Steele Ex Rel. Steele v. State Farm Mutual Insurance

105 So. 2d 222, 235 La. 564, 1958 La. LEXIS 1230
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 27, 1958
Docket43555
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 105 So. 2d 222 (Steele Ex Rel. Steele v. State Farm Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steele Ex Rel. Steele v. State Farm Mutual Insurance, 105 So. 2d 222, 235 La. 564, 1958 La. LEXIS 1230 (La. 1958).

Opinions

SIMON, Justice.

A writ of certiorari addressed to the Court of Appeal of the Parish of Orleans brings to us this damage suit which involves primarily the question of fact whether a motorist, who, proceeding on a right-of-way street, met with an accident at an intersection where traffic is controlled by a stop sign, was contributorily negligent such as would bar recovery for damages to property and for personal injuries incurred by him as a result of the collision.

This suit was filed by Samuel L. Steele, Sr., individually and for the use and benefit of his minor son, Samuel L. Steele, Jr., against Mrs. Vera C. Jennings, wife of, and Joseph C. Jennings and their insurer, State Farm Mutual Insurance Company, for damages resulting from the subject automobile collision between two 1953 two-door Chevrolets driven by Steele, Jr., and Mrs. Jennings.

The primary issue presented to the trial court was evolved in favor of plaintiff, absolving the minor from the charge of contributory negligence imposed by defendants, and accordingly the trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants, jointly and in solido in the sum of $6,550, with legal interest from date of judicial demand, and for all costs.

The court of appeal reversed the judgment of the district court and dismissed plaintiff’s suit, holding Steele, Jr., to be guilty of negligence and which negligence was the sole and proximate cause of the accident. In the absence of a reconventional demand by the defendants, no judgment was or could be rendered in defendants’ favor.

[567]*567The record discloses that the automobile accident which gives rise to this suit occurred on April 2, 1955 at about 1:50 o’clock a. m. at the intersection of 5th Street and Avenue B in Marrero, Louisiana. Both streets are black topped and intersect at right angles. Avenue B is the right-of-way street; and 5th Street is the subordinated street, its traffic controlled by a stop sign.

At the time of the accident plaintiff’s car, operated by his 16 year old son, was proceeding south on Avenue B; defendants’ car was being driven by Mrs. Vera C. Jennings in an easterly direction on 5th Street. The headlights of both vehicles were on. Steele, Jr., was a resident of this neighborhood and he knew that stop signs were posted on the streets that intersected Avenue B. Both motorists were on their respective ways home. Mrs. Jennings was returning to her home after having taken a babysitter home, and upon entering upon 5th Street she crossed a number of intersecting streets before she came to Avenue B, at all of which were posted stop signs.

Steele, Jr., had taken his girl friend home and was proceeding to his home at 1224 Avenue B. Prior to entering upon Avenue B he had been driving on 4th Street, or U. S. Highway 90, for about a mile and a half. Upon reaching Avenue B he turned left thereon and, after driving one block after his turn off 4th Street, met with this accident at the intersection of Avenue B and 5th Street. In the earlier part of the evening Mrs. Jennings had visited the home of friends and had partaken of one or two alcoholic cocktails. Steele, Jr., • had spent the evening dancing at a local cocktail lounge and had drunk a half bottle of beer. His girl friend did not drink anything. Neither of the drivers was under the influence of alcohol at the time of the accident and there is no question as to the state of sobriety of either.

Both motorists were injured and rendered unconscious. Steele, Jr., regained consciousness and, in spite of his injuries, was able to perambulate to the street scene; Mrs. Jennings was thrown from her car unconscious but regained consciousness before both motorists were removed from the scene of the accident in hospital ambulances. Each charges that the accident was caused solely by and through the negligence of the other. The defendants alternatively plead contributory negligence. Each vehicle was occupied only by its driver, and consequently the manner in which the accident occurred is restricted to the testimony of the drivers coupled with physical evidence such as the resulting damage to the respective vehicles and to other property.

Young Steele was not present at the trial but his deposition was taken by consent and in the presence of both counsel for the parties herein, without the issuance of any formal notice or other formal requirement. He testified that at the time of the accident he was driving at a rate of speed of from [569]*56915-20 miles an hour in about the middle of the roadway of Avenue B. While so proceeding and upon reaching about the middle of the intersection of 5th Street he saw the headlights of the defendants’ car. This observation was made when the defendants’ car was approximately 6 or 7 feet from him toward his right. As soon as he was aware of the' presence of her car he endeavored to turn sharply left and thereby avoid a collision. He testified that he had stopped right where he was at the time he noticed the defendants’ car, that, quoting him, “She would just about have killed me, as fast as she was going, she would have hit me right in the middle.” He testified that Mrs. Jennings was travelling at about 30 miles an hour when he saw her car; that she did not put on her brakes; that the left front portion of the defendants’ car came into contact with the right front portion of plaintiff’s car. As he endeavored to negotiate a right angle left turn and the front left side of defendants’ car hit the front right side of plaintiff’s car; and as the two cars almost paralleled and came into contact both proceeded in a forward direction. The plaintiff’s car ultimately landed in a yard, colliding first into a telephone pole and then into a fence, knocking both down. The defendants’ car came to a stop in a ditch.

Mrs. Jennings testified that she had been driving on 5th Street and had stopped for stop signs on every intersecting street including Avenue B; that at each of the stop signs she stopped her car'and started from a stopped position in second gear. She testified positively that she brought her car to a complete stop at the intersection of 5th Street and Avenue B, looked to the left and to the right and seeing no cars to her right she put her car into second gear and proceeded across the intersection of Avenue B. She did not see the plaintiff’s automobile until the actual collision, ánd then- it was a “flash”, and she was rendered unconscious. Mrs. Jennings testified that when she stopped at Avenue B and looked to the left she could see all the way to 4th Street and that the house on her left did not obstruct her view. She answered the question, “What was on your left on Avenue B ?” as follows: “I don’t remember but there may have been some cars out there. I don’t remember.”

A deputy sheriff for the Parish of Jefferson who investigated the accident testified that he found the vehicles in separate ditches; that Mrs. Jennings’ car had gone “completely across the street” before it came to a complete stop in the ditch. We quote part of his testimony as follows: “They had to stop, it went in the ditch and couldn’t go no further and the other one went into the fence.” The said deputy sheriff found no skid marks to indicate that either of the motorists attempted to stop their respective vehicles by use of brakes.

[571]

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 2d 222, 235 La. 564, 1958 La. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-ex-rel-steele-v-state-farm-mutual-insurance-la-1958.