Shaffer v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co.

160 So. 439, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 234
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 1935
DocketNo. 15072.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 160 So. 439 (Shaffer v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co.) 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
Shaffer v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 160 So. 439, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 234 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Thomas A. Shaffer and his wife received injuries in a collision between an automobile owned and driven by Shaffer and another car owned by Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company and driven at the time by John R. Catoire, who was acting within the scope of his duties as an employee of the said telephone company. About four months after the accident, Shaffer’s wife died, leaving, other than her husband, no “survivors,” who, under the provisions of article 2315 of the Civil Code, are entitled to prosecute claims for such injuries and damages as Mrs. Shaffer might have been entitled to claim had she lived, and, therefore, Shaffer, alleging that the death of his wife resulted from the said accident and asserting that the accident resulted from the negligence of the said Catoire, seeks recovery for physical injuries sustained by him; for the damage caused him by the loss of his wife and for such items of damage as his wife might have recovered had she lived. He also seeks judgment for an amount which he alleges represents the damage sustained by his automobile and for the medical and other expenses which were necessarily incurred as the result of the injuries of himself and of his wife.

At about 7:30 p. m. on February 10,1933, in what may be termed a “head-on” 'collision at a point on the road along the west bank of the Mississippi river and only a very short distance above Westwego, the two automobiles met. The Shaffer car was going up the river and the- other ear in the opposite direction.

Shaffer alleges that as Catoire approached, after for a short distance driving his car back and forth in a “zigzag” fashion across the road, he suddenly swerved it to the left, or wrong side, and that it crashed into the Shaffer car, which had been driven as far as possible to the right side of the road and had *440 been brought almost to a stop in an effort to avoid tbe on-coming Catoire ear.

The defendants are Catoire, the operator of the car, which is alleged to have been the offending vehicle, and the corporation which is the owner of the said car and the employer of Catoire.

Defendants deny that the collision was caused by or contributed to by any negligence on the part of Catoire and allege that it was Shaffer’s negligence which produced the unfortunate result and that this negligence consisted in driving at an excessive speed, in not maintaining proper control over his car, and particularly in that he, Shaffer, “while so driving in a curve * * * swerved over on to the wrong side of the road and there collided with defendant’s ear.”

Defendants also aver that, if Catoire was in any way negligent, Shaffer’s contributory negligence should bar recovery, and they also maintain that, if it be held that Catoire’s negligence was the proximate cause of the accident, Mrs. Shaffer’s death resulted from natural causes and not from the accident, and they contend that, for this reason, in any event, there can be no recovery for her death.

In the district court of Jefferson parish there was judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $10,223.25, of which, according to his reasons for judgment, the district judge fixed $2,500 as the amount Mrs. Shaffer, had she lived, could have recovered for her pain and suffering, and $5,000 as the amount to which Mr. Shaffer is entitled in his own right for the loss of the companionship of his wife. The remainder, $2,723.25, is made up of $2,-000 awarded to Mr. Shaffer for his own injuries and $723.25 for medical and other expenses, damages to the automobile, etc.

Defendants have appealed and plaintiff, claiming that the amount awarded is inadequate, has answered the appeal, praying for an increase to $22,723.25.

Of the witnesses who testified, only two actually saw the collision, Shaffer and Ca-toire, the drivers of the colliding cars. Mrs. Shaffer died before the trial.

There is no possibility of reconciling the testimony of the two drivers. Each insists that the two ears met on his side of the road. Shaffer said: “I saw a car coming towards me, in a very rapid speed, zigzagging across the road.”

He also testified .as follows: “ * * * In order not to have a collision, I kept as close to the right hand side of the road as possible without getting in the ditch.”

Catoire’s statement places the cars on the opposite side. He says: “I was on my right side of the road * * * positive I was on the right side * * * I was on the right side, and he just come in on me, that was all * * * He was coming on my side — the left side of the road coming from Westwego.”

Several persons saw the two cars almost immediately after the crash and the testimony given by them convinces us that, as a matter of fact, the point of impact was not on Catoire’s side of the road, but on Shaffer’s, and while it may not have been on the extreme edge of that side of the road, as Shaffer says it was, we feel certain that it was sufficiently beyond the center to show that the accident was due to Catoire’s negligently failing to notice that, as a result of the double curve which he had just previously negotiated, his car had swerved across and had encroached sufficiently upon the other side to make it impossible for Shaffer to pass. While the two cars still remained in the respective positions in which they stopped, other automobiles passed and they chose to go by on that side of the road on which Catoire says the two vehicles met. It is shown that on that side there was ample room for passage,, while there was none on the other. In fact, Catoire is very frank in admitting that his. full attention may not have been directed upon the operation of his ear. He states that, he noticed the Shaffer car for the first time when it was only about 50 feet away: “My-mind might have been off somewhere.”

Much is made by counsel for both sides-over the fact that at least one of the young men who arrived upon the scene immediately after the crash forgot that written statements had been made to insurance adjusters, or concluded that what was contained in those statements was incorrect, and gave on the witness stand versions different from those-set forth in the said written statements. Each party attempts to persuade us that-the; true version is the favorable one.

But, even giving to those statements all' the weight which defendants contend for, we feel that the evidence, by a clear preponderance, shows negligence on the part of Catoire • and indicates that there was no course available to Shaffer which would have avoided the collision after Catoire’s negligence made it imminent. We thus conclude that, on the primary question, liability vel non, the finding of our brother below is amply supported., by the record.

*441 The greatest loss for which claim ia made is that for the death of Mrs. Shaffer and we, therefore, first give consideration to whether that loss was caused by the injuries which she sustained in the accident.

When Mrs. Shaffer died, four months after the accident, she had some time before returned to her home in Terrebonne parish and had not consulted her physician for nearly a month. Just before her death the local doctor was summoned. By chance he was the parish coroner. He saw her only about twenty minutes prior to her death; but in the death certificate issued by him appears the following:

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160 So. 439, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-southern-bell-telephone-telegraph-co-lactapp-1935.