Roll Osborn & Sons, Inc. v. Howatt

167 So. 466, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 195
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1936
DocketNo. 5222.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 167 So. 466 (Roll Osborn & Sons, Inc. v. Howatt) 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
Roll Osborn & Sons, Inc. v. Howatt, 167 So. 466, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 195 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, an undertaking establishment, doing business in the city of Shreveport, brought this action against defendant and his insurer, the Great American Indemnity Company of New York, claiming $1,173.75 for damages done its ambulance in a collision with defendant’s coupé. The acts of negligence alleged by plaintiff are:

(1) Failure to heed the ambulance siren;

(2) Failure to stop or slow down for the intersection within which the collision occurred ;

(3)' Driving on the wrong side of the street at a reckless speed of 45 of 50 miles per hour;

(4) Failure to keep a proper lookout;

(5) Defective brakes; and

(6) Adjusting radio in car, instead of keeping lookout.

Howatt admits the collision, but contends that it was proximately caused by and solely due to the negligence of plaintiff’s driver, in that the ambulance was driven into the intersection at the excessive speed of 60 miles per hour, on the wrong side of the street, and in violation of the traffic light ordinance of the city of Shreve-por$.

He pleads contributory negligence, and reconvenes, demanding as damages to his car and for the loss of its use, $568.95; and for personal injuries, pain, suffering, and medical expenses, $2,531.00, in all, $3,099.95.

The insurer denies negligence of defendant, alleges negligence of plaintiff, and, in the alternative, pleads contributory neglb gence of plaintiff in bar. of recovery by it.

There was judgment below rejecting plaintiff’s demands and in favor of defendant in reconvention for $1,131.18, with legal interest from judicial demand.

Plaintiff has appealed and defendant has answered,, praying that the award be increased.

In the city of Shreveport, hospitals do. not maintain ambulances. This service;, for an appropriate charge, is rendered by *468 the various funeral homes. That of plaintiff is located on the east side of Fair-field avenue, which runs approximately north and south, in a long block of about 600 feet south of its right angle intersection with Jordan street. Both streets are much traveled main thoroughfares. Jordan is 40 feet wide, while Fairfield has a width of 36 feet. Traffic at the intersection is controlled by a light overhanging the center, which alternately shows the usual colors, green, amber, and red. .

At about S o’clock on the afternoon of October 8, 1934, plaintiff’s establishment received a telephone call for its ambulance to go to Spring and Lake streets, many blocks distant. It was stated that a wreck had occurred there, but no details were given as to who was injured nor how gfavely. The ambulance’s . regular operator, accompanied by a mechanic, immediately drove it out the driveway into Fairfield avenue and turned to the right toward Jordan street. The foot manipulated siren with which the ambulance was equipped was sounded continuously. As the machine gathered momentum and neared the intersection, the driver observed to his left the usual group of cars parked head-in to the several business houses on that side of the street. The last of these, on the corner of the intersection, is a filling station, the front of which allows a view of some distance westerly on Jordan street. Before him he saw two or three cars headed in the direction in which he was going. They were in’ the right-hand lane of travel and had stopped in the face of the red light. The driver and the mechanic both say that they did not see the light, but it is abundantly proven to have been against them, and it was their duty to see it. Swinging his machine around the waiting cars, he continued without slowing up, at a speed va-* riously estimated at from 25 to 40 miles per hour, into the intersection, ignoring completely the red light. He says that he first saw the Howatt car when it was about 90 feet' away from the intersection, coming toward his left, and that Howatt gave no indication of having observed the ambulance. Relying solely upon the sounding siren to protect him from collision, this driver continued to drive the ambulance forward into the intersection. He testified vaguely that he reduced- the speed of his vehicle and that it was under control. In this testimony he is not corroborated by the accompanying mechanic or other witnesses. When asked why he did not stop for the red light, he answered,

“It has been customary when the traffic is in such position and such shape, to go through, or on emergency call, with the siren sounding.”

We are satisfied, from a consideration of all the testimony, that the ambulance did not slow down at all. It had progressed to the center of Jordan street when it was struck about the left rear wheel by the Howatt coupé, turned over two or three times, and came to rest near the northeast corner of the intersection.

Howatt entered Jordan street on Texas avenue, and when about one block from Fairfield, he was stopped by a freight train passing over a railroad crossing. Pie was the first away when the bars lifted. When about half a block from the intersection, he saw the green light come on; and as he neared the intersection, he looked each way. He observed one car on Fair-field to his left, and two or three on his right awaiting a favorable light before going forward. Realizing that it was about time for the light to change to red, he had his eyes on the light as he approached the intersection. He neither saw nor heard the approaching ambulance until it was too late to avoid colliding with it. The noise of the freight train was still ringing in his ears; and the radio was playing softly. The light changed just as the collision occurred. Pie estimated his speed at nor more than 30 miles per hour.

We then have a situation wherein two vehicles approach an intersection and, without material change in speed or direction, continue on to an inevitable collision. Ordinarily, in such circumstances both drivers would be held to be negligent. Howatt relies upon the traffic light ordinance of the city for justification; while those responsible for the ambulance, upon provisions contained in the state traffic laws granting certain privileges to ambulances. The city ordinance, No. 17 of 1926, provides :

“Sec. 2. That when a red light is displayed at any intersection vehicles on the streets along which and on to which it is displayed, shall stop before entering the street intersection, and before passing the property line at such intersection. * * *

“Sec. 3. That when a green light is displayed at a street intersection, traffic shall *469 move forward into the intersection and on the street along which the green light is displayed. * * * ”

There is no special provision for ambulances, but it does ordain that the showing of the amber light in all four directions, accompanied by the ringing of a bell, is the warning of approach of fire or police cars and requires all other traffic to pull into the curb and stop. Even these public vehicles are privileged only when the warning is given by the light itself. This ordinance specifically provides that no vehicle shall ever proceed into an intersection when the red light is displayed, except to make a restricted right turn. Under the terms of this ordinance, How-att was within his rights in acting as he did, and the ambulance driver was wrong.

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Bluebook (online)
167 So. 466, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roll-osborn-sons-inc-v-howatt-lactapp-1936.