Rigouts v. Larkan

153 So. 2d 363, 244 La. 479, 1963 La. LEXIS 2400
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1963
DocketNo. 46436
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 153 So. 2d 363 (Rigouts v. Larkan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rigouts v. Larkan, 153 So. 2d 363, 244 La. 479, 1963 La. LEXIS 2400 (La. 1963).

Opinions

McCALEB, Justice.

This is an action for damages arising out. of a motor vehicle accident which pc-[364]*364curred in Natchitoches Parish at about 3:00 p. m. on November 5, 1958 at the southerly approach of Louisiana Highway 1 to the Monette Ferry Bridge, when a 1955 Chevrolet automobile owned and operated by Father Alphonse Rigouts, proceeding in a northerly direction collided with a 1958 International truck towing a 1955 Freuhauf trailer which was travelling in a southerly, or the opposite, direction. Having sustained personal injuries as a result of the accident, for which he claims $1936.75, including medical and other out-of-pocket expenses, Father Rigouts (who will be sometimes referred to herein as the sole plaintiff) instituted the suit, jointly with his collision insurance carrier, General Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corporation, Ltd., which expended $750 towards the repair of the Chevrolet, against A. E. Larkan, the owner and driver of the truck-trailer, alleging that the mishap was due to Larkan’s negligence in driving the truck-trailer over the center line of the two-lane highway at an excessive rate of speed at the time plaintiff was approaching from the opposite direction, thus creating an emergency from which plaintiff could not extricate himself by the timely application of his brakes.

In due course defendant filed his answer, denying generally the charges contained in the petition and, in a reconventional demand, claimed $3460 for the damage sustained by his truck-trailer and other expenses, asserting that the accident was caused solely by the negligence of plaintiff. He averred that plaintiff was driving the Chevrolet at an excessive rate of speed around a curve and thereafter downhill on a cloudy, wet and rainy day on a blacktopped road, which caused him to lose control of the car and crash into the truck-trailer.

Following a trial in the district court on the issues thus formed by the pleadings, the judge resolved that the proximate cause of the accident was the failure of plaintiff to reduce the speed of his car when he saw the big truck entering the bridge, observing that plaintiff was coming downhill on a wet asphalt road “ * * * and had he approached the situation that confronted him with caution there would have been no accident. * * * ” On this finding judgment was awarded in favor of defendant on the reconventional demand for $1808.20 against both plaintiffs in solido.

On appeal, the Court of Appeal, Third Circuit, affirmed the judgment, declaring that, after reviewing the evidence, it could not find sufficient grounds to hold that the trial judge “ * * * was manifestly erroneous in accepting the defendant’s, rather than the plaintiff’s version of the accident.” The Court of Appeal set forth that the defendant and his wife, who was a passenger in the cab of the truck, testified that as the truck-trailer entered the bridge it may have been across the center line of the highway but, by the time it reached the center of the bridge, they observed plaintiff’s car swerve on its approach to the bridge, so “ * * * they moved into their right-hand lane as far as possible; * * * ” and that their vehicle was completely in its proper lane and had cleared the bridge 30 or 40 feet “ * * * [when] the rear end of plaintiff’s automobile swerved across the center lane of the highway and struck the left rear wheels of the truck tractor * * * See Rigouts v. Larkan, La.App., 145 So.2d 48.

In view of the factual finding of the Court of Appeal that Larkan was driving his truck partially on the wrong side of the road until he reached the middle of the two-lane bridge, we granted a writ of review herein as we thought it manifest that this infraction of the law (see R.S. 32:-231)1 constituted negligence having causal connection with the accident and that, therefore, defendant should not have been [365]*365awarded judgment on his reconventional demand. Of course, since the case is now before us it becomes our duty to review the entire evidence and decide the matter as though it were brought here by direct appeal. See Section 11 of Article 7 of the Constitution; Thornton v. Strauss & Son, Inc., 240 La. 455, 123 So.2d 885 and cases there cited.

At the southern approach to the Monette Ferry Bridge, where the accident occurred, Louisiana Highway 1 is a two-lane blacktopped road approximately 19 feet wide. The road shoulders end at the approach to the bridge and the approach is bordered by guard rails for the protection of traffic. The bridge itself is not long but the approaches thereto, which are supported by trestles, are more extensive so that the entire structure is about 200 feet in length.

Father Rigouts, travelling alone, was driving from Alexandria to Natchitoches. He testified that his speed was approximately 45 miles per hour; that, on his way to the bridge, he was required to make a right turn in the road so he slowed down to 40 miles per hour, in conformity with a suggested safe maximum speed sign posted at the entrance of the curve; that, after negotiating the curve and proceeding downgrade toward the bridge, he increased his speed slightly to 45 miles per hour; that he then noticed the large truck and trailer entering the bridge from the north side; that, when he first saw the truck, he did not pay much attention to it but, as he approached, he observed that it was holding the middle of the road while traversing the bridge and, at that time, “ * * * I suddenly realized that I was not going to be able to clear the space between the truck and the bridge, so then I fully applied the brakes and tried to stop because there was no shoulder, there was an alternative of either hitting the truck or hitting the bridge there or running off of the road into the water so I tried to come to a stop and I did not succeed.” He stated that, when he put on his brakes, his car swerved slightly in the road but he kept to his right side; that the truck, however, continued to straddle the center line of the highway and that, just before contact was made, it is probable that the truck driver swerved the truck over in an attempt to regain his proper lane but that it never returned to the lane in time to avert the collision between the rear dual wheels of the truck and front left end of the automobile.

Father Rigouts’ testimony is clear, concise and, as we shall demonstrate later, factually correct in our opinion. His statement is amply supported by the testimony of an independent eyewitness, a Mrs. Mary Tabb, who was driving a pickup truck following the Larkan truck and trailer on her way to the nursery she operates near Lecompte, Louisiana.

Mrs. Tabb says that she was following the Larkan truck which had passed her on the road north of the bridge; that she observed the truck enter the bridge and proceed to cross it in the center of the highway while plaintiff’s car was coming down the hill applying its brakes, apparently trying to stop or, as she puts it, “ * * * dancing in the highway”. She asserts positively that at the time of the collision the truck and trailer were still over the center line of the highway.2

[366]*366Mr. Larkan, according to his testimony, had left Tucson, Arizona at 1:00 p. m. the day before the accident accompanied by his helper, one Bill MacKee, with a 36,000 pound load of shrimp to be delivered at St. Simeon Island, Georgia. He reached Las Cruces, New Mexico that night and, on the next day, drove across the state of Texas to the city of Marshall, where he was met by his wife and two small boys that night.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 So. 2d 363, 244 La. 479, 1963 La. LEXIS 2400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rigouts-v-larkan-la-1963.