Sloan v. Gulf Refining Co.

139 So. 26
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1924
DocketNo. 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 139 So. 26 (Sloan v. Gulf Refining Co.) 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
Sloan v. Gulf Refining Co., 139 So. 26 (La. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

PORTER, J.

On the night of November 16, 1920, the plaintiff suffered a serious physical injury from a collision between a Ford roadster, belonging to his employers, Morris & Co., and a five-ton loaded truck, belonging to the defendant company; and in this suit he seeks to recover damages against defendant company in the sum of $25,000, and legal interest from judicial demand. There was trial before a jury, which rendered a verdict for plaintiff for $4,500, and, from a judgment in accordance therewith, the defendant company appeals. The plaintiff has answered the appeal ⅝ and prayed for an increase of the judgment. '

A short time before the day of the accident, the day before perhaps, the plaintiff was employed by Morris & Co., a Shreveport concern, as traveling salesman, and assigned to the territory along the Shreveport-Mooringsport road. This road is a hard-surfaced highway connecting Shreveport with a number of towns and villages, and passing through extensive oil and gas fields lying northwest of Shreveport. On the afternoon of the day of the accident, plaintiff went to the store of Morris & Co. and was instructed by Mr. Jones, the manager of the firm, as to the line of goods which he was to sell, and, according to' "the uncontradicted testimony of Jones, a Ford roadster, which he knew how to drive, was assigned to him. As he was unacquainted with the customers on the route to which he was assigned, the manager instructed J. M. Ivey, a shipping clerk in the employ of the company, to take plaintiff in the car, show him over the route, and introduce him to its customers. They went' as far as Moorings-port, where plaintiff was introduced to a number of business men, and where several orders were taken. Ivey says that plaintiff took the orders and “I just assisted him.” They started to return to Shreveport, and when-they had reached a point some six or eight miles-from the latter place darkness came on; and when they undertook to turn the lights on they discovered that they could not do so on account of some defect in the lighting apparatus. There was some discussion between-the plaintiff and Ivey, the latter driving the ear and plaintiff being seated on his right, as to whether they should proceed with an unlighted car; and they finally concluded to do so. As this discussion, brief as it was, is an important matter in the further consideration of the ease, we quote the testimony of the plaintiff and Ivey on the subject:

Ivey, referring to the lights, said:

“I tried to fix them, but I couldn’t. I had an idea there was a short in the wire somewhere, but I couldn’t find it.”

“Q. Did Mr. Sloan say anything to you then? A. He asked me if I thought we would get in to town without them. I told him we could get as far as the first garage, that it was against the law to come in without lights, but we could go to the first garage and have them fixed, and he said that if I would drive slow that it was satisfactory with him.”

He says that he was acquainted with the road; that they came on in; and that he started driving between eight or ten miles an hour, between eight and twelve miles an hour! anyway, and that he drove to the right side of the road all the time. Ivey was a witness for the plaintiff.

The plaintiff testified as follows:

• “Tes, I told Ivey it was getting dark and he had better turn on the'lights, and he got out to do so and discovered we didn’t have any lights to turn on. I don’t- mean we didn’t have the equipment, but they were out, and it' was insufficient or rather it was out of order and I was not a mechanic and I didn’t know how to fix the car. I know how to drive a Ford, but I don’t know how to fix a car when anything gets wrong with it. And Ivey got back in and said, ‘How are we going to get to Shreveport?’ 1-Ie said, T am familiar with the road. I can go.’ And I said, ‘All right, if you drive slowly,’ and he started on down the road to come on ir».”

, “Q. How did he drive? A. 1-Ie drove care[27]*27fully. He made the remark at the time about ■driving carefully; ‘I think I can make it all right. If we meet any care they probably will have lights and we can pull out and give them the road.’ And we came on figuring that if we met any cars they would have lights. He drove carefully and slowly. I judge'he was making from eight to twelve miles an hour — I couldn’t say — It was dark and I cannot he sure, but not over eight or twelve miles an hour. .

“Q. What were you doing? A. I was simply sitting there as a passenger. We were not conversing very much. Once in a while we would say something, hut were sitting there watching the road.”

“Q. Were you watching the road? A. Absolutely. I surely wouldn’t he out with a fellow driving on a dark night without looking.”

They drove along without mishap to within about three and a half miles of Shreveport,, when they collided with an unlighted truck belonging to the defendant company, which was going from Shreveport to Mooringsport; and the plaintiff was thrown from the car and Injured, while the truck was pretty badly battered up, and the car was as badly wrecked.

The driver of the truck and his helper, a negro man, both testify that when the collision occurred they had drawn to the right-hand side of the road and stopped to put on the lights; and that when the car struck them it was running at a high speed. Jordan, the man in charge of the truck, estimates it at from 35 to 40 miles an hour. Plaintiff and Ivey say they were not running faster than eight or twelve miles an hour. This witness’ testimony was taken under commission. Frank Hall, the colored man, who was his helper at the time, was a witness for the defendant, and his testimony, except as to the fact that the truck was standing still, for the purpose above stated, at the time of the accident, was pretty badly shaken, because he contradicted himself in a number of instances. It is, perhaps, not out of place to say that the witness appears to have been considerably “rattled” by the rather vigorous cross-examination to which he was subjected by the able counsel for the plaintiff.

We do not, however, regard the facts with reference to the position and speed of the. truck, and of the conduct of the persons in charge of it, as of controlling importance in the determination of the case, and we may well concede that those in charge of it were guilty of the negligence charged in the petition.

The plaintiff, in effect, judicially admits that it was negligence to drive either the car or the truck on the public highway on a dark night, without lights.

In his petition, he charges the defendant company with negligence because its servants drove the truck “more on the left side of said road than to the right or center thereof,” and because its servants “were” (at the time of the accident) “driving and operating said truck upon the road without being provided with lights, or without lights burning and displayed thereon, it being dark at the time.”

It is further charged that Morris & Co. was guilty “of negligence which was one of the proximate causes of plaintiff’s injuries in that said car in which petitioner was riding was furnished by it to be used in said work on said trip without lights, or without a lighting system thereon.”

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloan-v-gulf-refining-co-lactapp-1924.