Probst v. Smith Hardware Co.

141 So. 508
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1932
DocketNo. 970
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 So. 508 (Probst v. Smith Hardware Co.) 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
Probst v. Smith Hardware Co., 141 So. 508 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MOUTON, J:

February 26, 1931, Mr. Franz Probst was driving a Ford sedan northward from Cov-ington to Bogalusa-which was struck in the rear by a Chevrolet -truck. Frank Silver was driving for defendant company.

Mr. Edward Maitre was on the front seat with Mr. Probst, and his wife, with Mrs. Maitre, were sitting on the rear seat of the sedan when the collision occurred.

The sedan was badly damaged, and the four occupants of the car suffered personal injuries as a result of the accident, for which they recovered judgments below in separate amounts, from which defendant company prosecutes this appeal.

The collision occurred about 2 miles south of Bogalusa on a graveled highway, 22 feet in width.

Mr. Probst, the driver of the sedan, which was traveling ahead of the truck, did not know the road to Bogalusa, his point of destination. He testifies that he saw a pedestrian coming on his left towards him from Bo-galusa, and that, as he desired to get information about the route, he proceeded at about 150 feet before getting to him, to gradually slow down the sedan, and that just as he had reached at about 10 feet from this pedestrian, who, the evidence discloses, was Mr. Otis Corkern, he hailed him, and at that moment, as he was coming to a stop, his car was struck in the rear by the truck. Mr. Probst is positive that at that time, and before, the sedan was on his right-hand side of the highway.

As the highway, at that point, is 22 feet wide, there was 11 feet on each side from the center line of the highway. Mr. Probst testifies that there was 14 feet on his left from the side of his sedan for the passage of the truck, which shows, according to his evidence, that his car was 3 feet from the center line.

The other three occupants of the sedan testify substantially to the same effect, and all four say that the truck had ample room to pass on the left side of the sedan going northward to Bogalusa.

Mr. Corkern, the pedestrian, at first testified, that the sedan was entirely on the right-hand side of Mr. Probst, but afterwards, on close questioning, said he had pulled his car to his left and slightly over the center line of the roadway.

It is hard to believe, if believable at all, that Silver, who was driving the truck, with plenty of room, according to these witnesses [509]*509to pass on tlie left of tlie sedan, would have run against it in the rear, thus causing the damages complained of. The proof shows that Silver had been operating this truck as an employee of defendant company for about three years prior to this accident, and must therefore have been an experienced driver. True, he is a colored man, but the instinct of self-preservation, always present in all of us, it seems, would have prompted him from committing such a reckless act.

The sedan being closed in the rear, neither Mr. Probst nor the other occupants of the car saw the truck, which was coming behind them, and, hence, knew nothing about tha speed at which it was advancing.

Corkern, from whom information as to the route was being asked, says he saw the truck at a distance of about 100 yards or 300 feet as it was coming towards him, and that it was then moving at the speed of 50 to 55 miles an hour; that it never slackened its speed, and, more than that, says Silver deliberately ran into the sedan.

Such testimony as that is almost incredible, and could he taken as true only if it were supported by the testimony of other witnesses, or by corroborating facts or circumstances upon which a belief in such a statement could rest. It may be stated now before continuing the discussion on this feature of the case that, as the truck was coming toward Corkern, it was impossible for him to make an approximately accurate estimate as to the rate of speed the truck was then moving, as this court has heretofore taken occasion to say on the same subject-matter in cases submitted to it for decision.

Corkern, whose testimony was taken before a notary and who the trial judge did not have the opportunity of seeing on the witness stand, said also that, when the impact occurred, the truck had not slackened its speed, was then moving at 50 or 55 miles an hour.

He was in no better position at that time to make such an estimate then he was when he first saw the truck. Hence, the estimate of the speed of the truck given by Corkern can afford no criterion for a proper determination of its speed at that time.

As Probst and his companions in the sedan could give no information on that subject, we are forced to resort to the facts relative to the condition and positions of the vehicles after the collision.

The result of the accident showed considerable damage to the sedan and less to the truck. The truck passed ahead of the sedan, about the length of the truck and trailer, and was turned across the road. The sedan was thrown to the right-hand side of the road going towards Bogalusa, was turned over in the ditch with two of its wheels in the air.

The proof shows that the trailer was 14 feet long, and the truck not quite as long, which indicates that their combined length could not have been over 25 feet. It was therefore at about that distance from the point of contact that the truck was found across the roadway after the accident.

The evidence shows that the truck struck the left rear end of the sedan. It is shown that the truck’s weight was one ton and one-half. It seems to us that a 3,000-pound truck in motion, if going at 50 or 55 miles an hour, would have gone much further than 25 feet from the point of contact. It occurs to us, also, that, if the sedan had stopped ox was stopping when hit, as appears from the evidence, it would have been torn to pieces, and its occupants would not all have escaped with their lives.

Silver, driver of the truck, says that he had slowed down the truck from about 30 miles an hour to 25 when he struck the sedan: His testimony, in reference to the speed of the truck, is more in keeping with the facts, judging from the results of the collision, and more acceptable in guiding the court to a correct solution of the issues in this case.

The testimony of Spencer Allen, witness for plaintiff, is that a Mr. Menish, in company with Corkern, obtained a statement from him in reference to the collision.' It seems a little peculiar thát Corkern should have manifested such an interest in this case. It might be said that his going with Menish to obtain the statement was a mere coincidence, and should have no influence in our consideration of his testimony. Ordinarily it should be so viewed, but, when taken in connection with Oorkem’s other exaggerated statements about the truck speeding at the rate of 50 or 55 miles an hour, and to the deliberate act of Silver running into the sedan, hereinabove referred to, we are constrained to note Cork-ern’s conduct in obtaining a statement from Allen as a proper link in the chain of the evidence for the purpose of getting at a correct appreciation of his testimony.

Probst testifies that when he hollered at Corkern his hand was extending out of the left front window of the sedan. The back windows, he says, were closed, and the right front window was down about one inch for circulation of the air, although according to his testimony, the left front window was open from the time they left New Orleans to the moment of the accident, and this in the latter part of February. Mr.

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Related

Maitre v. Smith Hardware Co.
141 So. 512 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
Probst v. Smith Hardware Co.
141 So. 512 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/probst-v-smith-hardware-co-lactapp-1932.