White v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co.

183 So. 537
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1938
DocketNo. 1868.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 So. 537 (White v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing 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
White v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co., 183 So. 537 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Le BLANC, Judge.

On March 1, 1937, Dr. Henry B. White and his minor son, Henry B. White, Jr., were both injured in an automobile accident which occurred at about 1.30 in the afternoon, on Flighway No. 90 which is also known as the Old Spanish Trail, about one mile east of the city of Lake Charles. *538 Dr. White wás returning to his office in Lake Charles from a trip to the country. He had just entered Highway No. 90 from the De Ridder Highway and was trailing a large truck belonging to the Halliburton .Oil Well Cementing Company, one of the defendants herein which was being driven by one of its employees, Steve Vardaman, who is also made a party defendant.

Dr. White was driving a Lincoln Zephyr coupe automobile which he had purchased only a few days previous, and his minor son, ten years old, was in the car with him.

The Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Company has its place of business on the south side of Highway No. 90, approximately 750 feet west of the intersection of the De Ridder highway, and the truck Vardaman was driving was on its way there. The building stands some 40 feet away from the south edge of the gravel shoulder of Highway 90 and there is a gravelled surfaced driveway leading to it from that point. It is not near any intersecting street or road and a vehicle approaching it from the east and desiring to enter, has to make a left hand turn in the middle of the highway and cross over the same in order to do so. Vardaman was in the act of making such turn, with Dr. White following him, when the two vehicles collided. Dr. White lost control of his car and it finally landed against a sycamore tree on the north side of the highway about 125 feet from the point of the collision. It was from the force of the impact with the tree that Dr. Whité’s car was practically demolished and he and his son sustained the personal injuries complained of, to recover damages for all of which he has instituted suit for his own behalf and for the use and benefit of his minor son.

In the original petition filed by him, Dr. White claimed $15,700 for himself and $1700 for his child. In a supplemental petition the amount claimed on his own behalf was increased to the sum of $33,200, made up of the following items: pain and suffering physical, $12,500, mental $7000; 1 deformity and temporary disability, $4000; loss of time and earning capacity, $8000; medical expenses $500 and damages to automobile $1200. The damages claimed for his minor son included $1000 for physical pain and suffering, $500 for mental suffering and $200 for medical expenses.

Vardaman, the driver of the truck is charged with negligence in driving at a speed of 20 or 25 miles without due regard to the traffic then existing on the highway and attempting at the same time, to make a sudden left hand turn at the point already described without looking back or through the rear view mirror with which the truck was equipped. He is also charged with gross-negligence in failing to give any signal whatever of his intention to .make such turn and also in leaving the north lane of travel on the highway and suddenly going into the south lane without observing the White car which was at the moment occupying that lane and in the act of passing ahead.

Vardaman is also charged with being at the time engaged in the course of his duties as an employee of the Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Company and on that ground the latter is sought to be held liable for his acts of negligence. That fact is admitted and it is an issue which is not controverted.

The two defendants filed separate answers but in substance they are the same. They both deny any negligence on the part of Vardaman, driver of the truck, and aver on the contrary that during the time mentioned in plaintiff’s petition as covering the period leading to and the moment at which the collision took place he exercised that degree of care and caution required of a prudent driver and complied fully with the provisions of the State- Highway Regulatory Statute.

They both aver that he was running at a speed not in excess of 15 miles per hour gradually reducing the same -to 5 miles as he prepared to make the turn in the highway to enter his employer’s premises. They aver further that he looked in the rear vision mirror of his truck and seeing the plaintiff’s car which was then at a distance of more than 200 yards behind him, gave the warning and signal of his intention to turn to the south, and as he was making the turn and his truck had crossed the center stripe 'in the paved portion of the highway a distance not to exceed 2 feet, plaintiff’s car running at a highly excessive and dangerous rate of speed, without warning, ran into the front portion of the truck. They both set out that plaintiff had ample space on the left hand or south side of the highway at that point to use in passing ahead of the truck and could easily have avoided the collision. They aver further that plaintiff’s car sustained no damage from its collision with the *539 truck, but that the same and his injuries as well as those of his minor son were caused by his continued negligence and reckless driving and finally running his car against the sycamore tree on the north side of the highway.

After setting out a complete lack of negligence on the part of Vardaman, and urging that plaintiff’s own negligence was the sole and proximate cause of the accident, the defendants both, in the alternative plead contributory negligence against the plaintiff and in the further alternative, they plead the doctrine of last clear chance.

On the issues as thus presented to him the district judge, after a lengthy hearing rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and assigned written reasons therefor. A motion for a rehearing was heard and he again assigned written reasons and overruled the same. The award was in the total sum of $11,549 in favor of Dr. White individually and $600 for and in behalf of his minor son. The award in his favor was reduced by the sum of $20 by the ruling on the motion for rehearing.

- The defendants have appealed and plaintiff has answered the appeal asking for an increase of the amount of the award in both instances, to the sums as originally demanded.

The prominence of the plaintiff as a citizen and a practicing physician and surgeon, the rather unusual size of the demand as well as the ability of counsel engaged on each side, has made of this a bitterly contested litigation. In their zeal and enthusiasm in looking after and protecting the interests of their respective clients, counsel have travelled a bit far afield and mentioned matters which might better have been left unsaid, as a court, in considering a case on an appeal, can only review the findings and the judgment of the trial court on the record as made up during the trial. We have of course discarded* all extraneous matter, and, confining ourselves solely to a consideration of the record, find it impossible to say definitely that on the question of liability, the district judge committed manifest error. The determination of that question rests largely on the credibility of certain witnesses who testify that they saw the accident. There is conflict in some of the testimony but the unbending rule ha£ been, and is, that especially where such conflict exist, great weight is attached to the findings of the trial judge.

On the date of the accident, Dr. White was just a few months short of being sixty years old.

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Bluebook (online)
183 So. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-halliburton-oil-well-cementing-co-lactapp-1938.