Provosty v. Christy

152 So. 784
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 1934
DocketNo. 14685.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 152 So. 784 (Provosty v. Christy) 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
Provosty v. Christy, 152 So. 784 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Francis Nugent Provosty sues Edmund H. Christy and Ocean Accident & Guaranty Corporation, Christy’s liability insurance carrier, claiming $9,953.65 for physical injuries and resulting loss of earnings, expenses, et cetera, caused while Provosty was a guest passenger in a Packard coupé automobile owned and driven by Christy and occupied by the two men mentioned and also by a young lady, who was a friend of both.

The automobile was proceeding up Baronne street and, 138 feet after crossing Poydras street, it skidded into a- large motortruck which was stationary and to which was attached a trailer, which trailer was backed into an alleyway with the truck ahead of it extending almost at right angles into Baronne street, and blocking approximately half of the street; the portion blocked being that directly in front of the Packard car of defendant.

Provosty ehai'ges that Christy was negligent in failing to perceive the truck in time and in not having his car under such control as would permit of its being stopped before striking the obstructing vehicle. Defendants deny that Christy was negligent in any way, averring that his automobile was being operated at a normal, reasonable speed, and that the accident was unavoidable and resulted from the fact that when Christy pere’eived the truck ahead and attempted to turn his Packard to the left and to pass around the front end of the truck, his car skidded, or slid along the surface of the street until its right side, after turning, came into contact with the left side of the stationary truck. It is further asserted that, if the said Christy was negligent, Provosty, sitting also on the front seat and having an equal opportunity to perceive the danger, acquiesced in such negligence and was also independently negligent in several particulars:

First, that Christy had been drinking and that Provosty, knowing this, asked Christy to drive him home.

Second, that since Provosty asked Christy to drive him home, Christy, in doing so, was “acting for and on behalf of plaintiff” (Pro-vosty).

Third, that Provosty, by requesting a seat in the car, which to his knowledge was to be occupied by two other persons, and by so crowding the operator, contributed to his negligence.

Fourth, that since Provosty was and is an experienced driver, he should have cautioned Christy if the latter was driving negligently;

In the district court there was judgment for plaintiff against both defendants in the sum of $5,000, and, since the insurance carrier’s liability was limited by its policy to that amount, and because the district court felt that plaintiff’s injuries and losses required a judgment for a greater amount than $5,000, an additional judgment was rendered against Christy in the sum of $1,896.16.

There is no evidence which tends to show that the occupants of the car were to any ex *786 tent intoxicated, so we may at once dismiss that contention. 'Christy himself testified, “We were not in a state of intoxication in the slightest degree.”

It is not necessary to determine whether Christy-extended to Provosty the invitation to ride, or whether the latter requested the former to allow him to enter the automobile. In either case the legal relationship is the same and there would be no difference in the resulting liability. See Lorance v. Smith, 173 La. 883, 138 So. 871.

The accident occurred at about half past 1 o’clock in the morning. We are sátisfied, as was the district judge, that the street was wet.

Counsel for defendants directs our atten: tion to the fact that plaintiff in his testimony concedes that, as the automobile approached the point at which the brakes were applied, it was being operated by defendant Christy properly -and at a reasonable speed, and that the district judge found that after reaching that point at which the brakes wore applied there was nothing Christy could have done which would have avoided the crash, and that the skidding which occurred was inevitable. Our 'attention is at once focused upon two legal principles, each of which is firmly established, and which, according to counsel for defendants, require that we hold that there is no liability here.

The first is that: “ * * * A person using a public highway, especially in an incorporated city, has a right to presume and to act upon the presumption, that the way is safe for ordinary travel, even at night, and he is not required to be on the lookout for extraordinary dangers or obstructions to which his attention has not been called.” Jacobs v. Jacobs, 141 La. 285, 74 So. 992, 997, L. R. A. 1917F, 253.

See, also, Deichmann v. Gerard et al., 145 So. 30, 32, in which we said: “⅜ * * A person using a modern concrete highway in the open country and driving at so reasonable a speed as 20 or 25 miles an hour is justified in assuming and in acting on the assumption that the way is safe for ordinary travel, even at night.”

The second of the legal principles relied on by defendants is that: “It is a well-known physical fact that cars may skid on greasy or slippery roads without fault either on account of the manner of handling the car or on account of its being there.” Linden v. Miller, 172 Wis. 20, 177 N. W. 909, 12 A. L. R. 665.

See, also, Siren v. Montague (La. App.) 142 So. 196, 197; Monroe v. D’Aunoy (La. App) 143 So. 716; Barret v. Caddo Transfer & Warehouse Co., 165 La. 1075, 116 So, 563, 564, 58 A. L. R. 261.

In the Barret Case appears the following: “It is settled that the mere fact that an automobile skidded is not evidence of negligence. Berry on Automobiles, § 156; Huddy on Automobiles, § 336; Cyc. on Automobile Law, p. 269.”

From these two principles, that a driver may presume that the roadway is safe and unobstructed and that skidding does not of itself prove negligence, flows the contention that there was no negligence 'here on the part of Christy and, consequently, no lia-, bility in defendants.

But, while it is true that there is a presumption that a paved roadway is safe for travel, this does not mean that an automobile driver may rely on that presumption to such an extent as to relieve him from negligence if he fails to see a danger which should have been apparent to- a reasonably prudent and observant person. In the Jacobs Case the danger resulted, not from an obstruction which extended above the surface of the roadway and which, therefore, would have been plainly noticeable, but from a drainage canal which extended across the projected line of the roadway and which, in the nighttime, might easily escape the notice of an ordinarily prudent driver.

The same may be said of the danger which caused the accident in the Deichmann Case. There, it is true that the obstruction extended above the surface of .the roadway, but it was not in front of the car, and, therefore, was not illuminated by the headlights until they were turned suddenly, upon it as the car followed the curve of the road.

In both cases the danger was not manifest and obvious and might easily have escaped the observation of a reasonably careful-driver until too late.

Here, however, the obstruction should have been easily seen.

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152 So. 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provosty-v-christy-lactapp-1934.