Sibille v. Highway Ins. Underwriters

12 So. 2d 625, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 264
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1943
DocketNo. 2492.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 625 (Sibille v. Highway Ins. Underwriters) 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
Sibille v. Highway Ins. Underwriters, 12 So. 2d 625, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 264 (La. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

These are two damage suits which were consolidated for trial in the district court and for argument in this court. They both grow out of the same accident which resulted from a collision between an automobile and a truck, at about nine o'clock on the night of February 2, 1940, on Highway 90 or the Old Spanish Trail as it is called, as it enters the City of Crowley, in the Parish of Acadia.

The plaintiffs, respectively, are Mr. Joseph A. Sibille and his wife, Mrs. Louise Guilbeau Sibille. The defendant in the suit of Joseph A. Sibille is the Highway Insurance Underwriters, which carried public liability insurance on the truck which was involved in the accident and which belonged to A.W. Herpin Truck Line, Inc. In the suit of Mrs. Joseph A. Sibille, both A.W. Herpin Truck Line, Inc., and the Highway Insurance Underwriters are made parties defendant.

With the exception of the allegations relating to the damages claimed, both petitions are substantially the same. In each it is alleged that Mr. Sibille and his wife were traveling by automobile from Crowley, where they had visited their son, Dr. Howard Sibille, to their home near Sunset, Louisiana; that Mr. Sibille was driving his car and proceeding in a careful and cautious manner, and with all due regard for his own safety and that of his wife. That as they reached the Old Spanish Trail from the street on which they were driving, in an easterly direction, he brought his car to a complete stop, carefully looked in both directions for approaching traffic on the highway and then successfully turned into the said highway, and having reached his right hand side thereof, was proceeding north when he was suddenly faced with the truck of A.W. Herpin Truck Line, Inc., which was being driven at a very excessive speed. It is further alleged that the said truck was heavily loaded and, as it approached the automobile, the driver lost control of it and crossed from his right hand side of the highway over on to the left, which was the side the automobile already occupied and, as it did so, collided almost head-on with the automobile, without in any manner halting its speed. It is further averred that the truck swung the automobile around, crushing the left rear *Page 627 side thereof, and that it then left the highway and ran into a mud puddle on the side of the pavement for a distance of about one hundred and ten feet. It is also alleged that the truck was being run and operated by a party by the name of Guest, an employee of A.W. Herpin Truck Line, Inc., who was at that time acting in the course and scope of his employment as a truck driver, and that his acts of negligence, which are detailed as follows, were the proximate and immediate cause of the collision: (1) That he was driving the truck at an excessive rate of speed on a heavily traveled highway; (2) that he failed to slacken his speed around a curve on the highway before reaching the point of the collision; (3) that he failed to observe the automobile in time to avoid striking it; (4) that he failed to bring his truck under control so as to be able to stop or swerve to the side and avoid the collision: and (5) that he failed to continue on his right side of the highway, which was then unobstructed, but instead, he crossed over to the side of the road on which the automobile was, where he collided with it.

In his petition, Mr. Sibille alleges that he sustained the following damages, which he is entitled to recover from the defendant Highway Insurance Underwriters: Repairs and labor on his automobile, $340.28 medical, nursing and hospital bills incurred by him for the treatment of the injuries sustained by his wife, $170.50, making the total amount of his demand $510.78. In her petition, Mrs. Sibille alleges that she sustained the following injuries: (1) Complete fracture of the upper portion of her right arm; (2) a lacerated scalp wound, extending across the entire forehead; (3) severe systemic shock; (4) severe pain, discomfort and suffering because of her injuries; and (5) nervous shock and mental suffering as well as anxiety occasioned by the collision and the injuries she received. She sets out in detail the pain she suffered and the discomfort and nervousness for which she was obliged to take sedatives and opiates in order to obtain rest. She asks $1,250 for her pain and suffering, $1,500 for permanent injury to her right arm, $2,500 for physical nervousness and emotional impairment of her general health, $2,000 for the permanent disfigurement and scar on her forehead, and $1,000 for shock, fright and mental suffering, all aggregating the sum of $8,250.

The answers of both defendants are substantially the same. In both it is denied that the driver of the truck, whose name is said to be Bernice Guest, was negligent in any manner as set out in the petitions of the plaintiffs, and it is further alleged that, on the contrary, he observed the approach of the Sibille car toward the highway and had perfect control over his truck. It is further alleged that he was going at about thirty-five miles an hour, on the right hand side of the highway, and when some distance away, noticed the lights of a car coming on a small gravel road which entered the highway, at a very slow rate of speed. That he blew the horn of his truck and as it appeared to him that the car was about to stop before entering the highway, he continued on in a careful and prudent manner. That just as he reached the intersection, the automobile suddenly came on to the highway and its front center struck the right front fender of the truck. It is alleged that as soon as the automobile darted into the highway, the truck driver put on his brakes and swerved to his left, but because the automobile was so close he was unable to avoid the collision which followed.

It is specifically alleged that the driver of the truck was at no time guilty of any negligence whatsoever; that he did everything in his power to avoid the accident, and that the sole and proximate cause thereof was the gross carelessness and negligence of the driver of the automobile in coming into the highway from the side road, immediately in front of the truck, without looking or taking the necessary precautions in such a situation, and, further, that the negligence of that driver created an emergency from which the driver of the truck could not, using all due care, extricate himself.

On the issues as thus presented to him, the cases were tried before the district judge, who, after trial, rendered judgment in the suit of Mr. Sibille, in favor of the defendant, dismissing that suit at plaintiff's costs, and in the suit of Mrs. Sibille, awarded her judgment against both defendants, in the sum of $2,500. The defendants appealed from the judgment against them in favor of Mrs. Sibille, and Mr. Sibille has appealed from the judgment which was rendered against him dismissing his suit.

The trial judge did not assign any written reason for judgment in either case. From *Page 628 the disposition he made of both, however, it is to be inferred that he concluded that the drivers of both vehicles were negligent and at fault, as he would not have otherwise dismissed the suit of Mr. Sibille. After having carefully considered the records in both cases, we find that there is little difficulty in agreeing with him in his disposition of Mr. Sibille's suit, but we are constrained to disagree with him in the suit of Mrs. Sibille, in which he rendered judgment in her favor.

The only eye-witnesses to the accident were Mr. and Mrs. Sibille themselves, the truck driver, Bernice Guest, and a party by the name of Neelis David, Guest's helper, who was riding in the truck with him, and two other parties who were following the Sibille car in another automobile.

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Related

Murry v. Salley
35 So. 2d 820 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1948)
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172 P.2d 147 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1946)
Guilbeau v. Highway Insurance Underwriters
12 So. 2d 631 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 625, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sibille-v-highway-ins-underwriters-lactapp-1943.