Varnado v. Rex Petroleum Corporation

147 So. 513, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1628
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1933
DocketNo. 1123.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 So. 513 (Varnado v. Rex Petroleum Corporation) 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
Varnado v. Rex Petroleum Corporation, 147 So. 513, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1628 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

The only issue in this case is one of fact as to whether the motorcycle on which the plaintiff, Cody Varnado, was ‘riding wqs struck by an automobile belonging to the Rex Petroleum Corporation, Incorporated, and being driven by one Sloan Emerson its president and general manager at the time. Incidentally, too, the amount of damages allowed by the judgment of the lower court in favor of the plaintiff presents a serious question.

The plaintiff was a patrolman in the service of the Louisiana highway commission, using his own motorcycle as a means of conveyance. On July 8, 1931, he was patrolling highway 90, known as the Old Spanish Trail between Lake Charles and Vinton. He was traveling west toward Vinton and, on approaching the place where a road to Edgerly leads off from the highway, just east of a garage known as Read’s Garage, he claims that he was run into by this automobile being driven by Sloan Emerson and seriously injured.

It is not disputed that Sloan Emerson was on the highway in the neighborhood of the accident at the time driving west in a large cream colored Buiek coupé which belonged to the Rex Petroleum Corporation, Incorporated. As he left Lake Charles, he picked up two boys on the Calcasieu river bridge. One of these boys named Garruthers knew Emerson and asked him for a ride. It is shown unquestionably by the testimony of these two boys that Emerson had been drinking. In fact, he admits that he had and from other evidence in the record, it would appear that he was very much intoxicated.

Between Lake Charles and Sulphur, Emerson passed plaintiff on the highway. As he approached him, he evidently was driving at a rapid rate of speed and in a carefree manner as the boys had to caution him to slacken his speed because of the presence of the road cop ahead. To their warning, Emerson answered that if the cop did not get out of his way he would run over him. The Carruthers boy when asked if Emerson drove close to any other objects on the road answered: “Oh, he shaved some of them pretty close. * * * Others he would go around them all right.” Emerson himself admits that he passed plaintiff this first time and that the boys did mention something to him about coming close to him and he answered in a joking way that they would knock him off the road. Counsel for defendants had one of these boys admit that from Emerson’s tone of voice he was not serious in his remark about running over plaintiff and we would hate to think that he was. All of the testimony on this point, however, furnished strong proof of the fact that in his hands, in the condition in which he was at the time, this large Buick automobile was a dangerous instrumentality being operated in a dangerous and reckless manner on the public highway. It was so unsafe that we get the impression from their testimony that the two boys were glad when they reached Sul-phur and Emerson stopped, so that they could get out.

Emerson says that he does not remember passing plaintiff a second time, that is between Sulphur and Vinton after he had stopped at Sulphur, and still there can be but little doubt from all other testimony and the circumstances related in the record that it is a fact that he did. In justice to him we must say that he does not deny that he did, satisfying himself by merely stating that he believes that he would have remembered if he had hit him as plaintiff claims he did. Asked the direct question: “Are you in a position now to say that you did not strike the motorcycle with your automobile?” He answers: “No, sir, not that I know.” Pressed further, he is asked: “Wel!. are you sure that you did not do it or will you say that you simply don’t know whether you did or not?” and he answers: “I wouldn't say * * * I say it was possible.” This testimony impresses us as that of a man who wants to be truthful and who whilst he does not want to admit certain facts about which he is being interrogated, cannot conscientiously deny them. Testimony of this character is not sufficient, ⅛ -our opinion, to rebut positive statements such as are made by the plaintiff herein to the effect that he was struck from the rear of his motorcycle by an automobile the license plate number of which he was able to read as it passed on ahead of him which he immediately wrote in a small note book used by him in *515 carrying on his work, and which number identified the car as that being driven at the very moment by Emerson.

In describing the accident, plaintiff says that when he fell, his left foot was jammed under the motorcycle and it was after he got up that he jotted the license number which he had “caught as the car shot by” in his little book. It is strenuously contended by counsel for defendants that such a feat, while possible, is hardly probable. It is seriously doubted, they urge, that there is one chance out of a hundred of it being accomplished under the circumstances confronting the plaintiff at the moment. In this case, we must bear in mind that the person claiming to have performed it was a traffic officer charged with the very duty of observing automobile license plate numbers and taking them down hurriedly. It would seem that the nature of their employment would require that they be trained for quick observation and perception along those very lines. Therefore, it may be that the very probability or chance which counsel admits, existed in this very case. As for the circumstances under which it was done, we believe that the fact that the officer in this case being personally involved in the accident, and being, as the evidence discloses, in complete control of his mental faculties, was the more apt to have quickly thought of and caught the license number of the car that had struck his motorcycle.

After plaintiff got up, he walked over to Read’s garage near by and first asked for a fast running ear with which he could catch up with the one that had hit him. There was no car available there so he waited a few minutes until a strange car bearing an Ohio license number came along. He hailed this ear, ex-lilained his trouble to the people in it and they picked him up. It happened that they had also picked up the same Bertrand boy who had been riding with Emerson and he told plaintiff about their experience when they had first passed him on the highway, from all of which plaintiff and the boy as well seem to have concluded that it was Emerson who had run into plaintiff’s motorcycle. When they arrived at Vinton, plaintiff says that he went to a garage where he could telephone the license number he had caught on the car to his superior officer, Sergeant: Eanguy at Lake Charles, to have the latter check up on it. Counsel for defendants, contend that it was after the Bertrand boy had told him about Emerson and after he had seen Emerson’s car in Vinton that plaintiff telephoned the information about the license 'number to Eanguy. The testimony, however, as we interpret it, shows that it was not until after he had ’phoned, that plaintiff saw the car and verified the number he had caught as it went by him after the accident.

In connection with the testimony relative to this telephone conversation, it is to be noted also that Eanguy, at whose home plaintiff and his wife lived, was not in and that it was Mrs. Varnado who spoke to him. In relating the conversation, she testifies that her husband told her that “someone had hit him” and for her to get in touch with Fanguy so that he could look up the license number he gave her and come to meet him at Vinton where he would be waiting.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 513, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/varnado-v-rex-petroleum-corporation-lactapp-1933.