Van Dyke v. Waguespack

198 So. 425
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1940
DocketNo. 2164.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 198 So. 425 (Van Dyke v. Waguespack) 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
Van Dyke v. Waguespack, 198 So. 425 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

This suit grows out of an automobile accident which occurred on May 9, 1939, at the intersection of Osceola and Seneca Streets in that part of East Baton Rouge Parish known as Istrouma. Mrs. Van Dyke was injured and sues for damages in the sum of $4,500, and tier husband, Edward B. Van Dyke, joins in the suit and claims damages for himself in the sum of $159.15 on account of damage to his car and expenses incurred by him on account of injuries suffered by his wife. Edward B. Van Dyke also sues in behalf of the Commercial Standard Insurance Company for $26.50,. the amount paid by this company for repairs on the Van Dyke car under a policy issued to said Van Dyke. The defendants are Willie Waguespack and his insurance carrier, American Indemnity'Company.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Mrs. Van Dyke in the sum of $750 and in favor of Edward B. Van Dyke for himself and the Commercial Standard Insurance Company for the amounts asked for in the petition. The defendants have appealed, and Mrs. Van Dyke has answered the appeal asking that the judgment be amended by increasing same in her favor to the sum of $4,500.

Mrs. Van Dyke was driving the Van Dyke car west on Seneca . Street and Waguespack was driving his car north on Osceola Street. Both of these streets were gravelled at the time of the accident and neither was designated as a right of way street. Mrs. Van Dyke alleges that while she was crossing the said intersection in a westerly direction said Wagues-pack, driving in a northerly direction along Osceola Street, negligently and carelessly and without keeping a proper lookout, drove his automobile into the' intersection at a rate of speed of more than 35 miles per hour and ran into the car which she was driving, causing the injuries and damage for which this suit is brought.

The defendants deny that Waguespack was guilty of any negligence, but aver that the accident was caused by the negligence of Mrs. Van Dyke in driving at an excessive rate of speed across the intersec *427 tion, in failing to yield the right-of-way to said Waguespack when she saw or should have seen his car enter the intersection first, and in failing to stop her car or swerve it to the right so as to avoid the accident. Defendants plead these acts of negligence on the part of Mrs. Van Dyke in the alternative as contributory negligence in case the court finds that Waguespack was guilty of any negligence.

Exceptions of no cause or right of action were filed by defendants and overruled by the court. No mention is made of these exceptions in this court and they must be considered as having been abandoned. Waguespack also filed a recon-ventional demand in the sum of $277.44 for damage to his car, but this demand is no longer an issue in the case.

No one was in the car with either Mrs. Van Dyke or Waguespack. The principal testimony consists of that given by these drivers of the two cars, plus some photographs of the two cars and other physical facts. Mrs. Van Dyke is corroborated bj another lady, Mrs. Habard, who claims to have seen the accident from her home about a block away. Waguespack is partly corroborated in his testimony by a school boy, Dyer, who was riding his bicycle about a block away. The other testimony in the case is of such little value in arriving at a solution of the disputed facts in the case that we deem it unnecessary to comment on it in any detail.

The substance of Mrs. Van Dyke’s account of'the accident is that she was driving west on Seneca Street at about twenty miles per hour; that she looked to her right (north) and to her left and about the time she entered the intersection of Osceola Street, she saw the Wagueápack car coming from the south (to her left) at a fast rate of speed; that she entered the intersection first; that she could not see but a short distance down Osceola Street on account of a house with shrubbery in front of it at the southeast corner of the intersection; that as she got out into the intersection, the Waguespack car hit her car on the left door and rear part of the front fender and knocked her car some fifteen or twenty feet over toward the northwest corner of the intersection where her car came to a stop in the ditch.

Mrs. Habard testified that she saw the accident from her back porch and saw both cars before they collided; that Mrs. Van Dyke was going west on Seneca Street and Waguespack was going noith on Osceola Street, neither going at an excessive rate of speed, the former going between twenty and twenty five miles per hour and the latter going between twenty five and thirty miles per hour; that Mrs. Van Dyke entered the intersection first, and when she was about halfway across the street, Waguespack ran into the left side of her car; that Waguespack was looking to his left (toward the west) across a vacant lot where there was a potato patch; that she did not hear either driver blow the horn or apply the brakes; that Mrs. Van Dyke’s car was knocked into the ditch on the right side of Seneca Street.

Waguespack’s account of the accident is not altogether clear to us, however, we think the substance of his testimony may be summarized as follows: He was going north on Osceola Street at a speed of ten or fifteen miles per hour and when he got to the intersection he saw this other car coming from the east at a fast rate of speed; that he stopped his car after he had gotten about the middle of the intersection as he saw that he could not get across before the other car would strike him; that he got to the intersection first; that he looked toward the east before he entered the intersection, but could not see the Van Dyke car on account of the hedge to the right. At this point we are unable to follow Waguespack’s testimony. At one place he says that when he saw the Van Dyke car, he was almost in the center of the intersection; at another place he says that when he entered the intersection, the Van Dyke car was about ISO feet from him, that he saw it there, and immediately thereafter he said that he saw it when he got into the intersection and that he realized he could not get over and stopped to let the. other car pass as it was going at a fast rate of speed; that Mrs. Van Dyke swerved her car to the right, in the same direction that' he was going, and the left fender of the Van Dyke car hung up in the right front bumper of his car and dragged both cars to the west side of the intersection.

Waguespack denies that he was looking to his left across a potato patch as he approached the intersection,- but states that he was looking ahead of him as school children were riding bicycles along the road. As Waguespack states in two or three separate’ places that he saw this *428 Van Dyke car coming when he got into the intersection, we must conclude that he did not see it until he got to (and probably in) the intersection. He says that he had come to a stop or a practical stop when Mrs. Van Dyke turned in the same direction as he was going and the left front part of her car sideswiped or hung into the right front bumper of his car.

For the purpose of showing that Wagues-pack had stopped when the cars collided, defendants placed a school boy, Dyer, on the stand who testified that he was riding a bicycle about a block away looking in the direction of the accident and he saw dust flying under the wheels of the Wagues-pack car and that Waguespack was in the act of stopping when the accident occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-dyke-v-waguespack-lactapp-1940.