Shaw v. Travelers Insurance Company

293 So. 2d 568
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 1974
Docket4470
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 293 So. 2d 568 (Shaw v. Travelers Insurance Company) 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
Shaw v. Travelers Insurance Company, 293 So. 2d 568 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

293 So.2d 568 (1974)

Ronald D. SHAW, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
The TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 4470.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 25, 1974.
Rehearings Denied May 14, 1974.
Writ Refused June 21, 1974.

*569 Gist, Methvin & Trimble, by DeWitt T. Methvin, Jr., Alexandria, for defendants-appellants.

Kramer & Kennedy, by Ralph W. Kenneth, Jr., Alexandria, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Willie D. Maynor, Baton Rouge, McLure & McLure, by John G. McLure, Alexandria, for defendant-appellee.

Before FRUGE, DOMENGEAUX and WATSON, JJ.

WATSON, Judge.

This case and those consolidated with it involve a multiple car collision in Rapides Parish. The plaintiff-appellee, Ronald D. Shaw, was a fare-paying passenger in a taxi which was involved in a collision where a Datsun automobile was overturned in the middle of the highway. In the trial court Shaw obtained judgment against various defendants, but only the defendant-appellant, Grace Wall, who is the mother of the minor driver of the Datsun, and defendant-appellant, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, the liability insurer of Grace Wall, have appealed to this court.

This matter was consolidated for trial with two companion suits: Lula Mae Harrell Cleveland, individually and for the minors, Laverne Cleveland and Henry Cleveland v. Stanley B. Bordelon et al. (No. 4468, 293 So.2d 574; and Robert Gene Mickel v. The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, et al. (No. 4469), 293 So.2d 574.

All three suits arise from a series of collisions which commenced at approximately 1:00 A.M. on June 6, 1971, on Louisiana Highway 1 north of Alexandria, Louisiana. The initial or first cause of the series of collisions was the negligence of Ronald G. Wall, a minor, who fell asleep at the wheel of his mother's 1971 Datsun automobile while driving in a southerly direction toward Alexandria. As a result, his vehicle overturned in the middle of Louisiana Highway 1 at approximately a 45 degree angle. The weather was clear and dry; the highway at that point is completely straight and level for at least a mile to the south. About a quarter of a mile to the north of the overturned automobile there was a curve in the road. The highway is a hard-surface two-lane road; the pavement is 23 feet 6 inches in width.

*570 Shortly after the Datsun overturned (the wheels were still spinning at the time), a 1967 Ford automobile occupied by Raymond Joseph Lacour, Arthur Gene Lacour, and Patsy Estes, which was being driven in a northerly direction toward Natchitoches, arrived. They stopped to lend assistance. They pulled Wall from the Datsun in a dazed condition and placed him on the side of the road. Raymond Joseph Lacour testified that the Datsun was obstructing the highway in such a fashion that "... you couldn't really get by." (TR. 277). All the witnesses agreed that there were no lights visible on the Datsun after it turned over.

Another automobile came up from the south and made a U-turn; its driver went back toward Alexandria to call the police. This call was received at approximately 1:18 A.M.

An unmarked Oldsmobile state police car, a vascar, arrived at the scene "By 1:23 A.M." (TR. 156), occupied by two state troopers, George Michael Wagner and Robert Rigby, and a civilian, Robert Gene Mickel. It was parked on the south or Alexandria side of the overturned vehicle, more or less in the middle of the road, but at a slight angle. The front of the vascar was pointed toward the overturned vehicle or toward the north; its lights were flashing with the tail lights toward the south. Ronald G. Wall was placed in the vascar with Trooper Wagner for interrogation. There were no flares available in the vascar and none were put out.

Meanwhile, Arthur Gene Lacour had been directed by the troopers to move his Ford automobile from the northbound side of the road to the southbound side. He had made a U-turn to do so and his Ford was then parked on the same side of the road as the Datsun and the vascar and, like the vascar, had its headlights toward the north. He had gotten out of his car and was talking to James Ray Lachney, who had driven up from the south and parked on the shoulder.

Various other automobiles had parked on both shoulders of the road in the interim. The evidence is conflicting and confused as to what lights were showing on these automobiles. A disinterested witness, Louis G. Mims, testified that he pulled up south of the Datsun on the shoulder; left his parking lights on; and looked for a flashlight because of the lack of illumination at the scene.

One of the automobiles which stopped was being driven by Laverne Cleveland, a minor, and carried her brother, Henry Cleveland, also a minor, as a passenger. These two had gotten out of the car and had been talking to Trooper Rigby.

Robert Gene Mickel, the civilian in the vascar, had been told by Trooper Rigby to direct traffic on the south side of the Datsun. He was proceeding to the rear of the police car with a flashlight but had not yet started to carry out his instructions.

All of the foregoing occurred in a short period of time. With the scene as set forth hereinabove, a Yellow Cab Company taxicab, driven by George Ussery and carrying Ronald D. Shaw as a passenger, arrived from the south. It was being followed by a 1968 Plymouth automobile owned and operated by Stanley B. Bordelon. It was not determined by the trial court and we will not attempt to decide which of these two vehicles made the first impact. In any event, six vehicles were struck.

Following these collisions, Trooper Rigby went to Troop E headquarters, Alexandria, and picked up Trooper Stanley Rogers at "... approximately 1:30." (TR. 230). Trooper Rogers described the scene as follows:

"... the police car was in the ditch on the left side, the cab was stuck to the rear of the police car, with the rear of the cab in the south bound lane; about (8) or (10) feet north of it in the south bound lane was a '67 Ford crossways of the south bound lane .... in the *571 north bound lane, near the center of the road was a '71 Datsun upside down...; and just to the right of it was a Plymouth, '68 Plymouth.

* * * * * *

"And a '67 Oldsmobile that was parked on the right side, on the shoulder,... had been hit, was owned by Robert Richardson," (TR. 224, 225).

As a result of these collisions, Ronald D. Shaw, the passenger in the taxi, was severely injured. The pedestrians, Robert Gene Mickel, Henry Cleveland and Laverne Cleveland, were injured. George Ussery subsequently died as the result of his injuries. Stanley B. Bordelon, the driver of the Plymouth, was severely injured.

The trial court found that both Ussery and Bordelon were negligent and dismissed the suits of Ussery's heirs and Bordelon. No appeal has been made as to these two suits.

The trial court stated in its reasons for judgment that the only serious issue as to the three remaining suits was whether or not the unquestioned negligence of Wall was a cause-in-fact of the subsequent collisions and injuries. The trial court decided that Wall's negligence was a precipitating and contributing factor in the later collisions and therefore actionable, citing Pierre v. Allstate Insurance Company, 257 La. 471, 242 So.2d 821 (1970).

Judgment was therefore given in the instant suit, No. 4470, in favor of Ronald D. Shaw and against defendants, The Travelers Insurance Company, Yellow Cab Company of Alexandria, Inc., Stanley B.

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Bluebook (online)
293 So. 2d 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-travelers-insurance-company-lactapp-1974.