Silva v. Allen

256 So. 2d 447, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5596
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1972
DocketNo. 4703
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 256 So. 2d 447 (Silva v. Allen) 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
Silva v. Allen, 256 So. 2d 447, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5596 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

REGAN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Beverly Silva, individually and as natural tutrix of her two minor children, filed this suit to recover damages for the wrongful death of her husband. Louis Silva was struck and killed by an automobile as he and Donald Bergens1 were standing in the right traffic lane near the shoulder of U. S. Highway 90, endeavoring to pour gasoline into the tank of their station wagon. Plaintiff asserted that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of the defendant driver in, inter alia, failing to see the victim in order to avoid striking him and in driving while intoxicated.

Named defendants were George Allen, the operator and his alleged insurer, State Farm Insurance Company; Ted W. Preston, owner of the car; Government Employees Insurance Company, the liability insurer of one Lewis Williams, also named in the alternative as the owner of the vehicle (hereinafter referred to as GEICO); and Olympic Insurance Company, Bergen’s innsurer, from whom plaintiff sought redress under the uninsured motorist coverage clause in the policy should all other insurers avoid liability on a question of coverage.

The following positions were assumed by each of the respective defendants:

(1) George Allen averred that the proximate cause of the accident was Silva’s negligence in failing to light flares or to use other devices to signal oncoming motorists of his dangerous position. If this was not the sole cause, he alternatively pleaded, it at least constituted contributory negligence sufficient to bar Silva’s heirs’ recovery.

(2) State Farm denied insuring anyone involved.

(3) Ted Preston, one of the alleged owners, apparently moved to Michigan before [449]*449the trial and no pleadings were filed on his behalf.

(4) Olympic Insurance Company admitted it had issued a liability policy which was in effect on the Bergens’ vehicle but denied liability. Alternatively, it adopted the driver’s defenses predicated on negligence. It also impleaded Allen as a third-party defendant seeking judgment against him for any amount for which it might be cast.

(5) GEICO denied liability and pleaded contributory negligence as an alternative defense.

From a judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit, plaintiff, Beverly Silva, has prosecuted this appeal.

The record discloses that on Saturday, October 21, 1967, the families of Louis Silva and Donald Bergens had gone on a picnic which occurred in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. As they were returning to New Orleans in the Bergens’ station wagon, Sylvia Bergens, the driver, realized that the vehicle was running out of gasoline. She therefore coasted to the shell shoulder of U. S. Highway 90, managing to park the vehicle about six to twelve inches from the right edge of the highway. The car stalled v/ithin the city limits of New Orleans on the Chef Menteur Highway but this area of roadway is not illuminated by street lights. At this point the highway is divided into lanes, two for eastbound and two for westbound traffic. The westbound lanes, measuring from the edge of the neutral ground to the edge of the shoulder, are twenty-four feet in width.

Shortly after the car stopped, Louis Silva and Donald Bergens walked to a service station and returned with two gallons of gasoline. Their wives and six children awaited their return in the stalled car. When they began to pour the gas into the tank, it was approximately 8 P.M. and it was dark. The opening to the gas tank was in the left rear fender of the station wagon, approximately one and one-half feet from the rear of the car. In view of the fact that the car had been stopped so close to the right traffic lane, it was necessary for the men to stand in the right lane of the roadway, about two feet from the edge, to pour the gasoline. The parking lights of the station wagon were lit, but no flares were posted. Ber-gens explained that neither of their wives attempted to signal approaching traffic in the highway because their husbands thought it was too dangerous. Two were needed to service the car, one to hold the funnel and the other to pour the gas.

Initially, Silva held the funnel while Bergens poured, but when some of the gas was spilled, Silva suggested reversing the operation. Just as Silva began to pour, both men were struck by the automobile driven by Allen. Bergens, wearing a white shirt and medium green trousers, had been in a crouched position closer to the oncoming car, or on the side of the gas tank nearer the tail lights, while Silva was positioned on the other side of the tank. Bergens described being sandwiched between the moving car and his own parked car until it moved passed him and then he fell injured in the right traffic lane of the highway. With assistance he dragged himself off the highway onto the shoulder behind the station wagon. Silva apparently was killed instantaneously and his body was hurled or carried 124 feet west of the point of impact. They found him lying partially on the shoulder and partially in the right lane of the roadway.

Witnesses called for the plaintiff knew little or nothing of the movement of the defendant’s vehicle before it struck the two men. Bergens could only recount that the car “came up extremely fast” and “ * * * before I could notice or almost do anything about it we were hit.” Sylvia Bergens, seated in the driver’s position with her back resting against the left front door, first heard a bump against the car, and then saw a dark object passing so close to the window she could have touched it. She also noticed sparks, apparently caused by the gas can striking the roadway. She [450]*450described the defendant’s vehicle as traveling at a great speed. Mrs. Silva also was first alerted to the accident by a loud thump. She was on the rear seat of the station wagon.

As to lighting conditions at the scene of the accident, it was established that the parking lights of the station wagon were turned on, and there was some light from a roadside billboard and a motel on the other side of the highway. When the accident occurred, the only automobile parked on the shoulder of the highway was the Bergens’ vehicle.

There was only one witness available to describe the accident from the vantage point of the moving vehicle, i. e., the defendant driver. His testimony was elicited by the plaintiff on direct examination, after the lower court ruled plaintiff was not entitled to cross-examine this defendant under the act.2 (The correctness of this ruling will be discussed more fully hereinafter.)

Defendant testified that he was driving a 1954 Pontiac with defective brakes, or as he put it “ * * * wasn’t ideal brakes.” He admitted to having three bottles of beer during the course of the day prior to this accident, the last of which was consumed at 5 P.M. He stated that about 7 or 7:30 P.M. he left Pearlington, Mississippi driving westward on Highway 90 toward New Orleans. When he was approximately three quarters of a mile east of the accident scene, he began driving in the neutral ground lane until another vehicle behind him flashed its lights indicating a desire by its driver to pass. We quote in part the transcript containing Allen’s account of the accident for the purpose of showing the difficulty experienced by plaintiff’s counsel as a result of being denied the right of cross examination.

“Q. How did this accident occur, Mr. Allen ?
“A.

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Bluebook (online)
256 So. 2d 447, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silva-v-allen-lactapp-1972.