Silvera v. Gallardo

63 So. 2d 15, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 526
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 1953
DocketNo. 19753
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 63 So. 2d 15 (Silvera v. Gallardo) 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
Silvera v. Gallardo, 63 So. 2d 15, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 526 (La. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

McBRIDE, Judge.

On the night of September 6, 1949 Can-dido Lopez sustained injuries from which he died as a result of being struck by an automobile owned and operated by Frank Gal-lardo on the State Highway which connects Delacroix Island in St. Bernard Parish with the City of New Orleans. The road is about 20 feet in width. Lopez was attempting a foot-crossing of the highway from the bayou side thereof to the gate of his front yard. Although the petition alleges that the accident occurred at approximately 8 o’clock p. m., the weight of the evidence is that the time was between 9 and 9:30 o’clock p. m. Lilly Silvera, widow of Candido Lopez, on behalf of herself and also on behalf of her four minor children, to whom she is natural tutrix, brought this suit against Gallardo, for $100,000; the case reaches us on her appeal from the judgment below dismissing her suit.

The negligence charged against defendant is that he was:

(1) Driving, at an excessive rate of speed,

(2) Not keeping a proper lookout,

(3) Not maintaining control’ of his car, and

(4) That he failed to warn pedestrians on the highway.

After setting forth a denial to the charges of negligence, the defendant .alleged in his answer that Lopez jumped or leaped directly into the path of the automobile, and that ■he did everything possible to avoid funning Lopez down. Alternatively, the plea is made that Lopez was guilty of contributory negligence in heedlessly attempting to cross the road notwithstanding the close proximity of the automobile.

The highway is locally known, as .the Delacroix Island Road. The accident happened near the village of Delacroix Island' on a gravelled or shelled strip, which has. a straight run of from 600 to 700 feet in the direction from which the Gallardo automobile came. The car was moving in the direction of New Orleans. On its south side the road is paralleled by a navigable bayou, between which and the edge of the road is a dirt shoulder approximately 2 feet wide. Where this shoulder of the road meets the bayou there is a steep drop to the water of the bayou, which at that point is about 8 feet deep. On the opposite or north side of the road is a small shallow drainage ditch with curving sides beyond which is soft or semi-marsh land, upon' which the inhabitants of the area have erected their homes. The. houses face the road and are built high off the ground as [17]*17a protection from high tides flowing in from the gulf.

The only persons witnessing the accident are Gallardo, one Gonzales who was riding in the Gallardo car seated beside the driver, and a Mrs. Silvera, the mother-in-law of Lopez. The latter, who appeared as a plaintiff witness, lived with the Lopez family in a small house, the shape of which bears resemblance to an inverted letter “L.” She claims that she was standing at the door of the kitchen (in the lateral portion of the house), located about 37 feet from the wire fence across the front of the Lopez property, and had a clear and unobstructed view of the road. Her attention was first attracted by the sound of the motor of a small boat operated by her son-in-law. She watched him moor the boat to. a wharf in the bayou and then ascend to the bank of the bayou and then attempt to walk across the road. From her testimony it appears that Lopez entered the road at a point to her left, which was also to the left of the fence gate, and that he walked across the road in a somewhat diagonal course. He was hit by the automobile which came from his right just as he was about 5 or 6 feet from the gate and was “knocked” a considerable distance. Mrs. Silvera did not see the automobile before it hit Lopez, and she described the accident as happening “like a lightning.” ,

Gallardo says that shortly before the accident he had “picked up” Gonzales at Delacroix Island and was taking him to his home. He maintains that he was driving 30' miles per hour and that when he reached a point in the road in front of the Lopez home, a man, who he afterwards learned was Lopez, leaped or ran in front of the automobile. Gallardo claims that the car was but a scant 10 or IS feet from the man when he first appeared in the road. His reaction was that he could not stop in time to avoid running the man down, so he accelerated his speed and swerved to the right in the hope that an accident would be averted. The maneuver was unavailing; the front part of the car struck Lopez and hurled him a distance of about 8 feet.

The testimony of Gallardo’s passenger, Gonzales, in every detail supports and corroborates Gallardo. Gonzales was emphatic that the automobile was but from 10 to IS feet away when Lopez dashed out in front of it. Gonzales said:

“We were coming along down the road — coming up the road. He shot right out in front of the car. He ran right in front of the car. Buddy swung to miss him. * * *
“ * * * He sort of jumped right in front of it. He ran off the road to try to miss him.”

Appellant concedes that Lopez negligently placed himself .in a precarious position in his endeavor to traverse the road notwithstanding the oncoming car, but the argument is advanced on' behalf of appellant that she and her children are nevertheless entitled to a recovery, because Gal-lardo was inattentive and not keeping a proper lookout and should have discovered the peril in which Lopez had placed himself in time to have avoided the accident. Appellant’s case' is presented as resting solely on the doctrine of the last clear chance as extended by the doctrines of discovered peril and apparent peril by the cases of Rottman v. Beverly, 183 La. 947, 165 So. 153, and Jackson v. Cook, 189 La. 860, 181 So. 195. In Fontenot v. Freudenstein, 199 So. 677, decided by us, the doctrine of apparent peril was also discussed, but plaintiff’s counsel have not cited this case. We are also cited to several later cases, in which there were similar holdings.

It is pertinent and most material therefore that we ascertain if Gallardo actually did discover, or should have discovered Lopez’s perilous position in time to take efficient steps to avoid the accident. Under our established jurisprudence, it is the duty of a motorist to use vigilance and care, as well as to keep a sharp lookout for pedestrians on highways, and if a motorist observes or should have observed the pedestrian in time to avoid the accident and fails to do so, then he must be held to be liable under the doctrines enunciated by the cited cases. Great stress is laid on some of Gonzales’s testimony, which counsel importune us to interpret as showing that Lopez was standing on the edge of the road when the [18]*18automobile was 70 or 75 feet away from ■him, and that Gallardo saw Lopez or should have seen him from that distance which afforded a reasonable opportunity to prevent the running down of Lopez. After carefully examining the testimony in question, we believe the only fair import that can be given to it is that Gonzales observed what he took to be the figure of a man standing on the edge of the road when the car was about 70 or 75 feet away. The trial judge interrogated the witness on this feature of the case and Gonzales’s response to his questions was that he was not sure whether it was a man he saw. He could not say — if a man it was — that the figure was that of Lopez.

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 2d 15, 1953 La. App. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silvera-v-gallardo-lactapp-1953.