Tom Slay, Inc. v. Continental Casualty Co.

321 So. 2d 863
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1976
Docket10406
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 321 So. 2d 863 (Tom Slay, Inc. v. Continental Casualty 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
Tom Slay, Inc. v. Continental Casualty Co., 321 So. 2d 863 (La. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

321 So.2d 863 (1975)

TOM SLAY, INC.
v.
CONTINENTAL CASUALTY CO.

No. 10406.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

September 2, 1975.
Rehearing Denied November 24, 1975.
Writ Refused January 9, 1976.

Dileo & Myles, Lonny A. Myles, Hammond, for plaintiff-appellee.

Talley, Anthony, Hughes & Knight, John W. Anthony, Bogalusa, for defendant-appellant.

Before SARTAIN, COVINGTON and BARNETTE, JJ.

BARNETTE, Judge.

This is a suit for damages resulting from an accident in which a gravel truck and trailer were overturned after striking road repair equipment, specifically a roller, engaged in highway repair work. The trailer was damaged beyond repair. There was judgment for the plaintiff, for $3600 representing the value of the trailer destroyed less $400 salvage. In addition, plaintiff was awarded $12,000 for loss of profits from destruction of the truck and $446.05 for other special items of damage, a total of $16,066.05. From that judgment the defendants have appealed.

*864 The issues are liability and quantum. We will address ourselves first to the issue of liability.

Early on the morning of September 11, 1973, a gravel trailer truck of 22 cubic yards capacity owned by the plaintiff, Tom Slay, Inc. and operated at the time by Ollie Robertson, was loaded at a gravel pit in Franklinton and then proceeded from Franklinton to Richardson (a relatively short distance, but not specifically stated in the testimony) from which point he proceeded in a westerly direction on Louisiana Highway 10 toward Arcola.

At a point approximately a mile and a half west of Richardson in the direction of Arcola the defendant, Southeastern Paving Company[1] was engaged in road repairs described as patch work. The plaintiff, Tom Slay, Inc., was engaged in hauling gravel for Southeastern Paving Company at Amite, Louisiana. We assume from the testimony of plaintiff's witness, Raymond Gaines, who said he was also hauling for Southeastern Paving Company and was taking his load to Amite, that Ollie Robertson was also hauling to Amite, and not to the job-site at which the accident occurred.

As the driver, Ollie Robertson, approached the point of accident he came over a hill which curves to the right to the place where the road was blocked by the machinery engaged in repairing the road surface. The estimate of distance from the curve to the rollers engaged in the road work varied according to who was testifying, from approximately 30 yards (90 feet) by plaintiff's witness, Gaines, to 1000 feet by defendant's witness, Lawrence A. Pecoraro. At one point Gaines testified that the distance from the point in the curve from which he could see the rollers was "about thirty yards." At another point in his testimony he said there was a "spreader" down at the bridge (beyond the point of the accident) which he estimated to be 150 yards from the curve. He had stopped his truck where the rollers were at work in the roadway and estimated the distance from his truck to the spreader at 75 yards. This would place his truck 75 yards from the curve, rather than 30 yards.

Another witness for plaintiff, J. W. Morris, also a gravel truck driver, testified:

"A. When I got to the curve I could see anything.
"Q. All right. Then as you proceeded around the curve what did you see?
"A. Well, when I got around the curve I seen the road was filled with machinery and all.
"Q. Now how close to the machinery before you could see it?
"A. I'd say about a hundred, a hundred fifty foot.
"Q. A hundred to a hundred and fifty feet from where you can see it, from the point where you were to where you could see the equipment?
"A. Yes, sir."

The plaintiff's truck driver, Ollie Robertson, was questioned on the point of distance and visability from the curve and said he did not know. He was asked how far he traveled after applying his brakes until his truck came to a stop. He hedged on this question and said he did not know. When pressed for an estimate, he related the distance to a point in the court room, which the trial judge interjected to be approximately 60 feet.

On the other hand, defendant's witness, Pecoraro, testified that the distance from *865 the curve to the road machinery was about 1000 feet. When pressed for an estimate of distance from the curve to the bridge he also said "about a thousand feet." According to plaintiff's witness, Gaines, the bridge was 75 yards (225 feet) beyond the road machinery. This would place the road machinery about 875 feet from the curve.

The State Police officer, Clarence Wagner, who made an investigation of the accident identified a skid mark from the application of brakes running back from the over-turned truck 1000 feet. This distance he estimated from stepping it off.

We cannot reconcile these varied estimates to establish a distance in feet or yards, but we are of the opinion that the evidence clearly shows that Robertson had ample distance in which to stop his truck after the obstruction came into view when he came over the hill and around the curve. It is significant, we think, that Gaines, driving a gravel truck a few minutes ahead of Robertson, negotiated the hill and curve and brought his truck to a stop before reaching the road machinery. Gaines said he stopped 15 feet from the roller and put on his emergency flasher lights. Morris said he came up three or four minutes behind Robertson and had no trouble in bringing his truck to a stop.

There is a contradiction of testimony whether a flagman was on duty to stop approaching traffic and whether there was a warning sign posted some distance ahead to warn motorists of "Flagman ahead, 500 feet" or words to that effect.

Allen Hayes, an employee of Southeastern Paving Company was very positive in his testimony that he personally put out a sign warning of a flagman ahead about 500 feet east of where Mr. Pecoraro was flagging traffic near the crest of the hill.

Mr. Wagner, the investigating officer, testified that he saw the sign warning of a flagman ahead.

Allen Hayes testified that Pecoraro was flagging traffic immediately before the accident. He said he was operating one of the three rollers, the one in the middle. Jesse LaFountain was operating the one which was nearest the on-coming truck. Hayes was standing on his roller and saw Robertson coming at a speed which he estimated at 50 miles per hour. He shouted a warning to LaFountain and when he determined which way the truck was going he jumped off the opposite side and "took to the ditch." He said he did not notice skid marks.

This witness was very positive that Pecoraro was flagging traffic at the top of the hill; that he could clearly see him and that the distance was about 500 feet.

Jesse LaFountain operator of the roller which was struck also testified that Pecoraro was flagging traffic about 500 feet behind him in the middle of the road and that he had on a "State jacket." He also said he saw the warning sign which was placed about 500 feet east of the flagman; having seen it on his way up to where his roller was parked. He proceeded on his roller, passing the flagman, saying: "about thirty seconds or a minute, two minutes, something like that, I don't exactly know" —before the accident. He was in the right hand lane going down the hill and switched over at the bottom to park his roller. Robertson's truck "sideswiped" LaFountain's roller and overturned in the ditch on the right (north) side of the road.

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Bluebook (online)
321 So. 2d 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tom-slay-inc-v-continental-casualty-co-lactapp-1976.