Smith v. Monroe Grocer Co.

179 So. 495
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 3, 1938
DocketNo. 5527.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 179 So. 495 (Smith v. Monroe Grocer 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
Smith v. Monroe Grocer Co., 179 So. 495 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

This case was consolidated with James v. Monroe Grocer Co., La.App., 179 So. 505, for trial; both cases arising out of a collision between a school bus and a beer *496 truck in which the minor sons of the plaintiffs lost their lives.

The lower court, in a well-written opinion, has clearly stated the pleadings and the facts and, in our opinion, has arrived at a correct conclusion. Its opinion is as follows:

“Andrew R. Smith and Mrs. Susie Smith, his wife, father and mother, respectively, of Melvin Lee Smith, brought this suit against the Monroe Grocer Company, Limited, and the Trinity Universal Insurance Company, its insurance carrier, to recover the sum of $14,250, with legal interest thereon from judicial demand, and for all costs, as damages sustained by them when their said son, Melvin Lee Smith, was killed in a collision between a school bus, owned and operated' by one Iddo L. Alford, and a beer truck, owned by Monroe Grocer Company, Limited, and operated by its employee, Ollie Grayson, on the Dixie-Overland Highway, or U. S. Highway No. 80, in Lincoln parish, La., on Friday, August 30, 1935, at about 9:30 p. m.; said Melvin Lee Smith being, at the time of the accident, a fare-paying passenger of the said school bus.
“William E. James and his wife, Mrs. Daisy Fletcher James, the father and mother, respectively, of Oscar James, also brought suit against the same defendants for the sum of $11,250, with legal interest thereon from judicial demand, and all costs, as damages sustained' by them on account of the death of their said son, Oscar James, who was killed in the same accident and under the same circumstances as was Melvin Lee Smith.
“The issues in both suits being identical, they were consolidated for the purpose of trial, and accordingly were tried together. The issues applicable to both suits will be discussed in this opinion.
“On the 24th day of July; 1935, Melvin Lee Smith and Oscar James, whose parents reside at Plain Dealing, in Bossier parish, and in Shreveport, Caddo parish, respectively, enrolled in the CCC and were immediately thereafter stationed at Camp Sanders, near Mt. Herman, in Washington parish, La., for duty. A goodly number of other boys who had likewise enrolled in said service from the parishes of North Louisiana were also stationed at the same camp.
“Just prior to August 30, 1935, Melvin Lee Smith and Oscar James, together with thirty-odd other enrollees of said camp, desiring to visit their respective homes on Labor Day, through Lieutenant Lassard, their commander, arranged with Iddo L. Alford, a man who resides in that community and owns a large school bus, to transport said enrollees in his said bus to or in the vicinity of their respective homes, and, at the conclusion of their said visit, to return them to camp. Said trip was arranged on condition that each enrollee making the trip would pay a round-trip fare of $2 for the trip; the fare to be paid in advance. Accordingly, all arrangements having been made and all fares having been paid, the said bus, with its owner, Iddo L. Alford, as its driver, left Camp Sanders about 1:30 p. m., on Friday, the 30th day of August, 1935, to make said trip; the city of Shreveport being the ultimate destination of the trip.. Thirty-five enrollees, including Melvin Lee Smith and Oscar James, were passengers on said school bus.
“The said school bus proceeded on its journey, uneventfully, until it reached' a point about eleven miles east of Ruston, in Lincoln parish' on U.’S. Highway No. 80, generally known and referred to as the Dixie-Overland Highway, where it met and collided with a large beer truck owned by the Monroe Grocer Company, Limited.
“At this' point the general direction of the highway is east and west. The school bus was traveling west toward Shreveport and the beer truck was traveling east toward Monroe. The actident happened ■ about 9:30 p. m., and was caused by the two vehicles ‘sideswiping’ each other as they met on the highway. Oscar James .was killed instantly, and Melvin Lee Smith was fatally injured and lived until 2:45 o’clock next morning, when he too died.
“Highway 80 is paved, the pavement being the standard width of 18 feet, with a black stripe or center line from 4 to 6 inches wide, extending along the center of the pavement, equidistant from the outer edges of same. On each side of the concrete slab is a dirt shoulder, the original construction width of which was 6 feet. Perhaps at this time the shoulder is not quite so wide as it was when constructed due to the effects of erosion over a number of years.
“At the scene of the accident the said highway traverses a hill of what may be termed medium height, as compared to the height of the other hills of that section. As the highway ascends this hill, going *497 east, it makes a rather sharp curve over the hill to the right and, going west, it makes the same type of' curve over the crest of the hill to the left; the apex of the curve in the highway being about the crest of the hill. The accident happened at a point just east of the crest of the hill, just after the beer truck had passed over said crest and just as the school bus was nearing same. Various witnesses estimated the distance between the two vehicles, at the time the beer truck was on the crest of the hill and at which time it came into the view of the driver of the school bus then ascending the hill from the other direction, at from 100 feet to 300 feet. Both vehicles were traveling at a rate of from 30 to 35 miles per hour.
“The beer truck was loaded to capacity with beer cases, all of which were full of bottles. Some of the bottles were full of beer and some of them were empty. The cases containing only empty beer bottles were much' lighter, of course, than those containing bottles filled with beer. The driver’s seat of the beer truck was occupied by three grown men, viz., Ollie Grayson, a colored man, who was driving said truck; R. F. Stovall, beer salesman for the Monroe Grocer Company, Limited, and who had control of the truck; and Barnett Houck, a hitch-hiker, but a good friend of Stovall’s. Arthur Thomas, a colored man and a helper, was riding on the top of the load.
“Melvin Lee Smith and Oscar James occupied sitting position in and on the south side of the school bus, or that side next to the center of the highway. Just prior to the happening of the accident, these boys, growing sleepy, and desiring to go to sleep, laid their arms, elbows extended outward, on the sill of the third window of the bus from the front, on the south side thereof, and, resting their heads on their elbows, dropped off to sleep. They were in this position when the vehicles collided. Both received serious head and arm injuries, as a result of which, as had already been stated, both died.
“Plaintiffs in both suits allege that the sole and proximate cause of the accident and resulting death of their said sons was the gross negligence of the driver of the Monroe Grocer Company, Limited’s, beer truck; said negligence being particularized, in substance, as follows, to wit:

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Bluebook (online)
179 So. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-monroe-grocer-co-lactapp-1938.