White v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp. Ltd.

210 So. 2d 580, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4781
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1968
DocketNo. 3042
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 210 So. 2d 580 (White v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp. Ltd.) 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
White v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp. Ltd., 210 So. 2d 580, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4781 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This appeal was lodged in this court by Mrs. Mary Elizabeth White and Howard C. White, plaintiffs, who brought this action against The Employers Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., and Phoenix of Hartford Insurance Company, and Nathaniel B. Knight, Jr., defendants, for damages which resulted by the death of their minor son, Jimmie Carl White, who died from injuries suffered in an automobile accident. After trial of the case on the merits, the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court rendered judgment in favor of defendants. Phoenix of Hartford Insurance Company had been dismissed from the case prior to trial.

The principal undisputed facts of the case according to the pleadings and the evidence are that plaintiffs resided with their six children on Alliance Avenue between Jefferson Highway and the Mississippi River in the City of Kenner, Louisiana. On the night of February 2, 1965, about 6:30 p. m., the plaintiffs sent their 13-year-old son, Larry White, on his bicycle to Skippy’s Grocery Store and Bar to get cigarettes and bread for the parents. The plaintiffs gave permission for their younger son, Jimmie (born December 21, 1956), to accompany Larry on his sister’s (girl type) bicycle. Skippy’s store was located on the north side of the Airline Highway at Lesan Drive. In that area the Airline Highway runs generally east and west and Lesan Drive and Alliance Avenue run generally north and south. Lesan Drive is quite some distance west of Alliance Avenue. Lesan Drive enters the Airline Highway from the north but does not continue south across it. Alliance Avenue intersects Airline Highway about a half mile west of the overpass. The overpass referred to is on Airline Highway a short distance west of New Orleans International Airport (Moisant Field). To reach Skippy’s from their home the boys traveled north on Alliance Avenue, across Jefferson Highway (the old River Road) and continued to and across Airline Highway where they went west to Skippy’s store. The whole area involved is in the corporate limits of Kenner. The boys arrived at Skippy’s, made their purchases and started on the return trip to their home. When they came out of the store, Larry rode south across the Airline Highway and turned east on the south shoulder or on the south side of the highway, while Jimmie turned east [582]*582along the north side or the north shoulder of the highway. Jimmie turned toward the south to cross the Airline Highway at the first break or opening in the neutral ground. This crossing through the neutral ground is 61 feet long and starts about 400 feet or more from Lesan Drive. Jimmie crossed the west bound traffic lanes of the Airline and as his bicycle entered the left east bound traffic lane, or momentarily after such entrance, the front wheel of his bicycle was struck by the left end of the front bumper of Mr. Knight’s Chevrolet Impala automobile traveling east in the left lane of the Airline Highway. Jimmie was thrown into the left side of the car, breaking the windshield at its lower left corner. After the accident his bicycle was lying in the neutral ground and his body was on the pavement in the left lane near the south neutral ground curb a few feet east of the point of impact. It was a dark, cold night and Jimmie’s clothes included blue jean trousers and two dark colored jackets. The Airline Highway in that area had been under construction at some recent time. New pavement of all four lanes and curbing along the sides of the highway and at the neutral ground had been completed but the filling and paving of the shoulders and neutral ground had not been done. The neutral ground was seven feet wide along the center of the highway. There were two traffic lanes on each side of the neutral ground, the south side lanes for traffic going east toward New Orleans and the north side lanes for traffic going west toward Baton Rouge. From about the point of collision there were 20 feet of tire skid marks which angled somewhat to the south side of the highway followed by a space of 100 feet without skid marks, at the end of which space skid marks again appeared for 20 feet ending at the left front wheel of the automobile against the south curb of the neutral ground, about 140 feet east of the point of impact. The wheel base of the automobile was one inch less that 10 feet.

Larry White testified that coming out of the store and crossing the Airline Highway as he rode east along the south side of the highway he could see his brother Jimmie, riding east on the north side, by the lights from vehicles going west toward Baton Rouge. When there was no traffic going west Jimmie turned to cross the Airline. Before Jimmie got to the neutral ground Larry said he saw lights of a car behind him going to New Orleans and he hollered to Jimmie to stop; that when Jimmie stopped with both feet on the ground he could see Jimmie plain because the car lights were on him; that when he told Jimmie to stop the Knight car was about even with Larry; that a big truck was behind the car; that other cars were behind the truck; that Jimmie was stopped with both feet on the ground when the car hit the bicycle. He said the car slid sideways and then “fishtailed” down the highway, with the stop or brake lights on all the way. Larry did not see the car actually strike Jimmie. He just saw a bunch of sparks. Larry said he knows Jimmie was stopped when he was hit. He saw him stop before the car got there. When Jimmie stopped with both feet on the ground his bike was inside the neutral ground lines. At one point Larry said the car was coming at a normal speed. At another he said it was going pretty fast. Notwithstanding Larry’s testimony, we are of the opinion from all of the evidence on the subject, that the car was traveling about 30 miles per hour.

Counsel for defendants argues, with some merit, that Larry’s testimony should be completely disregarded. Larry’s testimony does contain some contradictions on various points, particularly when his discovery deposition taken between the time of the accident and the trial of the case is compared with the testimony at the trial. However, we take into consideration that Larry was a child with no greater understanding and experience in life and no more capacity for recollection or wilful design than his age of 13 years would indicate. We can give some weight to some of his assertions which we believe can be accorded some degree of plausibility and credit without [583]*583applying the adage falsus in -uno, falsus in omnibus.

Mr. Knight gave a deposition in April, 1966. The trial in the district court was in May, 1967. Considering all of his testimony, we find that Mr. Knight was coming from Baton Rouge to New Orleans in a Chevrolet Impala automobile alone. He had been traveling between Baton Rouge and New Orleans almost every week for a long time. On the open highway he had been driving about 60 miles per hour but he said, as was his custom, when he reached somewhere near the city limits of Kenner he slowed down because from his experience he knew that the traffic began to build up in that area. It was dark and he did not look at his speedometer but he thinks he was traveling about 30 miles per hour when the accident happened. As he approached this point he saw nothing of an unusual nature, no signals or blinking lights, no signs or barricades, in indication that construction was underway there. He was driving with city driving headlights but not the high, bright headlights. There was no traffic near him at that time. His car was the only one on that side, of the road and there was none coming on the other side.

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Bluebook (online)
210 So. 2d 580, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-employers-liability-assurance-corp-ltd-lactapp-1968.