Sturcke v. Clark
This text of 261 So. 2d 717 (Sturcke v. Clark) 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.
Opinion
James H. STURCKE
v.
Bessie S. CLARK, The Hanover Insurance Company.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*718 Bienvenu & Culver, Hugh M. Glenn, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant-appellee and third-party plaintiff-appellant.
Lawrence A. Wheeler, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.
Donahue & Willmott, Richard M. Donahue, Metairie, and Peter J. Vernaci, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Before CHASEZ, REDMANN and LEMMON, JJ.
REDMANN, Judge.
Plaintiff appeals from the dismissal on the merits of his suit for automobile collision damages against another driver and her husband and plaintiff's uninsured motorist insurer. The last defendant protectively appeals from the dismissal of its third-party claim against the first two defendants and the insurance agency allegedly responsible for their not in fact having been issued a policy of insurance.
The principal issue is the basically factual one of plaintiff's negligence. Because we affirm on that issue we discuss no others.
The accident occurred one block after plaintiff had turned off Earhart Blvd. in New Orleans, heading uptown on South Claiborne Avenue. Defendant was crossing from his left on Clio Street. On the Claiborne neutral ground are overpass understructures which, plaintiff agrees, do not significantly block vision from a car on Claiborne of an automobile on Clio in the neutral ground area. A trailer-truck stopped in plaintiff's right lane with left turn indicator blinking attracted attention of both drivers; hand motioning by him was apparently interpreted by each as an indication to continue across the intersection.
Plaintiff's was the favored street. This fact lends support to plaintiff's position and establishes defendant's primary negligence. But plaintiff's own testimony is that he never saw defendant driver until he struck the right rear side of her station wagon. She was driving slowly (as was he); her car stopped near the far curb of the intersection, a few feet from impact (and his stopped near impact). Physical damage was not severe, confirming the moderate speeds involved.
Plaintiff has sympathy for his position that his failure to see cannot by itself make itself a cause of the accident. Failure to see what one should see may be negligence, but its only immediate result is that one must be treated as if had seen. The test for causation remains whether the seeing driver could have reacted and stopped in time to avoid the accident. Had plaintiff then been travelling at the lawful speed of 35 mph, he could not have stopped if he had seen defendant, and thus failure to see would not have caused the collision.
The circumstances, however, of plaintiff's slow speed, increasing from a speed of five to ten mph as he passed the truck, and of defendant's slow speed suggest that, as was apparently the trial judge's view, plaintiff could have stopped in the time it took defendant to move her car almost entirely past plaintiff's lane of travel.
Plaintiff's failure to see defendant was negligence, at least from the moment at which he should reasonably have determined he could safely pass the truck and thus should have returned his attention to the general roadway ahead of him. That determination should reasonably have been made when plaintiff was towards the rear of the truck, i. e., before he placed himself in too adjacent a position to avoid injury should the truck begin the left turn its lights were signalling. Perhaps prior to that reasonable determination it could be said the reasonable man's attention would be concentrated almost exclusively on the truck, and his failure to see a car in defendant's *719 position might have been an excusable or inculpable failure, a "very slight fault * * * for which no responsibility is incurred", C.C. art. 3556 subd. 13. But the truck circumstances cannot excuse plaintiff's failure after that determination. It is perhaps a close question, but we are unwilling to reverse the trial judge's determination merely because the evidence, although supportive, does not conclusively establish contributory negligence. A reasonable preponderance suffices, and we believe the slow speeds reasonably show that plaintiff still had time to stop when he was alongside the truck's trailer, and at that point we believe his failure to return his attention to the roadway was negligence which did contribute to the accident. See Suhre v. National Union Indem. Co. of Pa., 244 La. 455, 152 So.2d 558 (1963); see also discussion in Martin v. Moore, 210 So.2d 607 (La.App.1968).
The judgment is affirmed.
LEMMON, Judge (dissenting).
This case presents the following legal issuewhat is the duty of a motorist traveling on a favored street in the left lane, confronted with a large truck and trailer which is stopped in the lane to his right and signaling for a left turn, when another motorist illegally enters his path of travel from an unfavored street (especially when his view to the left is partially obstructed by the overpass understructure)?
The trial court observed:
"The Court is bound to arrive at this opinion in this particular case, that both of these parties were watching this particular truck, and that, under the circumstances of this particular case, even though the plaintiff in this case had the right-of-way street, if he had been alert and if he had been looking and had seen what he should have seen he was bound to see this defendant's automobile, which was bright red, which passed all the way in front of him. He hit the rear end of it, and he says he did not see that car at all. He had slowed because of the peculiar condition there. His attention undoubtedly was directed at the truck driver, as was the defendant's in the Court's opinion, they were both looking at it, but I think that the plaintiff in this case owed a further duty, and that was to see that it was clear for him to pass. If he didn't see this car at all, he is bound to be contributorily negligent, and I must dismiss his suit, and that's it."
The law imposes upon a motorist the duty of proper lookout. If the motorist breaches this duty, the legal consequence is only that he is charged with seeing what he should have seen had he kept a proper lookout. The motorist has still not committed actionable negligence unless his failure of lookout directly causes an accident.
In this case the plaintiff testified that he did not see the non-yielding defendant until he hit her. But the interval between the time that the defendant illegally entered the intersection and the time that the impact occurred was so brief that even if the plaintiff had maintained perfect lookout, he could not have stopped in time to avoid the accident.
It is important to note that the defendant, having failed to yield the right of way, was illegally in the position that she occupied when plaintiff should have first seen her, i. e., when she entered the intersection from his left. The front of defendant's vehicle then traveled approximately 20 feet (by my estimation) from the point of entering the intersection to the point of impact, which at 10 miles per hour would take less than 1½ seconds.
In my opinion plaintiff, after he should have seen the defendant, did not have sufficient time within which to stop or otherwise avoid the accident and therefore should not be held contributorily negligent.
*720 ON REHEARING
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261 So. 2d 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturcke-v-clark-lactapp-1972.