Whipple v. Lirette

124 So. 160, 11 La. App. 485, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 243
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 10, 1929
DocketNo. 453
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 124 So. 160 (Whipple v. Lirette) 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
Whipple v. Lirette, 124 So. 160, 11 La. App. 485, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 243 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

ELLIOTT, J.

Mrs. Seraline Palgout Whipple, wife of Walter Whipple, was knocked down and badly injured by an automobile driven by Melvin Lirette, unomancipated minor son of the defendant, Emile Lirette, residing wth him. She claims damages of Emile Lirette on account of her injuries. An exception of no cause [486]*486of action, based on the alleged fact that her alleged injuries were caused by the negligence of his unemancipated minor son was overruled. Defendant urges the exception in this court.

The exception was iproperly overruled. The law makes the father responsible for the damages occasioned by the fault of his unemancipated son residing with him. C. C. Art. 2318. Marionneaux, tutrix vs. Bringier, 35 La. Ann. 13; Mullis vs. Blaise, 37 La. Ann. 92; Rush vs. Town of Farmerville et al., 156 La. 857, 101 So. 243; Allen vs. Currie et al., 8 La. App. 30.

The plaintiff alleges that she was injured as a result of the grossly negligent and wantonly reckless driving of defendant’s son.

Defendant denies the negligence and recklessness, etc., alleged against his son. He avers that his son saw the. headlights on the Yillavasso car, upon crossing the interco.? stal canal at Bourg, 250 feet below the Whipple residence, but thought it was coming toward him. And as it was pn the wrong side of the road, he expected every moment to see it turn to the other side. That his son continued his course until it was apparent that unless one of the cars deviated from its course, a head-on collision was inevitable. That confronted with the exigencies of the situation his son took the ditch on his right rather than violate the rules of the road by passing the apparently approaching car on the left.

That his son discovered after the accident, that the apparently approaching car was in reality stopped in front of the Whipple residence on the wrong side of the road for its parking, and that the occupants were in conversation with Mrs. Whipple at the moment of -the acoidpn* That the course adopted by his son in the effort to avoid a collision was a judicious exercise of sound discretion.

The answer does not allege that stand ing on the bridge was an act of negligence on the part of the plaintiff. His conten tion is that his son did not know, and could not have known, when he turned to the right and took the ditch that plaintiff was standing on the bridge which spanned the ditch. That it was not a fault on his part to turn to the right under the circumstances; that such is th« law of the road. That the real cause ol the accident was the car parked on the wrong side of the road, with which his pon had nothing to do.

We do not understand defendant to contend that it would not have been his dut^ t.o turn to his left in order to pass a car that he knew was parked, but that it wa« not his duty to turn to his left in ordet to pass a ear that he supposed was running, coming toward him.

The following facts are admitted, or not denied by the answer, and therefore under the pleading Act 157 of 1912, section 1 (amended Act 27 of 1926) may be regarded as admitted. Other facts stated were established without dispute. The occurrence in question took place after d&yk in front of plaintiff’s residence at abouv. 7 o’clock P. M., on November 1, 1927. Plaintiff’s residence is situated fronting on the left or descending side of the highway which leads from Houma past Bourg and on to Montegut. The highway in question is gravelled in front of her residence to the width of 22 feet. A road drainage ditch approximately 8 feet wide and 3 feet in depth runs in front of her home between her front gate and the highway parallel [487]*487with the highway. The outer side of the open highway, a strip about two feet in width, next to the ditch is not gravelled.

A foot-way leading from plaintiff’s residence to the highway crosses the intervening ditch by means of a wooden bridge. This bridge was between 8 and 10 feet long and about 3% feet wide. Its end next to the highway rested on the dirt shoulder which formed the bank of the ditch. The plaintiff was not in the road when struck, but was standing on the bridge over the ditch about half way across the ditch talking to Mr. and Mrs. Villavasso and their daughter, who were seated in an automobile headed down the road toward Bourg, which they had stopped on the left or descending side of the road in the direction they were going, and which for them was the wrong side of the road. The front door of their automobile was about two feet from the end of the bridge and close to the outer edge of the gravel. The middle of the automobile was about opposite the bridge, the engine and front part below, and the rear end above it.

Melvin Lirette and three companions were driving up the road. They had just passed Bourg and were going on to Houma. They were therefore going in the opposite direction in which the Villavasso car was headed. The Lirette car was on the right side of the road, the side on which it belonged, in the direction it was going. The road contained a slight curve which commenced about 500 feet below the place in question and extended about the same distance beyond same, which however, did not prevent anybody from seeing the Lirette car that might be coming in the road, unless the party coming had been immediately behind the parked car. Therefore the question is, whether, under the established facts, plaintiff’s injuries may be said to have been the direct and proximate result of the wanton, reckless and careless conduct of defendant’s son, as provided by the law, Civil Code, Art. 2315, etc.

Elliott on Roads and Streets, 3rd Ed., sections 1079-1080, 1081, 1082, pp. 618-619-620-621 has this to say relative to meeting, passing and stopping:

“It is a general rule that one may travel upon any part of highway not occupied at the time by another, but if he meets another traveler whom he desires to pass, or who desires to pass him in either direction, there are certain rights and duties which each must observe in order to avoid a collision.
“The first and most important rule is, that in meeting, each party shall bear or keep to the right. If there is no statute on the subject proof of this custom is not necessary, for the court will take judicial knowledge of it.
“This rule requiring travellers who meet, .to pass to the right, is not an inflexible one, and there may be circumstances requiring one to keep to the left in the particular case. Emergencies may arise where, in order to escape from danger to one’s self, or to prevent injuries to others, it will not only be excusable, but perfectly proper to temporarily- violate the general rule.
“One who violates the law of the road by driving on the wrong side of the way assumes the risk of all such experiments, and must use greater care than if he had kept on the right sid-5 of the road. If a collision takes place the presumption is generally against the party on the wrong side. Especially is this true where the collision takes place in the dark. But the mere fact that one is on the wrong side of the road in violation of the law, gives another no right to neglect all precautions, and if by the exercise of ordinary care the latter might prevent a collision, notwithstanding the fault of the former, but fails to do so, he has no cause to complain. So while the fact that one that is on the [488]

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 160, 11 La. App. 485, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whipple-v-lirette-lactapp-1929.