Skinner v. Poston

71 So. 2d 702, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 687
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1954
DocketNo. 8075
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 71 So. 2d 702 (Skinner v. Poston) 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
Skinner v. Poston, 71 So. 2d 702, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 687 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

GLADNEY, Judge.

This action was filed by Henry Louis Skinner against Charles M. Poston, to recover damages for personal injuries received when a gasoline delivery truck driven by Skinner ran off state highway Number 403 in Vernon Parish and was overturned. The accident was allegedly caused by negligence on the part of the driver of defendant’s wood truck in crowding plaintiff off of the highway on a downgrade curve. The defense avers that the driver of defendant’s vehicle was not guilty of any negligence and,- in the. alternative, interposed pleas of contributory negligence and the last clear chance doctrine.

[703]*703After "a trial, judgment 'was rendered rejecting the demands of plaintiff. Assigning written reasons for the decision the trial judge determined the accident was primarily due to an attempt by. plaintiff to negotiate a dangerous portion of the highway while driving a heavily loaded truck at an unsafe rate of speed. He also reached the conclusion defendant’s .driver was free from negligence. In brief and argument counsel for appellant' have attacked the soundness of the judgment, generally in that it held plaintiff at fault and, particularly because of the court’s reliance upon the testimony of J. F. Robinson, Jack Patton and Ernest Dunlap, witnesses for defendant. Further error by the trial judge is charged in admitting over counsel’s objection the testimony of John Whiddon, a state police officer, who was permitted to express his opinion that at the time the truck left the highway it was traveling at a rate of speed of not less than forty miles per hour, and that plaintiff did not apply his brakes.

A correct resolution of the case must be found in factual issues concerned with the locus where the two vehicles involved passed each other, the speed of the gasoline truck as it approached the scene of the accident, and the credibility of certain witnesses upon whose testimony the judgment of the trial court was largely predicated. .

Defendant caused a survey of 3,000 feet of the highway to be made by R. V. Leone, a registered surveyor, who from the factual data obtained, has prepared an exhibit which depicts a drawing to scale referred to as a horizontal alignment of the section of the highway so surveyed. Also is included a chart indicating in profile the vertical contour of the road with designated points or stations. Incidentally, we may say at this point that the correctness of the-exhibit has not been challenged. The stations, one hundred feet apart, begin with station designated 80 at the highest point upgrade on the highway and from this point westerly downgrade stations are numbered consecutively to station 110, the distance between stations 80 and 110 being 3,000 feet. Oriented upon the drawing-and chart is the curve along said highway which lies between station 92.226 and station 95.339, a''distance of 311.3 feet.- Leone testified that the curve was approximately a 10% curve indicating amare of 31 degrees with deviation of 8.72 feet to each 100 feet. ■ The mid point of- the curve occurs at station 93.70. Of special significance is the fact that Leone made the survey when the imprint of the tires of the gasoline truck was still visible upon' the soft shoulders of the untraveled portion of the highway. We are thus able to determine accurately from the exhibit that the tires of the truck went off the graveled portion of the highway at station 95.06 and continued, straight about 40 feet before turning towards the outside edge of the right-of-way. , From the exhibit we can also determine that from west to east the elevation between station Í10 and station 80 rises approximately 110 feet,, and that such rise is interrupted by a dip in the highway between stations 91 and 88.

.In the early forenoon on December 28, 1951, with weather clear and the road surface dry, Skinner was driving the truck of his employer, Van Vines, along State Highway No. 403, westerly from Hornbeck towards Pisgah, when about two miles west of Hornbeck he entered that portion of the highway surveyed by Leone. As Skinner passed station 80 above referred to, he traveled downgrade along a graveled highway for a distance of 725 feet, during which there was a drop in elevation of 38 feet. Arriving at station 87.25 the road through the next 450 feet had a rise of 7 feet.' Upon-leaving station 91.75 there begins a steady decline and a motorist is proceeding downgrade when he begins to enter the curve at station 92.22. The highway continues to decline and has a loss of elevation of 34 feet between stations 92.22 and 95.06 at which latter point the right tires of the truck left the-graveled portion of the highway, and during the next 40 feet west of station 95.06 there is a drop of 3y2 feet. We thus discern that from the beginning of the downgrade Skinner traveled downgrade for 725 feet at a rate of' decline of 5.4%, then during the next 450 feet he encountered a-rise of 7 feet, after which the highway dropped precipitately at the rate of [704]*7047.62%. Other facts disclosed by the exhibit show that at or near the, scene of the accident the highway was not banked and its outside shoulder was, from .4 to .6 of a foot lower than the center of the highway. The graveled portion of the roadway was approximately 22 feet in width and the out-sidé shoulder was only 4'feet .wide.

Another important factor for consideration, it seems to us, is the weight of the vehicle plaintiff was driving. Skinner was driving a 2% ton Ford gasoline, tank truck.' It contained its maximum load of 770 gallons :of gasoline and, in addition, was carrying some 60 or 70 gallons of lubricating oil. Inasmuch as it was testified that gasoline has a weight, of 7 pounds per gallon, obviously the load carried by the truck was 5,000 pounds or greater.

Skinner testified that when he first saw the pulpwood truck he was driving about 20 miles per hour, at which time the latter vehicle was some 250 feet away. He said he could not remember if he was using the dog gear but was traveling on the extreme righthand side of the highway. He estimated the speed of the approaching wood truck at about 20 miles per hour, and noticed that the wood loaded on the truck had' shifted to the left about 1% feet. He testified Patton, the driver of defendant’s truck, was traveling in the middle of thfe highway and did not give way. This, he asserts, caused him to leave the graveled portion of the highway at a point where the downgrade was steep, after which he proceeded about 40 feet with his right wheels on the soft shoulder before the truck completely left the road. He declares that the passing took place in the curve some several feet before he met the truck. We quote this portion of his testimony:

“Q. About how far from the top of that hi 11, when you reached the highest point between the two grades — the one you had climbed and the one you were starting to descend — how far from the top of that hill did you meet this pulpwood truck? 'A. Around eighty or ninety feet from the top.
“Q. You .met it .eighty or ninety feet from the top of the hill ? A. Yes, sir. ..
"Q. I believe you stated that — or did you actually meet the truck and pass on by and then run off, or did you run off before meeting it? A. Í ran off of the road before'actually meeting the truck, several feet before.
“Q. You hadn’t gotten to the truck meeting it when you ran off of the road? You had not actually met it when you ran off? A. No, I was getting out of his way.”

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Related

Vines v. Poston
71 So. 2d 706 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
71 So. 2d 702, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-poston-lactapp-1954.