Washington Fire & Marine Insurance v. Williams

144 So. 2d 737, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2348
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 4, 1962
DocketNo. 437
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 144 So. 2d 737 (Washington Fire & Marine Insurance v. Williams) 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
Washington Fire & Marine Insurance v. Williams, 144 So. 2d 737, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2348 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

CECIL C. CUTRER, Judge pro tem.

This suit docketed as No. 437 in our Court, along with No. 438, Barra v. Williams, La., 144 So.2d 741, arose as a result of an intersectional collision between a vehicle driven by Warren Bowman and another vehicle driven by Charles Williams, the minor son of Bert Williams, the defendant in both of these suits. In suit No. 437 Warren Bowman and his insurer, Washington Fire & Marine Insurance Company, sued for the amount of property damage inflicted upon Bowman’s automobile. In suit No. 438 Mrs. Catherine Barra, who was a guest passenger in the. Bowman car, at the time the accident occurred, sues for personal injuries received as a result of the collision. These two suits were consolidated below for trial.

After submission of all the evidence, the trial judge found both drivers, Warren Bowman and Charles Williams, to have been negligent. However, as to Mrs. Bar-ra, the court found her free of contributory negligence. Accordingly, judgment was rendered dismissing the suit brought by Washington Fire & Marine Insurance and its insured, Warren Bowman, but awarding judgment in favor of Mrs. Barra against defendant, Bert Williams, rendering judgment in the sum of $386.00. From these judgments plaintiff in suit No. 437, as well as defendant in suit No. 438, have-prosecuted these appeals.

[738]*738Defendant Williams, appellee in suit No. 437 and appellant in suit No. 438, does not question the trial judge’s determination that his minor son, Charles Williams, was negligent nor that he, as the parent of Charles Williams, is liable for the torts committed by him. In suit No. 437 he merely seeks an affirmance of the trial court’s decision that plaintiff’s suit therein should be dismissed due to the insured’s contributory negligence. In No. 438 he seeks a reversal of the lower court’s judgment on the ground that Mrs. Catherine Barra, the injured guest passenger, has, by her failure to join Warren Bowman, her host driver, with defendant as a joint tort-feasor in this action, released and abandoned any claim against Warren Bowman without reservation. Defendant Williams urges that this failure to join Bowman is tantamount to a tacit release of his alleged joint tort-feasor, Bowman, and due to her failure to reserve her rights against defendant Williams, Mrs. Barra has also abandoned and released defendant from all liability. Williams contends that joint tort-feasors are bound in solido and hence a release as to one, without reservation, is a release as to all. It is obvious that defendant’s whole argument on appeal in No. 438, outlined above, is predicated on the assumption that the trial judge’s determination in No. 437, that Warren Bowman was contributor-ily negligent, is correct. Otherwise Bowman would not in any way have contributed to Mrs. Barra’s injuries and hence would not be a joint tort-feasor with defendant Williams and bound in solido with Williams to Mrs. Barra for the amount of damages she sustained.

That Warren Bowman was not negligent in any way, is exactly the position taken by Washington Fire & Marine and its insured, Bowman, on the appeal taken from the judgment rendered below, No. 437. They contend that the trial judge erred in determining that Warren Bowman was contribu-torily negligent and accordingly pray that we reverse this portion of the decision and cast defendant Williams for the amount of damage done to Bowman’s car. Thus, it is apparent that a decision by us reversing the trial judge’s determination of negligence on the part of Bowman in No. 437 disposes automatically of defendant Williams’ contention in suit No. 438.

Turning now to the undisputed facts as elicited in the consolidated trial of these two matters below, we find that the accident occurred at approximately 2:00 a. m. on November 23, 1958, in the City of New Orleans at the intersection of Canal Street and Claiborne Avenue. Immediately prior to the collision, Charles Williams, the minor son of the defendant, Bert Williams, was proceeding up Canal Street towards the lake as he approached the intersection. He had as passengers, in the borrowed car he was driving, Miss Myrna Dahmer, his date who was seated in the front seat with him, and Mr. Chester Dickey, and Miss Jerry Sollieau, both of whom were seated in the rear seat. At approximately the same time Warren Bowman was approaching the intersection on Claiborne Avenue, from Williams’ left. Mr. Bowman was accompanied by his wife and Mrs. Catherine Barra, who were seated in the front, and by Mr. and Mrs. Willie Williams, who were seated in the rear. The intersection of Canal and Claiborne is controlled by a semaphore traffic light.

From this point forward, the evidence is in considerable conflict. Both drivers testify that they each had the green light and each is corroborated to a greater or lesser extent by the passengers in their respective vehicles. The trial judge found that the light was changing or had just changed immediately prior to the collision. However, the reasons he orally assigned for his judgments here does not indicate in whose favor the light had changed, he being of the opinion that it would make no difference in the outcome since each had ample opportunity to avoid the accident had they but kept a proper lookout for each other. With all due respect to our learned brother below, we feel that under the recent [739]*739decision of Youngblood v. Robison, 118 So.2d 431, 239 La. 338, 118 So.2d 431, it is crucial that a determination be made, if possible, as to which driver the light favored since by virtue of the Youngblood decision, it is not necessary for one traversing an intersection on a green semaphore light to look to the left or the right before entering. The trial judge concluded that both drivers were negligent in that each had reasonable opportunity to observe the other and avoid the accident had they been keeping a proper lookout. But, as stated by Justice McCaleb, the organ of the Court in the Youngblood case,

“ * * * when a crossing is protected by an electric semaphore light it is not essential for the favored driver to look for violations by side-street traffic facing the red light for that traffic is not only required to stop but to remain stationary until the semaphore changes to green.”

With this in mind, we turn to the testimony of the two drivers involved in this collision, Charles Williams and Warren Bowman, and find them diametrically opposed as to the condition of the light at the time the accident occurred, each contending that the light favored him. Charles Williams testified that he was proceeding up Canal Street towards the lake for the purpose of bringing his date home. Mr. Williams and his date, Miss Myrna Dahmer, along with Mr. Chester Dickey and his date, Miss Jerry Sollieau, had just left the revels which usually follow the LSU-Tulane football game in the French Quarter of the City. However, Mr. Williams, as well as Miss Dahmer and Miss Sollieau, all testified that they had consumed only two or three drinks the whole evening. Mr. Williams stated that he was traveling at a speed of 20 to 25 miles per hour until he was one-half block away from the accident intersection at which time the light was green for traffic proceeding up Canal Street. He again observed the light to be green at a distance of a quarter of a block from the intersection and stated that upon reaching the intersection itself, he crossed without slackening his speed since he observed the light to be still green in his favor at that time. Mr.

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Related

Polk v. New York Fire and Marine Underwriters, Inc.
192 So. 2d 667 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1966)
Schexnayder v. Martin
150 So. 2d 616 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Allen v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
151 So. 2d 122 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Barra v. Williams
144 So. 2d 741 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 2d 737, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-fire-marine-insurance-v-williams-lactapp-1962.