Vassar v. Levy

184 So. 255
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1938
DocketNo. 16830.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 So. 255 (Vassar v. Levy) 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
Vassar v. Levy, 184 So. 255 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

The plaintiff, Roland Vassar, instituted this suit for the recovery of property damage and personal injuries he sustained in a collision between his automobile and a Ford sedan driven by Warren Levy, the minor son of the defendant, Dr. Joseph Levy. The petition alleges that on March 31, 1937, 'at about 5:00 a. m., the plaintiff was driving his Chevrolet automobile in the City of New Orleans on Jackson Avenue in the direction of the Mississippi River; that when he reached the intersection of Jackson and St. Charles Avenues, he brought his vehicle to a complete stop and looked down the lakeside roadway of St. Charles Avenue for oncoming traffic; that, having perceived that no traffic was approaching on St. Charles Avenue, he proceeded to cross the intersection and that, after he had practically traversed the lakeside roadway thereof, a Ford V-8 automobile, driven by the defendant’s minor son, being operated therein towards uptown at a speed in excess -of 45 miles per hour, crashed into the left side of his automobile near the rear. Plaintiff further avers that the collision was caused through the negligence of defendant’s son in operating the Ford car at an excessive rate of speed and that, as a result thereof, he sustained damages to his person and property in the sum of $292.85, for which he seeks recovery.

In due course, the defendant appeared and filed exceptions to the petition which were overruled. In his answer, he admitted the happening of the accident but denied that his son was guilty of fault in the premises. He avers that his son was driving the Ford automobile up St. Charles Avenue; that, upon approaching the corner of Jackson Avenue, he slowed the speed of the car; that, at that time, a street cap, being operated on Jackson Avenue in the direction of Claiborne Avenue, was crossing the lakeside intersection of St. Charles Avenue; that said street car was in the line of vision of the plaintiff and, because of this fact, the latter was ¡not in a position to observe the traffic proceeding up St. Charles Avenue and that it was negligence on his part to attempt to negotiate the crossing under these circumstances. In short, defendant denies any fault on the part of his son and ascribes that the accident was due solely to the plaintiff’s failure to obey the traffic ordinances of the City of New Orleans and that, if it should be held that his son was guilty of negligence in any particular, then plaintiff’s negligence was such as to bar his recovery.

On these issues a trial was had and the judge, after hearing the evidence, dismissed plaintiff’s suit at his cost. Hence this appeal.

We notice, at the outset, that the defendant has renewed, in this court, his exception of no cause of action. It is argued that the fact that plaintiff alleges that he looked down St. Charles Avenue and did not see any traffic, evinces negligence on his part because if he had looked properly he would have seen the automobile, driven by young Levy, approaching. We find no* merit in the contention. Whether the plaintiff should have seen the defendant’s son at the time he looked before entering the intersection is a question of fact which can be disposed of only by a trial of the merits of the case and not upon an exception which, for the purpose of hearing, admits all facts well pleaded. Our decision in Arbo v. Schulze et al., 173 So. 560, cited by the defendant, is based on an entirely different state of facts and bears no resemblance to the allegations made in the petition under attack.

We therefore pass on to a consideration of the merits of the case. The scene of the accident is the right angle intersection of St. Charles and Jackson Avenues. St. Charles Avenue is a boulevard bearing two sets of street car trades on its neutral ground. On each side of this neutral ground there are paved lanes for vehicular traffic. The lakeside lane is used by vehicles proceeding in the direction of uptown, or towards Carrollton Avenue, whereas the riverside lane is designated for use by traffic traveling downtown or in the direction of Canal St. Jackson Avenue, like St. Charles, is a double highway with two sets of street car tracks on its neutral ground. The uptown traffic lane is devoted to vehicles proceeding towards the Mississippi River, whereas on *257 the downtown roadway traffic travels in the opposite direction.

The plaintiff testifies that on the morning of the accident he was traveling on the uptown roadway of Jackson Avenue in the direction of the Mississippi River; that, when he arrived at the intersection of St. Charles Avenue, he brought his car to a full ^top and looked down the lakeside roadway thereof for oncoming traffic and that, finding there were no approaching vehicles, he proceeded across the intersection. He further declares that, when he stopped at the intersection, he noticed the presence of a Jackson Avenue street car (traveling in the opposite direction from that in which he was driving) traversing the St. Charles Avenue crossing and that the street car was about to enter the lakeside roadway of St. Charles Avenue from the neutral ground when he started to negotiate the same. Under these circumstances, he says, he felt that it was safe to proceed and that he had practically completed the lakeside roadway crossing when, suddenly and without warning, the Ford automobile driven by defendant’s son, being operated at a high rate of speed, crashed into the left rear side of his automobile, at a point near the St. Charles Avenue neutral ground, knocking it into a small post situated nearby.

The plaintiff’s testimony, with respect to the' negligent acts of the defendant’s son, is fully corroborated by three disinterested eye-witnesses to the occurrence, viz., Harris and Lauve, taxicab drivers, and Pre-jean, the conductor of the street car which was traversing the intersection at the time of the accident. All of these witnesses verify the fact that the defendant’s son was operating the Ford automobile at a speed variously estimated at between 40 and 50 miles per hour and also establish beyond peradventure that the defendant’s son swerved the Ford around the rear of the street car and collided with plaintiff’s automobile at a point very near to the neutral ground of St. Charles Avenue.

A review of all of the evidence in the case leaves no doubt in our minds that young Levy was operating the Ford automobile in a most reckless manner and without due regard for the rights of others. He and another boy were driving home from a party at five o’clock in the morning at a speed in excess of that permitted by law. Trailing his car was an-other automobile driven by a friend of his named Gaspaille who frankly admits that he was traveling at a speed of between 30 and 35 miles per hour. It was suggested by plaintiff’s witness Lauve, a taxicab driver (whose cab was passed by the Levy and Gaspaille cars approximately one block from the accident), that the drivers of these cars were engaged in racing each other. This casual observation by the witness is not without foundation as he estimates the speed of the passing automobiles at between 40 and 50 miles per hour.

We next consider the defendant’s charge that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The defense seems to be predicated on an assumption that the plaintiff either failed to stop at the St. Charles Avenue crossing or that, if he did stop, he was imprudent in entering the intersection while the street car was proceeding thereon inasmuch as it is said that his vision with respect to traffic traveling on the roadway was masked by the presence of the street car.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vassar-v-levy-lactapp-1938.