Rochefort v. Teche Lines, Inc.

186 So. 751
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 1939
DocketNo. 17010.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 186 So. 751 (Rochefort v. Teche 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
Rochefort v. Teche Lines, Inc., 186 So. 751 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

This is a suit for property damage and physical injuries resulting from a colli *752 sion between a passenger omnibus owned by the defendant Teche Lines, Inc., and, at the time of the accident, driven by one of its employees, and a DeSoto automobile owned and driven by the plaintiff, Frank Rochefort. The accident occurred on July 7th, 1936, and suit was brought against the Teche Lines, Inc., and its insurance carrier, the Central Surety & Insurance Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri, for $63,-209.20, on April 29th, 1937.

From an adverse judgment plaintiff has appealed.

The vehicles collided in the intersection of St. Louis Street and N. Claiborne Avenue when plaintiffs automobile, which was being driven on Claiborne Avenue in the direction of Esplanade Avenue, was struck by the defendant's bus which entered the intersection from St. Louis Street, which crosses Claiborne Avenue at right angles. The driver of the bus, for whose negligence his employer is vicariously liable, is said to have been at fault because of excessive speed, failure to respect the “stop” sign or to sound horn on approaching the intersection; the employer is said to have been primarily negligent due to its failure to have the bus equipped with proper brakes in accordance with Act 21 of 1932, and in operating an old and unsafe bus without proper inspection. Both defendants joined in the same answer and admitted that the accident happened at the time and place as alleged by plaintiff and also that the bus driver did not stop for the intersection, but denied responsibility upon the ground that there was a latent or concealed mechanical defect in the brakes. In the alternative, the defendants pleaded contributory negligence averring that plaintiff was exceeding the speed limit as established by the City Traffic Ordinance, and was not keeping a proper lookout and, finally, that plaintiff had the last clear chance of avoiding the accident.

North Claiborne Avenue is a wide thoroughfare divided by a neutral ground. It measures from curb to curb one hundred sixty-eight feet, eight inches. The neutral ground is one hundred seventeen feet, five inches wide, and the roadway on each side, which is restricted to one-way traffic, is approximately twenty-five feet wide. Plaintiff’s automobile approached the intersection on the side nearest the defendant’s bus since it was going in the direction of traffic to which that side of the thoroughfare is devoted. St. Louis Street is relatively narrow, being only twenty-nine feet, five inches wide.

M. J. Bouvier, the driver of the bus, testified that he had been working for the defendant for twelve years; that on the day of the accident, he left the Rampart Street Garage and drove down Rampart Street to St. Louis Street; that he stopped for a traffic sign at the intersection of Basin and St. Louis Streets and then drove out St. Louis Street until within one hundred and fifty feet of St. Louis Street and Claiborne Avenue, when he applied his foot brakes which held for a moment and then “let go”; that his speed was between twenty and twenty-five miles per hour; that he had one passenger in the bus and he “told him something had gone wrong and I cannot stop and as I approached the intersection, about thirty feet I pulled back the emergency brake and blew my horn and turned to the right, thinking the other car would see me and turn to his left, which he did not and we collided and I went up on the neutral ground and struck a tree”. This evidence he subsequently qualified on cross-examination by retracting his statement that he had blown his horn and by changing his testimony with respect to the distance from the intersection when he first attempted to apply the brakes from one hundred and fifty feet to three hundred feet.

The defective brake with which the bus was equipped was removed f-rom the bus after the accident and a part of it introduced in evidence and exhibited in this Court. Many witnesses were sworn and much, testimony elicited in connection with the alleged hidden defect. We are not sure we understand the mechanics involved in the operation of the brakes, notwithstanding the elaborate explanation of counsel in brief and in argument. It appears, however, that a certain nut called a “lock nut” is attached to the brake rod and that when this “lock nut” is kept tight against the “adapter”, all is well, but when allowed to work loose the vibration wears the threads and, in time, causes the brake rod to separate with the result that the brakes will not function.

B. J. LeBlanc, Professor of Mechanical Arts and Metallurgy at Tulane University, testified for defendant and declared that in his opinion the metal which composed the “lock nut” and the “brake rod” was defective and that the threads on the nut were poorly executed. Professor LeBlanc had *753 photographed the nut and brake rod after having magnified the objects five hundred times. Other witnesses, for example, E. Q. Chaney, the New Orleans Manager of the Mack Truck Company, the concern which had manufactured the bus operated by defendant, and John Scarpero, the local service manager of the Mack Company, testified that they had never known one of the brake rods on a Mack Truck to pull out before.

The bus, which is numbered 164, had been inspected by the mechanics of the Teche Lines, Inc., on July 6th, 1936, the day before the accident. The inspection included the brake rods and the lock nuts and was performed by having a man seated at the steering wheel working the brakes and one underneath the vehicle examining their application. Without mentioning any further details of the evidence on this subject, which is largely cumulative, we are of opinion that its sum and substance falls far short of establishing the defense based upon a latent defect. In the first place, the bus was, at the time of the accident, six years old. It was one of ten busses purchased from an insolvent corporation in St. Louis, Mo., for $6,000 or $600 each, the original price of one bus being $15,000. If the brake rod and lock nut, which were introduced in evidence, were the original appliances installed by the manufacturer in 1930, and were as defective in material and workmanship as defendant would have us believe, we find it difficult to understand why the bus should have given such long service without having previously revealed its inherent defect by the failure of the brake to function long before the date of the accident under consideration. Moreover, we get the impression from the evidence that if this “lock nut” had been securely tightened the brake rod could not have worked loose, notwithstanding the fact that some of the threads were worn. The metal of which the parts of the brakes were constructed, whether inferior or not, did not' separate and the only effect of the alleged inferior composition is that it caused the threads of the nut to wear. When it is considered that in the twenty months, during which time this bus was in the service of the defendant, it traveled thousands of miles and on the day of the accident it had just returned from a trip to Raceland over very rough roads, the worn threads might very well have been due to ordinary wear and tear. If the nut was in proper position when the bus left the garage on Rampart Street, it is difficult to understand why it should have loosened and the brake rod pulled out when on St. Louis Street approximately eight city blocks distant.

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186 So. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochefort-v-teche-lines-inc-lactapp-1939.