Shirley v. Caldwell Bros. & Hart

183 So. 581
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1938
DocketNo. 1882.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 So. 581 (Shirley v. Caldwell Bros. & Hart) 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
Shirley v. Caldwell Bros. & Hart, 183 So. 581 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

Miss Helen Ann Shirley, the minor daughter of the plaintiff and a student at the Louisiana State University, was driving a V-8 Ford Coupe with two girl companions on the Highland Road on the University campus, in a northerly direction, just after the noon hour on May 12, 1937, when the Ford Coupe collided with the left front of a truck' driven by an employee of defendant, Caldwell Brothers & Hart, contractors performing work in the construction of Leche Hall. The young lady suffered a fracture of the eighth rib on her left side and a nervous shock. The suit is by her father to recover for her damages in the sum of $2500, and to recover damages for himself as owner of the car which she was driving, the sum of $83.30. The New Amsterdam Casualty Company, the insurance carrier for the contractors, was joined in the suit.

Plaintiff alleges that his daughter was driving north on said Highland Road at a reasonable rate of speed, with the left side of her car at least one and one half to two feet east’of the black line marking the center of the road when, without any warning, the driver of the truck who was coming in the opposite direction, undertook to swerve his truck to the left, or tried to make a left hand turn across the road into’ the path of the oncoming car driven by Miss Shirley, and at a time when she was so close that, as the truck swerved to the left, crossing the black line, the left front fender of the truck struck the Ford a glancing blow on its left side with such force as to drive it against the curb on the east side.

It is also alleged that Miss Shirley was driving 30 to 35 miles per hour on her side of the road; that the driver of the truck coming south slowed down as if he intended to stop and observe her right of way, but, when she was almost abreast of the truck, the driver cut to his left across the black line and struck the car which she was driving.

Defendants deny any negligence on the part of the truck driver. They allege that on the day of the accident, Bennie Be-shears; an employee of the contractors, was driving one of their trucks south on the west side of the Highland road in a careful and prudent manner; that the driver saw the Shirley car approaching from the south at an excessive rate of *582 speed; that the driver expected to make a left turn in order to drive into a driveway north of Leche Hall; that the driver held out his left hand to indicate his intention of turning, and brought the truck to a complete stop, facing in a southeasterly direction on the west side of the road; that Miss Shirley continued to drive at an excessive speed and in an inattentive and reckless manner; that apparently she did not see the truck until she was about 30 feet from it; that the truck was then stopped in the road, and Miss Shirley applied her brakes and the Ford swerved to its left and struck the left front of the truck standing still.

Defendants allege in the alternative that if the driver of the truck was guilty of any negligence, which they deny, Miss Shirley was guilty of contributory negligence in operating her car at an excessive rate of speed and in an inattentive and reckless manner, and that her negligence is imputable to her father precluding him from recovering damage to the car and barring her recovery for the injuries received by her in the accident. And in the further alternative, defendants aver that Miss Shirley had the last clear chance to avoid the accident.

In a supplemental answer, the defendant contractors allege that their truck was damaged in the collision in the sum of $73.67, and that this damage was caused solely by the negligence of Miss Shirley who is a minor living with her father, the plaintiff, and they reconvene and ask judgment for this amount against plaintiff.

The trial judge gave exhaustive written reasons for judgment in which he analyzed the evidence and made a finding of facts. He reached the conclusion that the accident was caused by the negligence of Miss Shirley, and rejected her demands and the demands of her father, and, after granting a new trial, rendered judgment in favor of the contractors against the plaintiff for the amount claimed in the reconventional demand. Plaintiff has appealed.

• The Highland road at the point of the accident is 24 feet wide and is paved from curb to curb. The black line is off center one foot, there being 13 feet from this line to the east curb and 11 feet to the west curb. There were no other cars on the road near enough to affect the situation. There was nothing to obstruct the view of either the driver of the truck or the driver of the Ford. There was no intersecting street at the point of the accident, but the truck driver was preparing to turn into a drive way to his left in order to deliver some tools at the site where the construction work was going on.

The version of the truck driver as to the occurrence is about as follows: he was coming south on his side of the road at a slow rate of speed, and as he approached the place where he was to turn into the driveway on his left, he held out his left hand and came to a stop, with his truck facing in a southeasterly direction at an angle of about 45' degrees, with the left wheel of the truck on the black line and the left part of the front bumper extending over the black line about 16 inches; that as he stopped in this position, he saw Miss Shirley coming toward him from the south 75 or 80 feet away and driving at a fast speed, not less than 40 miles per hour; that she applied her brakes when within about 15 feet of his truck, skidded and struck the left fender of the truck and then went on 35 or 40 feet further, where her car stopped with the rear against the east curb and the front pointing at an angle toward the University; that his truck was standing still when struck by the Ford car; that the skid marks made by the Ford were about 18 inches east of the black line. The truck driver testified that-he had remained in this stopped position from the time he saw the Ford coming 75 or 80 feet away until the collision.

The account given by Miss Shirley is somewhat different than that set up in the petition. She says that she was driving from 35 to 40 miles per hour going north with the left wheels of her car one and one half to two feet east of the black line; that she did not see the truck until she was within 15 feet of it, at which time the truck was stopped (in plaintiff’s petition it is alleged that the truck did not stop, but swerved to the left without stopping) ; that the truck stopped on its side of the road, and then started up afte.r she got within fifteen feet of it and hit the side of her car as she tried to pass. She examined the skid marks of her car after the accident, and these marks showed that the left wheel of her car was about two feet from the black line, running parallel with this line *583 for about fifteen feet. She admits that there was plenty of room for her to have passed east of the truck, but she tried to stop when she saw the truck and did not pull to the right.

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Bluebook (online)
183 So. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shirley-v-caldwell-bros-hart-lactapp-1938.