Potter v. Glassell

83 So. 898, 146 La. 688, 1920 La. LEXIS 1779
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 2, 1920
DocketNo. 22415
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 83 So. 898 (Potter v. Glassell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Glassell, 83 So. 898, 146 La. 688, 1920 La. LEXIS 1779 (La. 1920).

Opinion

DAWKINS, J.

Plaintiff claims the sum of $12,347 as damages for personal injuries, etc., alleged to have been occasioned by a collision of his motorcycle with the automobile of the defendant.

Defendant excepted to the petition on the ground of vagueness, and plaintiff was ordered to amend, which was accordingly done, and thereupon an exception of no cause of action was filed and subsequently overruled. Answer was then filed admitting some of the allegations, including article 3, which, in the original petition, alleged indebtedness in the amount above stated; but we assume that this admission was made through an oversight and had reference to the article bearing the same number (3) in the amended petition which referred to defendant’s residence or domicile. In any event, the answer otherwise denies all liability and pleads con[689]*689tributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff.

The case was tried before a jury in the court below, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $1,050. After an unsuccessful motion for a new trial, based upon the contention that the amount allowed was inadequate, plaintiff appealed. Defendant did not ask for a new trial, but has answered the appeal, and prays that xjlaintiff’s demands be rejected in toto.

In overruling plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, the judge below used the following language, to wit:

“Plaintiff seeks a now trial from a verdict of a jury in his favor, basing same on the inadequacy of the amount allowed. Defendant is not seeking a new trial, so we will confine this to the question of the amount.
“We think that the amount allowed was grossly inadequate, for plaintiff was badly hurt, and we hardly think that he will ever be the physical man he was before the injury.
“We think it will better serve the interest of both sides to allow the case to go on and get a final decision, rather than get a new trial with the attending expense and delay, and then one party or the other appeal it, as will undoubtedly be done. In our opinion the amount should at least be $5,000.
“The motion for the new trial is overruled.”

Exception of no cause of action.

[1] We take it that, inasmuch as nothing was said in the argument or in the brief in support of this exception, it has been abandoned. At any rate, we do not think it well founded. We assume that what defendant’s counsel had in mind, when filing it, was that plaintiff alleges he was attempting to pass defendant’s car on the left or wrong side, according to “the law of the road.” But we think this sufficiently overcome by the additional charge, made in justification of this course, that he was compelled to do so because of defendant’s violation of this rule and to avoid the collision. In such circumstances, it is not negligence to attempt to pass to the left. Each case must turn upon its own particular facts. Schick v. Jenevein, 145 La. 333, 82 South. 360.

Statement of Pacts.

The collision out of which this suit arises occurred a few miles out from the city of Shreveport, on the model or gravel road which runs in a northerly direction towards Belcher, the home of defendant. On the day of the accident defendant left 'Shreveport near 6 o’clock p. m. in a large Cadillac car, accompanied by his wife, son, and two other gentlemen, Messrs. Dixon and Hudson, the car being driven by defendant’s said son, Ashton Glassell, with Dixon also on the front seat, and the others on the middle and rear seats. Plaintiff had been employed in revetment work on the bank of Red river some 15 or 20 miles north of Shreveport, and, having finished his work for the day, was returning to his home in Shreveport in a southerly direction over the same road on a motorcycle. The two vehicles met, and, through circumstances which plaintiff attributes to the fault of the defendant’s said son, and which defendant in turn imputes to plaintiff, a collision followed, resulting in very serious injuries to the latter, and for which, as indicated above, the lower judge thought that he was entitled to recover, if anything at all, at least $5,000. As -is usual in such cases, the testimony is conflicting. Plaintiff claims that he. was traveling on the proper or right side of the road going south within some two or three feet of the west edge of the gravel, and continued to do so until he reached a point within a few feet of the automobile, in the expectation that the latter, which was also traveling on that side,'would turn to its right and permit him to pass; but that, upon reaching the point stated, he concluded that the ear would not concede him his side of the road, and, in order to avoid a head-on collision, he quickly turned [691]*691to Ms left and to the right of the automobile in the hope that he would be able to pass it on that side; that, instead, the car also turned in that direction, and they came together, the front wheel of his motorcycle striking the right fender of the automobile; and that he was thrown to the ground and injured as stated. Defendant, and the other occupants of the car who were sworn, admit that the automobile had been traveling on the west side of the road going north, but claim that this had been necessary in order to pass some wagons, and contend that the car had gotten back near the center of the road before the collision, and'that there was sufficient room to the west and left for the plaintiff to have passed in safety, but that he carelessly turned to the east in front of the automobile, thereby causing the accident.

Two witnesses, one white and the other colored, who seem to be without interest, sworn on behalf of , plaintiff in addition to himself, say that he was traveling on the extreme west side of the road, as was the automobile, until within a few feet of each other, when the motorcycle turned to the east and the collision occurred; while none, of the defendant’s witnesses contend that the auto was any further east than the center of the road. The witness J. W. Dixon, sworn on behalf of the defendant, and who says, because of their friendly relations, he would not like to see a judgment rendered against the defendant, as stated above, was sitting on the front seat of the car with young Glassell the chauffeur. He says that he was looking back and talking to those in the rear of the car, when his attention,was attracted by a remark of defendant’s wife to her son. We' quote some of his testimony on direct examination, as follows:

“Q. When you first saw him (meaning plaintiff), what portion of the road was he in?
“A. He was a little to the right.
“Q. When you first saw him coming?
“A. Well, it was this way. I was talking to Mr. Glassell. I was sitting turned around with my face to Mr. Glassell, talking,, and was not looking ahead, and all at once Mrs. Glassell said, ‘Watch out, Ashton!’ She said: ‘Watch out! Watch out! There is some body coming there! And I looked, and I saw him too, and then all at once it seemed that he commenced to switch and dodge, and I thought that he was going fast enough to get by, and then he slowed down, and I didn’t think that he was going to show speed enough to get by, and then the collision happened just like this (witness pops hands together).
“Q. And when you saw him, you were only a few feet away?
“A. Yes.

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Bluebook (online)
83 So. 898, 146 La. 688, 1920 La. LEXIS 1779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-glassell-la-1920.