Toole v. Morris-Webb Motor Co.

180 So. 431, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 589
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1938
DocketNo. 16761.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 180 So. 431 (Toole v. Morris-Webb Motor 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
Toole v. Morris-Webb Motor Co., 180 So. 431, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 589 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

The parents of the deceased minor, Bernard Toole, originally sued Paul É. Burns of Biloxi, Miss., and the Morris-Webb Motor Company, Inc., of Gulfport, Miss., in solido, claiming $11,234, as damages for the negligent killing of their minor son. By supplemental and amended petition, the suit against the Morris-Webb Motor Company, Inc., was abandoned and the Blankenship Motors, Inc., of New Orleans, La., substituted as codefendant. The plaintiffs allege that on May 30, 1936, their minor son, Bernard Toole, was seated on the curbing of the sidewalk of Perrier *432 'ne.ar Upperline street, when an automobile driven by Paul E. Burns ran into and killed him; that Burns had purchased the automobile from the Blankenship Motors, Inc., from which company he had obtained a set of dealer’s number plates without which he could not have driven the automobile in the ■ city of New Orleans; that it was well known to the said Blankenship Motors, Inc., its agents, and employees at the time they loaned the license or number plates to the said Burns, that he did not know how to drive an automobile, and had no knowledge of its mechanism.

Judgment was rendered against Paul E. Bums by default, and no appeal has been taken by -him. Blankenship Motors, Inc., filed an exception of no cause of action which was maintained and plaintiffs’ suit dismissed. From this judgment they have appealed.

It is contended on behalf of defendant-appellee that it is not 'responsible for the negligence of its customers, or for their ignorance of the mechanism or method of driving the cars they purchase, and that to hold otherwise would be to impose a responsibility upon the vendors of automobiles so great as to render the conduct of their business unprofitable and impossible. It is not the business of the seller of an automobile, says counsel, to inquire into the capacity of the purchaser to drive it any more than it is. the obligation of the vendor of guns and ammunition to ascertain whether the purchaser is familiar with the use of the weapons. With this contention we quite agree, but according to the allegations of the present suit the Blankenship Motors, Inc., loaned one of its license plates to Burns in order to enable him to undertake to drive the car through the streets of the city of New Orleans when it knew that Burns knew nothing, about driving the car; a totally different proposition.

Act No. 20 of 1932, in section 15(a), provides that a manufacturer of or dealer in automobiles, in lieu of registering such vehicles, may obtain from the Secretary of State by the payment of a registration fee, one or more “number plates,” which may be transferred from one vehicle to another. Subparagraph (b) • provides that these license plates, so obtained, shall not' be used or be permitted to be used for “other than for bona fide demonstration or delivery purposes.” Subparagraph (c) reads as follows: “No manufacturer of or dealer in motor vehicles, trailers * * * shall cause or permit any such vehicle owned by such person to be operated or moved upon a public highway without there being displayed upon such vehicle a number plate or plates issued to such person, except as otherwise herein authorized.”

It is contended on defendant’s behalf that it is charged with nothing more than allowing its license plates to be used for delivery purposes, something expressly authorized by law. On the other hand, plaintiffs’ counsel insist that the allegations of the petition, which for present purposes must be accepted as true, make out a case involving a violation of the statute. We do not regard this question as important for, as we see it, if the action of defendant in lending its number plates to one, who, to its knowledge, did not know how to drive, may be considered as the proximate cause of the accident, defendant is responsible whether in so doing it violated the provisions of any particular statute or not, and conversely if defendant’s action in lending the license plates was illegal without such action being a proximate cause of the accident, it is of no consequence.

We are referred to the case of Davis v. Shaw, 142 So. 301, 305, a case decided by our brethren of the Second circuit, in which it was held that the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition to the effect that Mrs. Shaw, the defendant, had permitted her nephew, Oscar L. McLain, to use her automobile, with the' knowledge that he “was and is a careless, reckless and incompetent driver of an automobile,” did not state a cause of action as against Mrs. Shaw for damages resulting to the plaintiff as a consequence of the negligence of Oscar L. Mc-Lain. It is true that in'that case the automobile belonged to Mrs. Shaw and was loaned to her nephew who was alleged tq be incompetent, while here the automobile is alleged to have been purchased by Burns, the negligent driver; but we find no difference in principle since the basis of the present suit is the alleged negligence of the vendor of the automobile in loaning its license plates and thus enabling the negligent Burns to drive the car which killed plaintiffs’ child. In the cited case the court quoted from Corpus Juris, Volume 42, page 614, to the effect that a motor vehicle is not in itself a dangerous instrumentality, and “cannot be placed in the same category as ferocious animals, locomotives, gun powder, dynamite,” etc.; consequently, the rules of law applicable to such dangerous *433 instrumentalities generally do not apply. It was recognized, however, in the decision that the rule permitted of exceptions where, for example, an owner permitted it to “be operated by very young, or inexperienced, persons, by insane persons, inexperienced drivers, or by doped or drunken persons, or by other persons similarly incompetent, such automobile may become a dangerous instrumentality or agency, and the law applicable to such dangerous machines may apply. And, where an owner of a motorcar, knowing of such condition existing .either in the car itself or the driver to whom he intrusts the use of such car, may be so negligent in permitting his automobile to be operated on the public highways in such condition, or by such person, as to be held responsible in damages for the negligent operation of such automobile.” But the court held that the allegations of the petition in that case did not state a cause of action, because “to make such an allegation sufficient to even state a cause of action in a case of this nature, general averments that the driver had previously driven recklessly alone cannot be sufficient, but at least the circumstances and places where such previous occurrences were alleged to have happened must be set out in detail. In other words, one may have knowledge of a driver having on previous occasions driven at an excessive speed, and of having previously experienced an accident, and still not be considered negligent, if he gratuitously permits such a driver to operate his car for the sole benefit and purposes of such driver.” In other words, the conclusions of the pleader will not supply necessary allegations of fact. Here the allegations are to the effect that the driver did not know how to drive. There was, therefore, no need of specification.

In Baader v. Driverless Cars, Inc., 10 La.App. 310, 120 So. 515, we held that a corporation which rents an automobile to a drunken driver is liable for the damages sustained by a pedestrian due to his negligence upon the principle that one who intrusts to incompetent hands a potentially dangerous agency, such as an automobile, is responsible for the mischief done.

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180 So. 431, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toole-v-morris-webb-motor-co-lactapp-1938.