Rector v. Allied Van Lines, Inc.

198 So. 516, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 251
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1940
DocketNos. 6119-6121.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 198 So. 516 (Rector v. Allied Van Lines, Inc.) 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
Rector v. Allied Van Lines, Inc., 198 So. 516, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 251 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

HAMITER, Judge.

Shortly after 1 o’clock of the morning of September 6, 1937, a large motor truck driven by Walt McCampbell crashed into the rear end of a 1930 model Chevrolet sedan that was parked on U. S. Highway 71 at a point about 7% miles south of Bunkie, Louisiana. Both machines fronted in a northerly 'direction and were on their right or the east side of such highway. They came to rest a short distance apart, in a ditch that lies east of the pavement and parallel to it.

Occupants of the Chevrolet were Mildred McLeod and Harley Rogers, Jr., who have since married; and James Rector. The last-named person died a few hours after and as a result of the collision. The others sustained certain injuries.

Three suits followed. Mrs. Zelima Rector, the widow of the deceased, sues in her individual capacity and as tutrix of their minor child, Patricia Ann Rector, claiming damages allegedly occasioned by the death. The other suits are brought, respectively, by Harley Rogers, Jr., and Mrs. Mildred McLeod Rogers, the survivors of the accident, to recover for the injuries that they received.

Impleaded as defendants in each cause are Ford Brothers Van & Storage Company, owner of the truck and the employer of the driver McCampbell, and hereinafter referred to as Ford Brothers; the Allied Van Lines, Inc., an incorporated association of which the truck’s owner is a member and agent; the Travelers Mutual Casualty Company of Des Moines, Iowa, the insurer of the truck; and the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, which issued an *518 insurance [policy in -favor of Allied Van Lines, Inc. No judgment is asked against the driver McCampbell.

The petition of each plaintiff alleges the manner of'the occurrence of the accident and concludes that the sole cause thereof was the negligent and reckless driving of the truck by McCampbell. It is also averred therein that the truck was being operated by and for the said Ford Brothers and the Allied Van Lines, Inc. The doctrine of respondeat superior is invoked as a basis for the contended liability of the defendants.

All defendants (except the Travelers Mutual Casualty Company, which filed no answer) deny that McCampbell was negligent, and alternatively plead contributory negligence on the part of the occupants of the Chevrolet.

Allied Van'Lines, Inc., and its insurer, Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, as stated in the brief of their counsel, “defend on the additional ground that, even i.f the alleged negligence of McCampbell be assumed the doctrine of respondeat superi- or does not apply to them because he was not Allied Van Lines’ servant or agent, either directly or remotely, and that accordingly no liability should attach to them.”

The cases were consolidated and tried together, All defendants were condemned in solido to pay to Mrs. Zelima Rector individually $5,000, and as tutrix of the minor $10,000; and to pay to Harley Rogers, Jr., and Mrs. Mildred McLeod Rogers the sum of $250 each.

The defendants appealed from the judgments.

By way of answer to the appeals, increases of the awards are requested by the respective plaintiffs.

The issues of the three cases, except as to quantum, are identical; and all will be discussed and treated in this opinion.

The record discloses that the occupants of the Chevrolet departed from New Orleans during the evening of September 5, 1937, on a journey north to their homes in Bastrop, Louisiana. When they reached the above-mentioned point on U. S. Highway 71, about midnight, their machine stopped because of its gasoline supply being exhausted. Several attempts were made to obtain fuel from passing motorists, but success did not attend these efforts. Thereupon, so testify Mr. and Mrs. Rogers, they pushed the car off the pavement onto the east grassy shoulder of the highway and all went to'sleep in it, léaving both front and rear lights burning.

The highway north and south of the place of stoppage is straight for a number of miles; and it consists of a concrete slab 18 feet wide with 5-foot grassy shoulders. The nearest intersecting road is one-half mile to the south.

One Cleveland Frank, according to his own testimony given as a defense witness, traveled north on that highway on said morning of September 6, ■ 1937, with Bunkie, Louisiana, as his destination, and passed the location in question about 1 o’clock. He was proceeding 25 to 30 miles per hour, and first observed the parked Chevrolet when 30 or 40 yards (90- or 120 feet) south of it. At least part of it extended over the pavement. No lights were burning thereon. The weather was “kind of foggy”. He swerved his machine to the left and around it. Approximately one and one-half hours later he returned and witnessed wreckage that evidenced the occurrence of the collision.

Some minutes after Cleveland Frank passed the locus on his northerly journey, Walt McCampbell approached in his truck. States the latter: “It must have been about 1 o’clock, as near as I can say”. This vehicle consisted of a large van, 8 feet in width and containing a space of 1200 cubic feet, pulled by a Ford V-8 tractor. The over-all length of the equipment was 36 feet, and it weighed ten or eleven thousand pounds. It was traveling empty from New Orleans to Shreveport. McCampbell, according to his testimony, was driving “maybe 30 or 35 miles per hour”, and was about 25 or 30 feet from the Chevrolet before he saw it. The headlights on the truck were good, but no estimation as to the distance they reflected could be given. The windshield wiper was functioning properly. With reference to the density of the fog existing there, he says, “I would say about medium, I would not say it was a real heavy fog”. It is his belief that the left rear wheel of the parked machine stood on the pavement approximately 3 or 3Yz feet from the east edge thereof, and that none of the lights thereon burned. On seeing this stationary object ahead, he did everything possible to avoid hitting it, such as swerving the truck to the left and attempting to apply the brakes. The truck’s right front wheel struck the Chevrolet about the center of its rear end.

*519 The evidence is convincing that the Chevrolet was not parked entirely on the grassy shoulder, as Harley Rogers, Jr., alleges and testifies. A preponderance of the testimony and the physical facts furnish the conclusion that such car was sitting at a very slight angle on the highway with the right wheels on the grassy shoulder and the left ones on the pavement. The left rear wheel, as McCampbell correctly states, rested on the pavement at a point 3 or 3% feet from its east edge; hence, in view of this position and after allowing 1 foot for the car’s rear extension, a clearance of less than 15 feet remained on the 18-foot concrete slab. This finding with reference to the position of the left rear wheel is supported by the established facts that the car’s gasoline tank was struck about its center by the truck’s right front wheel and no part of the truck left the pavement before the contact was made.

Perhaps the lights of the Chevrolet were on when the occupants commenced their slumber, as the survivors testify; but it is seriously doubted that such condition endured at the moment o.f the collision. Both Cleveland Frank and Walt McCamp-bell say that no lights were aglow.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 516, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rector-v-allied-van-lines-inc-lactapp-1940.