Travelers Indemnity Co. v. Ben

269 So. 2d 553, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6203
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 13, 1972
DocketNo. 9073
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 269 So. 2d 553 (Travelers Indemnity Co. v. Ben) 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
Travelers Indemnity Co. v. Ben, 269 So. 2d 553, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6203 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

CUTRER, Judge, ad hoc.

This is a suit for property damages by the Travelers Indemnity Company and Robert E. Peavy against Walter Ben arising out of an automobile accident involving a vehicle driven by Mrs. Peavy and a vehicle driven by Warren Ben, the minor son of defendant. Travelers was the collision insurer of the Peavy automobile and sued as a subrogee of Peavy. Peavy seeks the deductible paid by him. From a judgment dismissing the suit, plaintiffs appeal. Defendant did not appeal nor answer the appeal. We reverse.

The accident giving rise to this litigation occurred on October 11, 1968, at approximately 3 :30 P.M. on La. Highway 1, within the city limits of Brusly, Louisiana. Highway 1, at the scene of the accident, is [555]*555a four-lane concrete surfaced highway with two lanes for each direction of traffic. There is a wide neutral ground separating these lanes. The weather was clear and the highway surface was dry at the time of the accident.

Mrs. Peavy was driving the community two-door Plymouth automobile and entered Highway 1 from a service road on the east side, crossed the two northbound traffic lanes and stopped in the wide neutral ground separating the two lanes of traffic. She was accompanied by three teenage girls, Alice, Marilyn and Martha Hebert. She stopped in the neutral ground for the purpose of allowing Alice Hebert to get out of the car. Alice lived in the neighborhood and she was going to walk to her home. After letting Alice out of the car, Mrs. Peavy turned to her left into the southbound lanes of traffic. After making her left turn and having proceeded approximately 174 feet from the intersection Mrs. Peavy’s vehicle was struck from the rear by an automobile operated by Warren Ben, the minor son of defendant.

The trial court’s oral reasons were brief, and made no findings of fact except that Mrs. Peavy did not see the Ben vehicle prior to the accident. We reiterate as follows :

“THE COURT: Personally the Court doesn’t think there’s any doubt that there were two people negligent here, as the police stated that she said he must have been coming mighty fast because she didn’t see him. Now, as to whether the last clear chance applied in this case, that is the only serious problem as far as the Court is concerned, whether or not it does apply. However, as there are two people negligent, the Court believes it’s up to the plaintiff to prove this last clear chance, and as there’s a doubt in the Court’s mind, the Court dismisses the suit at plaintiffs’ costs.”

The plaintiffs-appellants contend that the trial court erred in finding Mrs. Peavy negligent, or in the alternative by not applying the doctrine of “last clear chance.”

The trial court was impressed with the investigating officer’s testimony which reflected that Mrs. Peavy stated to him that she did not see the Ben car approaching as she entered the lanes of travel. Mrs. Peavy testified that as she entered the southbound lane of traffic, the Ben car was three or four blocks away. She stated that she had proceeded to the right-hand lane of traffic and had proceeded approximately one-half block when her car was hit from the rear. Mrs. Peavy testified she heard no brakes or other noise prior to the impact. She estimated her speed at approximately 25 miles per hour as she intended to turn right at the next corner, which is located approximately a block from the cut-through.

Martha Hebert, one of the occupants of the Peavy car, testified that the Ben car was “a long way off” as they stopped at the intersection to let Alice out. On cross-examination she estimated the distance to be three times the length of the courtroom. The courtroom was estimated to be seventy feet long. This witness admitted that she was not observing Mrs. Peavy’s driving very closely. She was not sure that the car she had seen was the one which struck Mrs. Peavy’s car.

Alice Hebert testified that after getting out of Mrs. Peavy’s car, Mrs. Peavy turned left into the southbound lanes going directly into the right-hand lane. She further testified that the Ben car was so far down the highway that she walked across the southbound lanes of traffic and up near the adjacent railroad track before the Ben car passed her and the impact occurred. She stated that she heard no brakes squealing prior to the impact.

Warren Ben testified that he was driving approximately 60 miles per hour as he approached the cut-through intersection. Ben stated that he saw Mrs. Peavy stopped in the neutral ground when he was about one block away. He estimated the distance [556]*556of a block as 350 feet. Ben further stated that as he was approximately 60 feet away from the cut-through intersection, Mrs. Peavy pulled into the southbound lanes of travel. He said that she first turned into the left lane and then suddenly turned into the right lane immediately ahead of him, and the impact occurred. He testified that Mrs. Peavy was traveling slowly.

Defendant also called Beverly Bynum as a witness. She stated she was standing near the scene of the accident waiting for a ride. Miss Bynum testified that she saw the accident and estimated that the Ben car was 15 feet from the intersection when Mrs. Peavy pulled out in front of him.

Defendant called Lieutenant Jasper Den-icola, the investigating state police officer. He testified that he measured 174 feet of skid marks left by the Ben automobile, which skid marks began at the south edge of the cut-through and extended 174 feet in the right-hand lane. He concluded that the impact occurred at the end of the skid marks, or 174 feet from the cut-through. Lieutenant Denicola stated that the speed limit on Highway 1 was 70 miles per hour. He talked to the two drivers and stated that Mrs. Peavy told him she did not see the Ben automobile. The trial judge apparently accepted the fact that Mrs. Peavy had not seen the Ben car as he referred to this in his oral reasons for finding Mrs. Peavy negligent.

The testimony reflects wide variations as to the location of the Ben car as Mrs. Peavy entered the southbound lanes of traffic. There are, however, factors which were established with reasonable certainty, and from which we can draw reasonable conclusions as to the existence of other factors. The facts which are established are that 174 feet of skid marks were left by the Ben vehicle, beginning at the intersection. This means that the accident occurred approximately 174 feet south of the cut-through intersection. The accident occurred in the southbound lane of traffic. The skid marks of the Ben automobile were located entirely in the southbound lane of traffic. Mrs. Peavy had traveled from a stopped position, made a left turn, and was traveling at a speed of approximately 25 miles per hour at the time of the impact. We are convinced that as Mrs. Peavy made her left turn she proceeded directly into the right-hand lane. At the time Mrs. Peavy entered the right lane, Warren Ben was also in that lane traveling approximately 60 miles per hour, which was below the speed limit of 70 miles per hour. Using the tables found in Blashfield’s Encyclopedia of Automobile Law & Practice, Volume 9-C, Section 6237, for Mrs. Peavy to have traversed the 174 feet at an average speed of 20 miles per hour, she would have consumed 5 to 6 seconds of time. Traveling at 60 miles per hour, Ben was traveling 88 feet per second. This means, at the time Mrs. Peavy entered the traffic lanes, Ben was between 440 to 528 feet from the intersection. Considering reaction time, Ben could have stopped his vehicle in 226 feet.

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Bluebook (online)
269 So. 2d 553, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-indemnity-co-v-ben-lactapp-1972.