Thibodaux v. Pittman Bros. Const. Co.

199 So. 159
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1940
DocketNo. 2177.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 199 So. 159 (Thibodaux v. Pittman Bros. Const. 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
Thibodaux v. Pittman Bros. Const. Co., 199 So. 159 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

*160 OTT, Judge.

The suit is to recover damages in the sum of $2,035.25 against the Pittman Brothers Construction Co. and its insurance carrier, the Central Surety and Insurance Corporation, on account of personal injuries and property damage to his truck which plaintiff claims to have sustained on June 20, 1937. Plaintiff was going east on U. S. Highway 90, driving'his Ford truck about eleven o’clock on the morning of the above date, and a truck and trailer belonging to the defendant construction company, loaded with a gravel hopper, driven by an employee of this company, was going in the •opposite direction toward New Iberia. The accident occurred a few miles east of Morgan City in Assumption Parish, on a straight paved highway, eighteen feet wide.

The pertinent part of plaintiff’s petition setting out the alleged negligence of the defendant company may be summarized as follows: That the truck and trailer driven by its employee was loaded with a gravel hopper or bin sitting on top of and attached to iron beams with an over width load of 13 feet and 2 inches on the body of the truck and trailer; that the iron beams projected •on each side of the- truck far beyond the body of the truck and trailer; that the truck and trailer were not equipped with proper flags as required by law; that at the time plaintiff encountered said truck and trailer, the weather was cloudy and raining, and when he was about to pass the truck and trailer, the driver thereof pulled the wheels to the left to the black line, thereby throwing the projecting iron beam into the •side of the road on which plaintiff was traveling; that in order to avoid being struck by said projecting iron beam, plaintiff was compelled to pull his truck to his right onto the shoulder of the road where, •the ground being wet and slippery, he lost •control of his truck and turned over on the :side of the road, causing the injury and damage complained of. In fine, the acts of negligence charged to the construction com-pany consisted in the unlawful manner in which the truck and trailer were loaded, the failure to provide proper red flags thereon, .and the act. of the driver in pulling the 'loaded over width truck and trailer to the left so that the projection extended so far into plaintiff’s lane of traffic that he could .not pass without getting off the road.

The construction company and its insur•er filed a joint answer admitting that the •company owned the truck and trailer and that it was loaded with a gravel hopper, and that iron beams projected to some extent beyond the body of the truck and trailer. It is also admitted that the driver of the truck and trailer was acting in the course of his employment with the construction company, but they deny that the driver was guilty of any of the acts of negligence charged in the petition. In the alternative and in case it is found that defendants were in any way negligent, it is alleged that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in operating his truck at an excessive speed considering all the circumstances; in not having his truck under such control that he could pass the truck and trailer approaching from the opposite direction without getting on the shoulder of the road and without being able to control his .truck; and if it is found that any part of the truck and trailer did project over onto any part of plaintiff’s side of the road, then it is charged that plaintiff should have seen the same and brought his truck under such control as to avoid the accident. Pleading still further in the alternative, defendants allege that plaintiff had the last clear chance to avoid the accident.

Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, rejecting the demands of the plaintiff, and he has appealed.

Learned counsel for plaintiff seems to think that the trial judge found for the defendants because of the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. A reading of the reasons for judgment leads us to believe that he rejected plaintiff’s demands for the reason that he found that the proof failed to show that the accident was caused from any negligence on the part of the construction company, or its employee. The judge concludes his findings in the following language : “The sole and only cause of this accident, * * * is attributed to plaintiff’s own negligence and imprudence in operating his car. He was driving too fast, and when he took the wet and soggy shoulder, it caused him to lose control of his car, which was the proximate cause of the accident and to which defendant did not in any way contribute.”

Taking up the three principal charges of negligence against the construction company, we find that this company got permission from the Highway -Commission under authority of Section 4 of Act 21 of 1932, the law in force at the time, to haul a sand and gravel hopper twelve inches over width *161 on both sides from Slidell to New Iberia, provided the truck travel in the daylight, and provided it was not over loaded and had red flags on it to warn traffic. A highway patrolman inspected the truck and trailer at Slidell before the driver left with the over width load. The patrolman saw that the proper red flags were placed on the sides and rear of the truck and that it was equipped with clearance lights and flares. He required the driver of the truck to drive in the iron beam which he thought was projecting too far out on the left side, and after this had been done by the driver by using a mall, the patrolman permitted him to leave with instructions not to drive at night. The patrolman testified that the driver of the truck got some red cloth and made it into wide strips and tied a strip on-each of the four corners, one in the center and hung one on the projecting iron. This officer testified that the truck was properly equipped to travel on the highway when he gave the driver permission to leave.

The width of the load on the truck and trailer was slightly over thirteen feet. It appears from the testimony that the mixer was loaded a foot or so to the right side of the truck which would make the projection more on the right side than on the left or traffic side of the truck. From the body of the truck on the left side the load and iron beam extended over about two feet or perhaps a little over two feet, the testimony not being very definite on that point. Section 5 of the above mentioned act limits the width of a vehicle that may travel on the highways to eight feet. It was because of this excess width that a permit was necessary for the transporting of this over width load.

As the construction company secured a permit to carry this over width load, and as the law does not specify the kind or number of red flags to be placed on the truck to warn traffic of the over size load, the question arises as to whether or not the red flags put on the truck and trailer were sufficient to warn traffic. According to the driver, the flags on the truck at the time of the accident were the same ones that were on it when the truck left Slidell with the permission of the highway officer there. The contention is made that these flags were only small red streamers or strips tied on the side of the truck and could not be seen by a motorist approaching from the opposite direction for any considerable distance.

Mr. Carl Peterson, highway police sergeant stationed at Morgan City, was called to the scene of the accident soon after it occurred.

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199 So. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibodaux-v-pittman-bros-const-co-lactapp-1940.