Singletary v. Kirby

39 So. 2d 189, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 444
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1949
DocketNo. 3081.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 So. 2d 189 (Singletary v. Kirby) 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
Singletary v. Kirby, 39 So. 2d 189, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 444 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

This is a suit by T. J. Singletary, individually for medical and other expenses and for property damage, and on behalf of his minor son, John Noland Singletary, for personal injuries sustained by the said minor son, all arising out of a collision between a Ford Coupe automobile allegedly owned by the plaintiff, T. J. Singletary, and driven by the said minor, accompanied by his father, and a lumber truck with an attached trailer, belonging to defendant E. W. Kirby, and driven by Robert Hamilton, an employee of the said Kirby, and while in the course and scope of his employment. The suit is against Robert Hamilton, the driver, E. W. Kirby, the owner, and his insurer, Standard Accident Insurance Company.

The accident occurred on the afternoon of June 28, 1946, at about 4:00 P.M., on Louisiana Highway 36, commonly known as the Plank Road, at a point within the Parish of East Baton Rouge and at a point approximately three miles north of the intersection known as the Zachary Crossing and about 17 miles north of the then City limits of Baton Rouge. At the point of collision, the said highway is a straight and level black top highway of at least eighteen feet in width for at least a mile in either direction. The automobile driven by young Singletary was proceeding south while the truck-trailer was proceeding north.

Plaintiff alleges that the accident was due entirely to the gross recklessness and negligence of Hamilton, as more fully alleged hereinafter.

Plaintiff alleges that his son was driving the Ford Coupe automobile in a southerly direction, well on the western side of the *Page 190 said road, at a moderate rate of speed, approximately 45 to 50 miles per hour; that there was a large cattle truck going north approaching from the south, in its right hand side, the eastern side of the road; that as the Ford and cattle truck approached each other, preparatory to pass each other, the Kirby truck, which was also proceeding in a northerly direction, well behind and screened by the cattle truck, suddenly turned to its left, out into the lane of traffic along which plaintiff's car was proceeding; that when this sudden swerving of the Kirby truck to its left, from behind the cattle truck, into plaintiff's lane of travel, occurred, a collision appeared to be inevitable as there was no time for plaintiff's car to be brought to a stop or otherwise avoid the impending collision; that his son cut to the right well out on the shoulder on the extreme western side, his right hand side of the road, driving his car into the ditch on his side of the road, and while in that position the left front of the Kirby truck struck the left rear of plaintiff's car. The gist of plaintiff's allegations is that the accident happened on young Singletary's extreme right hand side of his lane of travel and well to his right of the center of the highway. The plaintiff further alleges that his automobile was severely damaged and his son was seriously injured. In the alternative, the plaintiff alleges that the Kirby truck driver had the last clear chance of avoiding the accident by pulling his truck back on to his own side, the eastern side, of the road.

The defendants, in their answer, after specifically denying any negligence on the part of Hamilton, the driver of the truck-trailer, allege an entirely different version of what occurred. Their version is as follows:

"Defendants show that as the cattle truck neared the approaching car of petitioner there was a car parked on the east side of the Plank Road, facing South, partly on the shoulder, and partly on the blacktop; that as the cattle truck which was ahead of defendant Kirby's truck operated by defendant Hamilton, passed this parked car, veering to the left, and completely passed the parked automobile, it straightened out on the cattle truck's right side of the Plank Road and proceeded North, and that as it had straightened out defendant Hamilton noted the automobile of petitioner proceeding South at a terrific, unlawful and reckless rate of speed, and noted that it just barely missed striking the cattle truck; that defendant Hamilton seeing that if he attempted to follow the cattle truck and pass the parked car he might likewise narrowly miss being struck by petitioner's car, or be actually struck, he slowed his truck down, did not attempt to pass the parked car but came to a stop South of the parked car on the East side of the center of the Plank Road with the wheels of the truck practically on the East edge of the blacktop portion where it joins the shoulder, and that after narrowly averting a collision with the cattle truck aforesaid, defendant Hamilton noted the petitioner's automobile, being driven at that time by his minor son, began to vear, and skid, and seemed to be out of control, and that without slackening speed the car swerved and skidded in the highway over the centerline thereof with the front end headed in a westerly direction, and the rear end swinging South and eastward in a skid, and that the left rear fender and bumper of plaintiff's car skidded across the center of the highway and struck the truck of defendant Kirby (operated by defendant Hamilton) on the left front fender of said truck, at a point just beneath the left fender parking light, ripping off a portion of the left front fender of said truck."

The defendants specifically aver that the accident was caused by the negligence of young Singletary "in proceeding at an unlawful, reckless and dangerous rate of speed on the highway which was damp and slick at the time, and which had some loose surface rocks or gravel thereon, and that petitioner's minor son did not have the automobile under control, but in fact lost control of same and the collision was due entirely to his negligence, and to the fact that his negligence caused him to skid from the west across the center line of the highway to the east with his car swirving, the rear end going around faster than the front end, and the car facing in a westerly direction across the center line, and continuing until the collision." *Page 191

In the alternative, the defendants plead contributory negligence in bar of recovery.

Upon these issues, the case was tried. The trial judge has favored us with written reasons for his decision of the case. In those reasons, he states:

"Plaintiff contends that the proximate cause of the accident was the act of the driver of the lumber truck in suddenly swerving from behind the cattle truck to the left side of the highway and into the path of the oncoming coupe.

"The defendants on the other hand say that the approximate cause of the collision was the act of young Singletary in driving on the wrong side of the highway at a dangerous and excessive rate of speed on the moist highway and without keeping a proper look out.

"It will be readily observed that the case presents almost entirely questions of fact. Obviously if the accident happened as plaintiff claims it did, defendants are liable. If on the other hand it happened in the way defendants contend that it did, the suit should be dismissed."

After a review of the testimony of each witness who testified in the case and after commenting on the physical facts found by some of the witnesses, the trial judge has this to say: "I am firmly of the opinion that the plaintiff has failed to show any negligence of the driver of the lumber truck which could be said to be a contributing or proximate cause of the accident. On the contrary I am of the opinion that the accident was due solely to the negligence of plaintiff's minor son." He dismissed plaintiff's suit. Plaintiff has appealed.

The primary question is the location of the Ford automobile and the Kirby truck with respect to the center of the road when the contact between them occurred.

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96 So. 2d 71 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 So. 2d 189, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singletary-v-kirby-lactapp-1949.