Mr. Ponder was reasonably familiar with the highway in the vicinity of the accident. He is a traveling salesman and had traveled the road on numerous occasions. He knew that the curve was there and that it was both sharp and dangerous. If he had been keeping a proper lookout, and the law required him to keep such on that occasion, he would most certainly have seen this curve in time to safely negotiate it. The consequence of his negligence was that he ran into the curve before he saw it, and when he had discovered what he had done, it was then impossible for him to stop the car on the highway, and to follow the highway was impossible for the reason the curve was so sharp that he could not negotiate it without the car turning over. The loose gravel may have aggravated the dangerous situation in which he found himself, but the cause did not originate there. It originated in the driver’s carelessness that permitted the car to get caught in such a situation. The testimony shows that Mr. Ponder was driving at a reasonable speed, one at which he could have safely negotiated the curve if he had been watching his business in driving the car as he should have been. The speed of the car had nothing to do with the accident primarily, yet, when he tried to make the curve after entering it as far as he had, the car could not make the curve and stay on its wheels at the speed it was going. That the situation resulting in the accident was due solely to A. M. Ponder’s negligence, I do not have the slightest doubt.

“In the case of Buckley v. Featherstone Garage, 11 La. App. 564, 123 So. 446, 450, the Court of Appeal, through Judge Odom, as its spokesman, said:

“ ‘A motorist must use such diligence and care as is commensurate with the dangerous character of the locality.

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Bluebook (online)
157 So. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ponder-v-ponder-lactapp-1934.