Scriber v. Chaffin

191 So. 566, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 390
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5851.
StatusPublished

This text of 191 So. 566 (Scriber v. Chaffin) 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
Scriber v. Chaffin, 191 So. 566, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 390 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

HAMITER, Judge.

A collision occurred on U. S. Highway 71 during the afternoon of April 2, 1937, between a Plymouth coupe owned and driven by Dr. R. G. Scriber, and a Dodge coupe operated and belonging to C. E. Chaffin. The cars were traveling in opposite directions, when they collided. Personal injuries were sustained by each driver and both machines were badly damaged.

The highway at the place of the accident is straight and runs north and south. It is of concrete construction and has shoulders approximately 6 feet in width.

Scriber and the insurer of his car, the Plome Insurance Company of New York, instituted this suit against Chaffin, asking that damages be awarded to them. They charge that the collision was caused solely by the negligence of defendant, and particularly aver that Scriber “was traveling south in his automobile on the Bossier-Coushatta road, Bossier Parish, Louisiana and when he reached a point at or near the Fullilove Gin about four (4) miles south of Bossier City -the defendant herein, C. E. Chaffin, who was traveling north on said highway proceeding to drive his automobile to the left side of the highway and in the path of the automobile which your petitioner was driving on his right hand side of said highway with the right front wheel just off the pavement and where the defendant herein struck petitioner’s right front part of his car just on the inside of the right front wheel with the left front wheel of the defendant’s car and the car was going at such a high rate of speed when it struck petitioner’s car that it turned over the hood of your petitioner’s car and bounced after striking the highway about the center, off the highway to the east or left side of the highway from where your petitioner’s car was.”

Defendant denies that he was negligent. Alternatively, he pleads contributory negligence on the part of Scriber, alleging, on information and belief, that the latter “was at the time and pláce of the accident either in a drunken or intoxicated condition or was suffering from a bad hangover, or was too sleepy to be able properly to handle the *567 operation of his automobile.” In recon-vention defendant asks judgment against the named plaintiffs for the damages suffered by him, asserting that the mishap resulted from the negligence and carelessness of Scriber. Specifically, he avers:

“At a point on said highway some three or four miles south of Bossier City in Bossier Parish, Louisiana, respondent noticed a car approaching him from the opposite direction at a rapid rate of speed of sixty miles per hour or more with its left wheels slightly on respondent’s side of the black line on said highway. Respondent pulled his automobile over to his right-hand side of the road with both right wheels thereof slightly on the dirt shoulder. As the approaching automobile came within a few feet of respondent’s car it suddenly swerved to its left and plunged into the left front portion of respondent’s car before respondent had a chance or opportunity to pull further to his right to avert a collision.”

The trial judge rejected the demands of all parties litigant. Written reasons for his decision were assigned.

Plaintiffs appealed from the judgment. An answer has been filed in this court by defendant in which he prays that the judgment be amended to the extent of allowing his reconventional demand, and that, in all other respects, it be affirmed.

Dr. Scriber left the City of Shreveport in his Plymouth coupe during the afternoon of April 2, 1937, on a business journey south to Taylortown, Louisiana. A guest accompanied him. He was in full possession of his mental faculties at the time, as the evidence conclusively shows, and was not experiencing the abnormal condition attributed to him in defendant’s plea of contributory negligence.

It is his testimony that defendant’s car was approaching on the west or his side of the highway a considerable distance away when he first noticed it; that he watched such machine until it entered the east or its proper traffic lane; that his next observation of it was when about 30 feet away and “they were right on the edge of the highway on my side”, at which time he sounded his horn and applied his brakes; and that defendant then swerved the Dodge to the right for the purpose of going to the east side of the road, but was unsuccessful in avoiding the almost head-on collision. His further testimony is that he was traveling between 50 and 60 miles an hour; that the left front wheel of defendant’s car struck the bumper and spring on the right side of his machine, or slightly to the right of the center of the radiator; and that the Dodge, after the collision, went into the air and over the radiator of his machine. The impact, he says, drove his car backward 3 or 4 feet, causing tire marks on the pavement, and spun it around.

Scriber’s testimony is corroborated by that of his guest in all respects except as to the mentioned tire marks, the points of contact on the cars, and the course of the Plymouth after the impact. This witness states that the marks were not seen; that the cars came together at about the left front fender of each; and that the Plymouth, or Scriber’s car, did not stop, when struck but continued traveling south along the highway for 25 or 35 feet, spinning as it went.

Defendant’s version of the accident is strikingly dissimilar to that furnished by Scriber. He and a guest passenger, both of whom lived in Longview, Texas, arose at 3 o’clock A. M., of the day in question and drove to Black Lake, south of Shreveport, on a fishing jaunt. A storm occurred in that locality during the preceding night and the usual good fishing was not experienced by them; so they ceased their efforts at noon, ate lunch, and began the journey to Longview via Shreveport. It is the testimony of said defendant that he was driving his Dodge in the right traffic lane at a speed of from 45 to 50 miles per hour, conversing with his companion about pecan .orchards, when he observed the approaching Plymouth 300 or 400 yards away. In describing the movements. of the cars, he says: “I never did cross the black line. I got up — I don’t know how far away we were, it was fairly close, it seemed to me like maybe, oh, 100 feet or further, maybe 150 feet, and it just seemed like they began to just pull over. * * * He was gradually coming over and it got up so close. I hadn’t thrown on my brakes but I had taken my foot off of the accelerator and I had both feet, one on the clutch and one on the brake, but I was still in the road. I hadn’t done anything, hadn’t begun to pull over. It was so close that Mr. Plolloway says, ‘He is not going to get over’, and I whirled over and it just happened that quick.” He further states that when the impact occurred his right front wheel was off the pavement on the east or his right side.

*568 The testimony of the fishing companion is substantially in accord with that of defendant.

The only other person testifying as an eye witness to the collision was a negro man. The trial judge placed very little, if any, credence in his testimony, as the following observation in the written opinion reveals: “Avery George, a negro, says he saw the accident, and that defendant’s car was over on its left hand side of the road.

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191 So. 566, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scriber-v-chaffin-lactapp-1939.