Reil v. McNaspy

177 So. 393
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1937
DocketNo. 1770.
StatusPublished

This text of 177 So. 393 (Reil v. McNaspy) 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
Reil v. McNaspy, 177 So. 393 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

Mrs. Reil, the plaintiff, was injured while riding as a guest in an automobile driven by the defendant, Mrs. McNaspy, on the afternoon of May 5, 1935. At the time of the injury, the two ladies were- returning from New Iberia to Lafayette, and the accident occurred about 1% miles out from New Iberia on the'Old Spanish Trail paved highway. It is alleged that the defendant was driving her automobile at about 25 to 30 miles per hour along the road when a horn was sounded by a motorcycle in the rear before passing the car in which the ladies were riding; that, when this horn *394 was sounded by the approaching motorcycle, the defendant negligently and carelessly steered her car too precipitately to the right, and, finding herself too near the guardrail, made a sharp turn to the left, lost control of the car, and zigzagged from one side of the road to the other, negligently putting her foot on the accelerator instead of the brakes, thus causing the car to pick up speed, the car running into the guardrail on the right side of the road and throwing plaintiff out with great force and violence.

Plaintiff alleges that as a result of the accident she suffered a comminuted fracture of the left humerus just below the anatomical juncture with the shoulder joint, cuts on her chin, and various bruises and contusions over her body, particularly her chest; that two teeth on her plates were broken and her gums were cut and her mouth made sore; that her eyeglasses were also broken. She claims damages in the total sum of $5,778.

It is alleged that the cause of the accident was the gross negligence of the defendant in losing control of the car, and in pressing on the accelerator instead of applying the brakes when the motorcycle horn'was sounded in the rear as a signal to pass.

Several motions and exceptions were filed, and these were either overruled, or the objections contained in them were complied with. As none of these motions and exceptions are pressed in this court, we will give them no further consideration, except it might be well to state that, in a supplemental petition, the heirs of plaintiff’s deceased husband, who died after the accident, were made parties to the suit in order to recover whatever portion of the damages might be found due the community.

Defendant admits the accident and the injury of plaintiff while riding as a guest in the car, but defendant denies that the in-, juries suffered by plaintiff are as serious as claimed. The defendant alleged that the sole and proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of the operator of the motorcycle in suddenly blowing a loud and terrifying horn or siren just as he was about to pass her car; that, upon hearing the loud blast of said horn she was unnerved and frightened, and she naturally and instinctively turned the steering wheel to the right in order to give what she'thought was a large bus room -to pass, and, as she did this, the wheels on the right side of her car left the paved portion of the road, whereupon she sought to get back on the paved portion of the road and in so doing her car turned over causing injury to plaintiff and herself; that she was not guilty of any negligence, but acted as any other reasonable person would have acted in the emergency created .by the loud blast of the horn in the rear, and that the accident was inevitable.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $3,000, and in favor of plaintiff and the two heirs of her deceased husband in the further sum of $258 as that part of the damage accruing to the community. Defendant has appealed, and the plaintiffs have answered the appeal asking that the allowance of damages be increased to the amount originally claimed in the petition.

There were only four witnesses who testified as to how the accident occurred-— plaintiff and defendant, and two young men who were riding a motorcycle. There is no great difference in their testimony, except in a few minor details. The defendant says that when the horn blew behind her she thought it was a large bus, and she pulled to the right to give room for it to pass; that she drove to the right and then to the left. She does not know if she stepped on the gas, but says that it is possible that she did. She says the horn was very loud, and the passing vehicle made a lot of noise.

She admits that she got onto the right shoulder and then zigzagged across the road once or twice before going into the ditch on the right

The plaintiff’s account of the occurrence is as follows: “We started ‘to Lafayette and just out of the City limits I heard some motorcycle horn sounded at the side of Mrs. McNaspy, and she swerved her car to the right, thinking to get out of the way of the vehicle, and I suppose realizing how near the shoulder she was, she brought it hack to the left and realizing she was not righting her car, with more speed, the car went across the road and back and the third time we hit the guard rail, and then the door of the car opened, and the car went over, and we both fell out.”

This -witness says the speed of the car was accelerated when going backwards and forwards across the road, and she did not see the defendant put her foot on the brakes. She says in her testimony that the horn which blew on the passing vehicle was not unusually loud, although in a previous written statement she said it was a loud horn that blew.

The testimony of the two young men on the motorcycle is to the effect that another *395 boy on a motorcycle passed defendant’s car just ahead of them; that the driver of the motorcycle on which these two young men were riding blew his horn when a few feet to the rear and to the left of the car as a passing signal; that the car was traveling slightly over the center black line, and, when the horn of the motorcycle was blown, the car suddenly swerved to the right, then zigzagged across the road two or three times and went into the ditch on the right-hand side; that as soon as the car began swerving from one side of the road to the other, the driver of the motorcycle pulled over on the left shoulder to avoid the zigzagging car, and the rear tire on the motorcycle blew out as the vehicle crossed a rut; that the motorcycle was pulled back on the road, and proceeded two or three hundred feet further where it came to a stop. Both of these boys deny that the horn on the motorcycle was unusually loud, or that the machine made any unusually loud noise.

Ityis generally known that motorcycles usually make quite a lot of noise in running, and their speed and approach in passing a car on the highway is different from the passing of another car. But a person driving an automobile on the through paved highways of the state should be prepared for the approach of these various kinds of vehicles that may be expected topass at any time. The law requires that the driver of an overtaking vehicle shall give-audible and sufficient warning of his intentions before overtaking, passing, or attempting to pass a vehicle proceeding in the same direction. And when the driver of the vehicle in front has been given this warning that the vehicle in the rear intends to pass', it is the duty of the driver of the vehicle in front to give way to his right in favor of such overtaking vehicle, and not to increase the speed of his vehicle until the overtaking vehicle has passed. Rule 7(b) and (f), section 3, Act No. 21 of 1932.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reil-v-mcnaspy-lactapp-1937.