Wall v. Great American Indemnity Co.

46 So. 2d 655, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 418
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1950
DocketNo. 7460
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 So. 2d 655 (Wall v. Great American Indemnity 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
Wall v. Great American Indemnity Co., 46 So. 2d 655, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 418 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

KENNON, Judge.

On January 26, 1946, plaintiff was one of a group of five highway employees engaged in pouring tar in the spaces between the paved sections of the highway between U. S. Highway No. 80 and Doy-line, Louisiana. Alleging that defendant, W. T. Sharpling, was the owner and operator of a Plymouth Sedan upon which the other defendant was the liability insurance carrier, and that Sharpling drove down the road at an excessive speed, ignoring the caution signs and presence of a truck and other equipment on the road, striking plaintiff and knocking him a distance of more than thirty-five feet and imposing serious and permanent injuries, plaintiff filed this suit praying for judgment against both defendants, in solido, for more than $6000.

The Travelers Insurance Company, alleging that it carried compensation insurance covering plaintiff at the time of his injury, intervened in the suit, praying that out of any judgment awarded the plaintiff, Walter C. Wall, it should be paid by preference the amount received from inter-venor by Wall as compensation.

The Great American Indemnity Company, liability insurer of the Plymouth Sedan, filed an exception of no right of action based upon the defense that the policy contained a provision that same should be of no effect in the event the vehicle should be used as a taxi, and that Sharpling had used same for that purpose.

After trial on the exception of no right of action, it was overruled by the District Court.

Defendants in answer admitted that the injury to plaintiff occurred on the date alleged, but set forth that defendant Sharp-ling was operating his car at a speed of not over thirty miles an hour when he approached the group of highway workmen; that as he approached within one hundred feet, one of the workmen who was engaged in warning traffic, signaled him to come on; that after sounding his horn, he proceeded past the highway equipment and working crew at a speed of twenty to twenty-five miles an hour; that the accident occurred when the plaintiff, without looking, stepped directly in the path of the Sharpling car and that the accident resulted solely from the action of the plaintiff in walking directly into the path of the oncoming car without looking and, without heeding the warning horn.

In the alternative, in the event the Court should find Sharpling guilty of negligence, the defendants pleaded the above listed acts of contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff as a bar to his recovery.

In a supplemental answer, the indemnity company set forth that the limit of its liability under the policy involved was $5000.

The District Court rendered judgment for $4996 in favor of plaintiff, giving well expressed written reasons for the judgment. Defendants appealed, and in this Court have reurged their exception of no right of action as well as their defense to the merits.

On the Exception of No Right of Action

The policy covering Sharpling’s Plymouth Sedan was issued for a term of one year beginning October 26, 1945. The purpose for which the automobile was to be used was stated as “business 'and pleasure.” Sharpling’s original 1945 license had been issued in January of that year for normal personal use. On 'November 19, 1945, Sharpling applied for and obtained a second 1945 license in which he stated that' the car was to be used as a taxi, and paid the 1945 taxi license fee of $10 (less $3 credit given him for the personal license previously purchased). On January 3, 1946, Sharpling applied for and was issued .a personal (non-taxi) 1946 license for his car! His testimony is that the taxi business had not been 'profitable and he decided to abandon it un January T, 1946, when his taxi license expired. At [658]*658the time of the accident the 1946 plates were in the car, but the taxi-type 1945 license was still on his car, as was the taxi sign.

There is no proof that any fares were collected or any taxi trips made by Sharpling after January 1, 1946. On the day of the accident, Sharpling had gone to Shreveport from Doyline with one J. L. Green. Green lived in the same section of the parish as did Sharpling. They were friends and Sharpling had left some of his cattle at Green’s farm, or under Green’s care. Green wished to go to Shreveport to see about some watches and Sharpling wished to secure some chicken wire. Both testified that no fare was paid or contemplated. That the trip was under the control of Sharpling and was not made as a taxi mission for Green is further indicated by the fact that Sharpling, after beginning the return journey and reaching the edge of Bossier City, remembered that he had not purchased the chicleen wire and returned to Shreveport and fulfilled this personal mission before again starting the trip home. Our finding is in accord with that of the District Court which held that, on the day of the accident, Sharpling was not operating the car as a taxi or public conveyance and that Green was not a fare-paying passenger.

On the Merits

At about 11:30 a. m. on the day of the injury, a highway crew consisting of plaintiff and four other workmen was engaged in pouring tar in the crosswise spacing •cracks or crevices in the paved highway leading from U. S. Highway No. 80 to Doyline, Louisiana. The hot tar was procured from a kettle built into a small trailer which was being drawn along the west side of the twenty foot pavement in a ■southerly' direction by the highway truck proceeding” at a slow or “crawl” rate of speed. Besides the driver of the truck and one workman who remained some ten to fifteen feet in rear of the kettle trailer to flag the traffic approaching from the rear; there were three men (including plaintiff) who were engaged in drawing the melted tar into two gallon buckets, equipped with pouring spouts, and pouring same into the crevices of the pavement. These crevices extended across the full width of the pavement at intervals of approximately fifteen feet. One workman held his bucket under the spout extending from the rear of the trailer and when same was filled, dosed the spout and poured the hot tar through the pouring spout along the crack and across the width of the highway. Meanwhile, a second workman was filling his pouring bucket with tar in order to pour the next cross crevice. In the same manner the third workman filled his bucket and poured the next cross crevice, and then the first workman was back at the tar kettle. Meanwhile, the truck driver proceeded on the right side of the pavement at a crawling rate of speed and the flagman followed along in rear with the assigned mission of flagging down traffic approaching from the rear. There was no flagman at the front, the workmen verifying the statement of the rear flagman who testified that “we (the workmen) look for traffic meeting us, and I am watching for traffic coming from behind.”

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 2d 655, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-great-american-indemnity-co-lactapp-1950.