Taylor v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.
This text of 237 So. 2d 690 (Taylor v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. 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.
Opinion
Vernetta E. TAYLOR, Wife of/and Orie E. Taylor
v.
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY, et al.
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CO. and George P. Richards
v.
Curtis Brooks LYONS, Jr., Payton Jackson, Jr., Payton Jackson, Sr., and Orie E. Taylor.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Joseph Accardo, Jr., Chaisson, Accardo & Morel, Luling, for plaintiffs-appellants.
*691 Felicien P. Lozes of Drury, Lozes & Curry, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant, Allstate Ins. Co.
Brierre & Malone, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees, State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. and George R. Richards.
Before REDMANN, BARNETTE and DOMENGEAUX, JJ.
DOMENGEAUX, Judge.
This litigation arises out of a vehicular accident which occurred on March 30, 1968, at about 7:25 p. m., on an overpass located one-half mile north of New Orleans International Airport on U. S. Highway 61. Plaintiffs Orie Taylor and his wife, Vernetta Taylor were proceeding south on the overpass in their 1964 Oldsmobile when they were involved in a collision with a 1966 Ford owned and being driven by George Richards in a northerly direction. Immediately prior to his collision with the Taylor vehicle, Richards had been involved in a collision with a 1964 Pontiac driven in a northerly direction by Curtis Lyons and owned by Payton Jackson, Jr., who was a passenger in the Pontiac. Two separate law suits, which were consolidated for trial and have remained so on appeal, resulted from these events. In the first of these the Taylors sued George Richards, his liability insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company; Curtis Brooks Lyons, Jr., Payton Jackson, Jr., and Payton Jackson, Sr., all three of whom were uninsured; and Allstate Insurance Company, their own uninsured motorist insurer. Richards filed the second suit against Curtis Brooks Lyons, Jr., Payton Jackson, Jr., Payton Jackson, Sr., and Orie Taylor. Allstate Insurance Company filed a third-party petition against all of its co-defendants alleging that in the event it should pay the Taylor plaintiffs because of its uninsured motorist coverage of them, it would be subrogated to their rights against the other defendants. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company and George Richards also filed a third-party petition against Curtis Lyons, Jr., Payton Jackson, Jr., and Payton Jackson, Sr., seeking contribution from them as joint tortfeasors should State Farm be found liable to the Taylors. After a trial on the merits, the trial judge decided the negligence of Curtis Brooks Lyons, Jr., to have been the sole cause of the accident. Accordingly he rendered judgment in favor of the Taylors against Allstate Insurance Company to the limits of its uninsured motorist coverage and against Lyons individually for the judgment excess; in favor of State Farm Mutual for the sum it had paid Richards under its uninsured motorist coverage against Lyons; and dismissing all claims against State Farm Mutual, George Richards, Payton Jackson, Jr., and Payton Jackson, Sr. The Taylors and Allstate Insurance Company appealed that judgment to this court and State Farm Mutual and George Richards answered the appeal of the Taylors asking that the judgment be affirmed. Lyons neither appealed nor answered any appeal.
Beyond the facts set out above the record discloses a controversy as to whether Richards or Lyons caused the initial impact between their two automobiles, sending both out of control. Richards testified that he was stopped in the right lane at a red traffic signal a short distance from the overpass when the Lyons vehicle came up alongside of him in the left north-bound lane and stopped. He states that the Lyons automobile was "wobbling" as it approached the light. His version has both automobiles leaving the traffic light at the same time and running together at some forty-five miles per hour until reaching the base of the overpass. At that point Richards says he heard the roar of what sounded like a high powered engine and he looked to his left to see the front wheels of the Lyons automobile rising slightly above the pavement. This he said happened approximately at the location of a small hump on the roadway. He thought that it was then that Lyons lost control of his vehicle and crossed into Richards' lane striking *692 his vehicle, and causing Richards to lose control also. Beyond this, Richards could remember nothing clearly about the occurrence of the accident.
Lyons' version was that he slowed down for the traffic light of which Richards spoke, but did not stop due to its changing to green as he approached it. He testified that he passed the Richards automobile at the light and was ahead of it until it crossed into his lane of travel and struck his rear right fender causing him to lose control. The blow, he said, caused him to spin around and strike the right railing of the bridge or overpass. He was corroborated in his version by the testimony of Payton Jackson, Jr., owner of the automobile Lyons was driving, and passenger in the back seat thereof at the time of the accident.
The only disinterested witness who testified was the state trooper who investigated the accident. He stated that there were 169 feet of skid marks left by the Lyons vehicle before it struck the railing and that the vehicle traveled another 150 feet before coming to rest. These skid marks gradually drifted from the left lane of travel, where Lyons started out, into the right lane, which is the one Richards was traveling in. The marks left by the right tires were much heavier than those made by the left tires. The trooper further observed blue paint matching that of the Lyons' vehicle on the left side of the Richards automobile. The location of the three vehicles after the accident was described by the trooper as having the Taylor automobile against the railing in the southbound lanes, the Richards automobile in the southbound lanes also, but perpendicular to the railing, and the Lyons automobile in the northbound lane also perpendicular to the railing. It is quite clear from his testimony, and apparently undisputed, that it was the Richards automobile which collided with that of the Taylors. The trooper also testified that the odor of alcohol was present on Lyons' breath, although both Lyons and Jackson denied that there had been any drinking. There was also some testimony by the trooper regarding what he was told by witnesses at the scene of the accident which was admitted into evidence as being part of the res gestae. While there is some doubt in our minds regarding the propriety of receiving this hearsay evidence, we need not reach that question as there is sufficient evidence without that testimony to support the findings of the trial judge.
The issue presented as to negligence is strictly one of fact dependent on the credibility of the witnesses. There were two divergent versions presented to the trial judge and he could elect to believe either one or the other, parts of both, or neither. His opinion was that the Richards version was substantially correct and lacking manifest error we may not substitute our judgment for his own. Coleman v. Brook, La.App., 227 So.2d 262; Sandel v. Travelers Insurance Company, La.App., 225 So.2d 736.
The injuries and treatment of the Taylors were as follows:
Mr. Orie Taylor was admitted to the emergency room of Ochsner Foundation Hospital following the accident of March 30, 1968. He sustained a comminuted fracture of the left tibia and fibula, and fractures of the first ribs, posteriorly. Leg pins were used to stabilize the leg fractures.
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237 So. 2d 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-state-farm-mutual-automobile-ins-co-lactapp-1970.