Richie v. Natchitoches Oil Mill

178 So. 752
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1938
DocketNo. 5584.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 178 So. 752 (Richie v. Natchitoches Oil Mill) 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
Richie v. Natchitoches Oil Mill, 178 So. 752 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiffs, the mother and father of Arthur Richie, deceased/ bring this action *753 against Phanor Metoyer, the Natchitoches Oil Mill, Inc., and its insurer, American Mutual Liability Insurance Company, to recover damages sustained by them on account of the son’s accidental death, alleged to have been caused by the carelessness and negligence of said Metoyer, admitted agent and employee of the oil company.

The accident occurred in the daytime on Mill street in the southern part of the city of Natchitoches, La., near the plant of the oil company. At the locus of the accident, Mill street is surfaced with 22 feet of gravel. Its entire width is over 30 feet. The oil mill property borders its west side, and between the road and the buildings there intervenes a level area, several feet wide, of practically the same elevation as the road. The road is straight for over 100 yards north, and for a greater distance south, of the place of the accident.

Arthur Richie was driving a Ford truck southerly on the street, laden with small pine logs. Metoyer was also driving a Ford truck, with large built-up body, loaded with four tons of cotton seed. He had come with his load from north of the oil mill site, and had just completed weighing the truck with load on scales of the oil company, on its land, immediately west of the said street. He drove southerly oif of the scales with the intention of discharging the seed about a hundred yards below. To do this, it was necessary that he again get on the street, as it led to his destination.

There is considerable difference in the testimony of witnesses regarding the position of this truck with reference to the street proper and the distance it had gone into the street when the Richie truck collided with it. It is certain the seed truck was struck a glancing blow. It had not straightened out on the street when hit. Its left side faced Richie.

We quote the gravamen of the petition anent the alleged negligence of Metoyer, viz.:

“That Phanor Metoyer had weighed the seed that were on the truck he was driving at the time of the accident and after doing so he drove out into Mill Street with his truck with the intention to make a swing around and on into the yard or enclosure o,f the mill through a gate and that he did so without looking in either direction and without giving any warning whatever of his intention to do so; that he drove into said Mill Street immediately in front of the truck being driven by the son of petitioners as aforesaid. That when he drove into said Mill Street, your son’s truck was so close that their son could not go around the truck driven by Phanor Metoyer on either side nor could he stop his truck; all of which caused the collision and killed their said son as aforesaid.
“They show that the said accident and resulting death of their son was solely due to the negligence and carelessness of Phanor Metoyer in the following respects, to-wit:
“(a) That he drove his truck out into the line of traffic on Mill Street in the face of the approaching log truck.
“(b) That he did not keep a careful lookout in either " direction along said Mill Street.
“(c) That he was operating a truck without proper brakes.
“(d) By creating such an emergency that Arthur Richie couldn’t avoid striking the seed truck.
“(e) That alternatively if Phanor Metoyer did see the approaching log truck, then he was negligent in starting his truck out into Mill Street or not stopping same if he had already started.”

Defendants deny that the accident was due to- any extent to the negligence or lack of care of Metoyer. The blame therefor is charged to Richie. The acts of negligence on his part, averred to have been the cause of the collision, are these:

(1) That he was driving his truck at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed, in contravention of the laws and ordinances of the city of Natchitoches.

(2) That a fraction of a second before the impact, Richie swerved his truck to his right and sideswiped the Metoyer truck, which, at the time, was no more than 2 or 3 feet over on the street; and was moving not over 5 miles per hour.

(3) That the truck was not equipped with adequate brakes and that Richie was not maintaining a proper lookout -for traffic on or about the street ahead of him.

(4) That the logs were improperly and negligently bound to the truck, in that the chains which held them together were not passed around the coupling pole or fastened to the truck in a substantial manner; that this negligence was the proximate cause of Richie’s death.

*754 These enumerated acts of negligence are, in the alternative, pleaded and relied upon by defendants to defeat plaintiff’s suit. Defendants further allege, in the alternative, that Richie had the last clear chance to avert the accident. Amplifying this plea, it is said: That the Metoyer truck was near the west edge of the street, moving slowly, when the collision occurred; that the street there is over 30 feet wide; that there were no other motor vehicles near the scene to interfere with vision from a hundred yards north and down to the locus of the accident; and, if Richie had been keeping the required lookout, he would and could have observed these conditions in time to swerve his truck to his left and avoid the collision.

Plaintiffs were awarded judgment for $6,161.50. All defendants appealed -sus-pensively. Plaintiffs, answering the appeal, pray for increase in the amount of the judgment. In brief, they urge that appellants be penalized for prosecuting a frivolous appeal.

Four witnesses, besides the truck operators, claim to have seen the accident. Three'of these were young men who had brought a cow to the scales to weigh, immediately after Metoyer drove his truck off of it. They were all about the scales at the time of the collision-

There is no serious dispute as regards the movement and course of the Richie truck as it covered the more than 100 yards of straight, unobstructed street north of the locus of the collision. It was on and held to its proper side of the street. There is serious conflict concerning the movements, course, and position of the Metoyer truck as it approached and entered the street from the level area on its west side. These three witnesses largely agree in their testimony. There are some variances, however. If this were not true, if they did agree in all details and particulars, there would be substantial ground for viewing their testimony with suspicion. They all testified that Metoyer drove the truck slowly from the scales towards the street, as they passed him with the cow, and that he stopped at the margin of the street, some 25 or 30 feet from the scales, rolled a cigarette, lighted it, and began to smoke; and that following these acts he immediately put the truck in gear and drove it, some say suddenly and rapidly, into the street and across the path of the other truck at a slight angle. The circumstances, the location, and character of injuries to the Metoyer truck, and rational inferences deducible therefrom, in our opinion, support these witnesses’ version of the fkets.

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Bluebook (online)
178 So. 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richie-v-natchitoches-oil-mill-lactapp-1938.