Simon v. Miller

44 So. 2d 123, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 449
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1950
DocketNo. 3180
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 So. 2d 123 (Simon v. Miller) 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
Simon v. Miller, 44 So. 2d 123, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 449 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this suit against the defendant for personal injuries and property damage resulting from a collision involving their automobiles respectively driven by them. The collision occurred on January 12, 1949, at about the hour of 1:30 A. M., on the Kaplan-Andrew Highway, in the Parish of Vermillion.

At the situs of the accident, the Kaplan-Andrew Highway is a graveled road which runs practically north and south and is about thirty feet in width. Approximately fifty feet north of the situs of the collision, on the west side of the highway, there is a side road leading from the Plaza Club, referred throughout the record as the Plaza Road, and entering the highway practically perpendicularly thereto. In the southeast corner of this side road, just before it enters the highway, there was a puddle of water. The dimension of this road is not given.

During the afternoon, and probably in the early part of the night, it had rained. However, at the time of the accident, it was not raining, but there was a very heavy fog and the visibility was bad.

Plaintiff alleges that he was traveling at a reasonable rate of speed, in a northerly direction on the highway in the direction of the village of Andrew, that as he approached the Plaza Road, the defendant was driving his automobile on the Plaza Road approaching the highway; that he observed the defendant approaching from the side road and he decreased the rate of travel of his automobile whereupon the defendant drove his automobile unto the highway in a sweeping curve driving his car into his, plaintiff’s, automobile, which was at that time on his own extreme right side of the highway; that the left bumpers of the automobiles became entangled; that he immediately jumped from his automobile and ran to the front in an attempt to disengage the two bumpers; that a third automobile which was traveling behind him struck his automobile from the rear, sending it smashing into him, and causing him serious personal injuries.

He charges the defendant with “negligently driving his automobile unto the highway from a side road and in further making a sweeping turn unto petitioner’s automobile, thereby stalling his car in the path of oncoming traffic.”

The defendant, in his answer, denies all of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, [124]*124save and except, he admits that a third automobile which was traveling' behind plaintiff struck plaintiff’s' automobile from the- rear, sending plaintiff’s automobile smashing into him.

Assuming the position of plaintiff in re-convention, defendant avers that, on the day and date of the accident he was traveling in a southerly direction towards the Town of Kaplan, at a slow and cautious rate of travel, on the highway, on his right hand (the western) lane of travel, having negotiated the turn unto the highway from the Plaza Road; that plaintiff was traveling in the middle of the -highway, or nearly so, with a portion of his automobile in defendant’s lane of travel, in a northerly direction; upon seeing plaintiff’s automobile, he, defendant, 'brought his automobile to a complete stop, whereupon plaintiff drove his automobile extremely near or into defendant’s and both vehicles were then- at a standstill; “no damages resulted from the contact, if any, •between the two automobiles and the two bumpers did not become entangled.” That plaintiff “descended to the road and stood between his and respondent’s vehicle, for the purpose, respondent believes, of inspecting said vehicle for damage. . At this time, a third vehicle, * * *, struck plaintiff’s car in the rear sending plaintiff’s automobile smashing into plaintiff’s person and your respondent’s automobile; as a result, your respondent’s car was damaged to the extent of Twenty-four and No/100 ($24.00) Dollars.”

The defendant alleges that “the collision was due entirely to the fault and negligence of Robert Simon, in abandoning his vehicle in the middle of said road, and the fault and negligence of the third party unknown to your respondent, in running into the rear of plaintiff’s vehicle.”

Alternatively, defendant alleges that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, ' barring his recovery, in the following particulars:

“(a) That plaintiff abandoned the said vehicle in the middle of a well traveled highway and negligently stood between his vehicle and that of your respondent’s.
“(b) That plaintiff was driving in the middle of the highway and did not keep to his righthand side of the road.
“(c) That.-plaintiff kept no lookout for oncoming vehicles.”

In the further 'alternative, the defendant avers that it was the negligence of the third party in driving its automobile into plaintiff’s automobile which was the intervening and proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries and that the said third party had the last clear chance of avoiding the collision.

In the further alternative, defendant alleges that the “plaintiff had the last clear chance to avoid said collision, by observing the oncoming vehicle which struck his automobile and taking refuge in a safe location.”

Upon these issues, the case was tried, resulting in a judgment dismissing plaintiff’s suit and defendant’s reconventional demand. Plaintiff has appealed.

We find the evidence to be very conflicting. About the only facts which are undisputed, besides those stated in the beginning of this review, are that both the plaintiff, accompanied by his wife, his two daughters, Joy and Elaine, aged respectively twelve and fourteen years, and a friend of his daughters, Marguerite Pre-jean, aged sixteen years, and defendant, accompanied by friends, Mr. and Mrs. Doyce Morton, had visited the Plaza Club. The plaintiff, with his guests, left the Plaza Club and went to Kaplan, presumably to obtain gasoline; failing to do so, he was returning towards the Plaza Club on his way home when the accident happened. The defendant, with his guests, left the Plaza Club, with the intention of returning to his home at Abbeville by way of Kaplan, and drove along the Plaza Road, and when he reached the puddle of water, he turned his car slightly to his left and made a long turn on the highway. When defendant reached a point about fifty feet south of the Plaza Road, plaintiff’s and defendant’s cars met and stopped with their respective left lights facing each other, making an overlapping of each automobile of about a foot. Both automobiles were trav[125]*125eling very slowly just prior to coming to a stop. While the automobiles were thus facing each other, a third automobile struck plaintiff’s automobile a'glancing blow at the left rear, causing plaintiff’s automobile to “ram’* into defendant’s left front fender, throwing plaintiff to the ground, resulting in his injuries. The plaintiff’s car came to rest with its two front wheels in the east ditch of the highway and defendant’s automobile remained on the highway. Plaintiff was found lying in the highway, with his head about two feet from the east side of the highway and his feet towards the west side of the highway, about five feet from his car and defendant’s car. It is conceded that the unknown motorist who ran into plaintiff’s automobile was grossly negligent.

As previously stated, the plaintiff charges the defendant with negligence in two particulars :

(1) In entering the highway from a private road, when by so entering he endangered the safety of those using the highway;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 So. 2d 123, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-miller-lactapp-1950.