Schexnaildre v. Bledsoe

194 So. 45
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 1940
DocketNo. 17,282.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 194 So. 45 (Schexnaildre v. Bledsoe) 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
Schexnaildre v. Bledsoe, 194 So. 45 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

On January 18, 1939, at about 1:20 A. M., an intersectional collision between two automobiles occurred at the downtown lakeside corner of Esplanade Avenue and North Broad Street in the City of New Orleans. The vehicles involved were a Pontiac Coach owned by Sylvan H. Mounes, which was being driven by Mrs. Lillian Picou, wife of Chenet J. Schex-naildre, and a Chrysler Sedan, owned and *47 operated by LeRoy D. Bledsoe of- Atlanta, Georgia. The plaintiffs’ • car, which we will hereinafter refer to as the Mounes car, was being driven in the downtown roadway of Esplanade Avenue in the direction of Lake Pontchartrain and' the Bledsoe automobile was proceeding in the lakeside roadway of North Broad • Street in the direction of Canal Street or uptown. When the Mounes car arrived at a point slightly over the center of the downtown lakeside roadway of North Broad Street, which crosses Esplanade Avenue at right' angles, it was struck a violent blow on its right rear wheel and fender by the front ¡bumper and right front fender of the Bledsoe car. As a result of the collision, the Mounes car was knocked off balance, turned over on its left side and then upside down and came to rest in that position in the lower lakeside roadway of Esplanade Avenue about 25 or 30 feet from the point of impact.

Prior to the accident, Mr. Mounes, together with Mr. and Mrs. Schexnaildre, Mr. and Mrs. Steven H. Rybiski and a Miss Margaret E. Zinser, had left a restaurant near the Shushan Airport known as “Happy Landing” where they had eaten a seafood supper and they were returning to their homes via Esplanade Avenue when the mishap took place. In the front seat of the Mounes car were Mr. and Mrs. Schexnaildre and Miss Zin-ser. Mr. and Mrs. Rybiski and Mr. Mounes were seated in the rear.

As a consequence of the accident, Mr. and Mrs. Schexnaildre, Mr. and Mrs. Rybi-ski and Mr. ■ Mounes received bodily injuries and, in addition thereto, the Mounes -car sustained considerable damage. Mr. and Mrs. Schexnaildre brought the present suit against Mr. Bledsoe, the owner and -operator of the other car involved in the collision, his alleged employer, the Polk Musical Supply Company, Inc., of Atlanta, Georgia, and his liability insurance carrier, the Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Company, for the damages they sustained, alleging that the accident was caused solely through the negligence o-f- Bledsoe who, they aver, operated his automobile into the ■ intersection at an excessive rate of :speed without having it under control and without exercising a proper lookout. Mrs. Schexnaildre seeks recovery' of the sum of $22,000- and Mr. Schexnaildre claims $3,805.34. Similar separate suits for recovery of damages were also filed against the defendants ' by Mir. and Mrs. Rybiski and Mr. Mounes.

The defendants appeared and filed a joint answer to the suit of Mr. and Mrs. Schexnaildre. Similar answers were also filed by them to the suit of Mr. and Mrs. Rybiski and to that of Mr. Mounes. In their answers, the- defendants admit the happening of the accident but deny any and all responsibility on their part for the consequences thereof. They specially plead that the accident was entirely due to the negligence, lack of. skill and disregard of the traffic ordinances of the City of New Orleans on the part of Mrs. Schex-naildre who, they aver, was the agent of her husband and for whose conduct her said husband is legally responsible; that she was at fault in that she approached the crossing at a reckless rate of speed; in- that she failed to accord the defendant Bledsoe his superior right of way under the rules of the road and the city’ traffic ordinance and in that she failed to take the usual and ■ necessary precautions to avoid the accident by stopping or by slowing down the speed of her car. They also assert, as an additional ground of-defense, that all. of the plaintiffs were negligent because of the fact that the Mounes car was overcrowded, containing six people, which interfered with the proper management and operation thereof and that the plaintiffs had been oh a beer party and were under the influence of alcohol at the time of the accident. The defendants further deny that the Mounes car had been proceeding on Esplanade Avenue prior to the occurrence and they aver that, on the contrary, the automobile had been traveling on the riverside roadway of North Broad Street in the direction of downtown and that when it arrived at the intersection of Esplanade Avenue the driver thereof proceeded to make a left hand turn into the lower side roadway of Esplanade Avenue in violation of the city traffic ordinance which prohibits vehicles from turning left at that intersection. They further deny that Bledsoe was an employee of the Polk Musical Supply Company, Inc., and that he was acting within the scope of his employment at the time of the accident. They admit, however, that Bledsoe was the owner and operator of the Chrysler car involved and that the defendant, Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Company, had issued a policy of public liability ■ insurance upon the automobile. In addition *48 to the foregoing, the defendant Bledsoe filed a reconventional demand in this suit claiming the sum of $246.20 for the damage sustained by his automobile in the collision which he maintains was attributable to the negligence of Mrs. Schex-naildre.

When the cases were thus put at issue by the answers of the defendants, they were consolidated for the purposes of trial. After a hearing on the merits of the controversies, the district judge, being of the opinion that the driver of the Mounes car was guilty of negligence and that Bledsoe’s fault was slight, dismissed, by separate judgments, this suit as well as the actions brought by Mr. and Mrs. Rybiski and Mr. Mounes. He also dismissed the reconven-tional demand filed by the defendant Bled-soe in this matter. Mr. and Mrs. Schex-naildre, as well as the plaintiffs in the other separate suits, have appealed from the adverse decision of the court below.

Since the defendants have interposed a number of special defenses, it is pertinent, at the outset, to dispose of those points which are not supported by the evidence.

The defendants aver in their answer that, prior to the accident, the Mounes car was being operated on the lower side of North Broad Street and that the driver thereof executed a left hand turn into the Esplanade Avenue intersection in violation of the city traffic ordinance. No evidence of probative value has been presented by them to sustain this allegation. The defendant Bledsoe, in his testimony, concedes that he did not see the Mounes car approaching the' intersection and that he first observed it just as he arrived at the comer when “they seemed to just loom suddenly out of nowhere”. The other defense witnesses, Welton Seruntine and Joseph M. Bowab, readily admit that they did not see the Mounes car prior to the collision. On the other hand, the testimony given by the six occupants of the car, as well as that of Edward L. Shields, a disinterested eyewitness to the accident, establishes beyond doubt that the Mounes automobile had, previous to the collision, been proceeding in the downtown roadway of Esplanade Avenue and that it did not approach from the riverside roadway of North Broad Street.

The defendants also assert that the occupants of the Mounes car were intoxicated. The record discloses that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
194 So. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schexnaildre-v-bledsoe-lactapp-1940.