Williams v. Brown

181 So. 679
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 1937
DocketNo. 5546.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 181 So. 679 (Williams v. Brown) 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
Williams v. Brown, 181 So. 679 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The Ford V-8 truck of defendant Brown and a Model T Ford truck driven by defendant, William Haines, collided late of the afternoon of September 8, 1935, on highway No. 71, some thirty miles south of the city of Shreveport, and Odie May Williams, 20-year-old daughter of plaintiff, a passenger in the Haines truck, died a few days later from injuries suffered by her in the collision. The Brown truck was then being operated by defendant, Rufus Lovett. Brown was riding in it at the time.

Plaintiff brings this suit against Brown, Lovett and Haines to recover damages from them on account of his daughter’s death, presumably on the theory that the collision was the result of their concurring negligence. However, the petition is barren of any charge of negligence against Haines. It is alleged that he is indebted in solido to plaintiff, but no reasons are assigned or facts set out which can serve as a basis for this allegation. Rather, in contradiction of the charge, it is alleged “that said accident or impact was caused by the reckless driving of the V-8 Ford truck occupied by the said B. L. Brown and Rufus Lovett”. And amplifying this general charge, it is averred that the truck was recklessly driven because of the intoxicated condition of Brown and Lovett; that this condition caused them to lose control of the truck in that they misjudged distances and directions in “close places”; and that for these reasons and causes the Brown truck suddenly cut across the road and ran into the Haines truck. It is additionally alleged that it was Brown’s duty to instruct Lovett, his alleged chauffeur and employee, to reduce the speed of his vehicle and stay on his side of the road when meeting or passing other cars.

Haines did not answer. The case was defaulted as to him. Exceptions of mis-joinder and of no cause and no right of action were filed by Brown and Lovett, who will hereinafter be denominated defendants. All exceptions in limine were overruled; and thereafter the exception of no cause of action was sustained to an extent and plaintiff was allowed to file an amendment to cure a defect in the petition. The exception of non-joinder has apparently been abandoned. It is not urged here. The exception of no cause and no right of action, in the respects now urged, is directed against the vagueness and lack of definiteness of plaintiff’s allegations regarding the facts of negligence and recklessness on defendants’ part as a or the cause of the collision.

Defendants deny any liability to plaintiff and deny that the collision of the cars was to any extent the result of their negligence or carelessness. They specifically deny that either was intoxicated when the accident occurred. They admit that Odie May Williams was a passenger on the Haines truck and that she died on September 11, 1935, from injuries received in the accident. They aver in defense that they saw the Haines truck approaching them from the south at a rapid rate of speed, on their side of the road some two or three feet; that Lovett sounded the horn but apparently Haines did not hear it or observe their presence, or, if so, was indifferent thereto; that in order to prevent a head-on collision, Lovett pulled his truck off of the highway onto the dirt shoulder, both right wheels getting thereon, and, — “that this shoulder being slippery and muddy, when the hind wheels struck the soft dirt, it being a light truck, it threw the front wheels of same back on the highway and the two trucks were forced together on ’ these defendants’ side of the black line. This accident was caused by reason of the said Haines being on the *681 wrong side of the road, forcing your defendants off the. road onto the muddy and slippery shoulder, and the prime and proximate cause of this accident was the said Haines driving his truck on the wrong side of the road, creating and forcing an emergency and condition which resulted in this accident.”

In the alternative, defendants plead that should it be found and held that the accident did not occur in the manner above set forth, then they show that said Haines, having forced their truck from the road onto the wet and slippery shoulder, a ditch being immediately on their right, an emergency was thereby created through no fault of theirs, and that in order to -avert running into the ditch, Lovett pulled the truck to his left in an effort to regain the road, resulting in running into the Haines truck, which was then and there on their side of the black center line; and that the accident happened in this manner.

Further in the alternative, defendants plead that if it should be held that the collision occurred through or by the fault of either or both of them, then they show that Haines was a grossly incompetent and negligent driver to the knowledgé of plaintiff and his deceased daughter, and that riding with such a driver, under the circumstances herein related, constitutes such contributory negligence on their part as to bar recovery herein.

Further in the alternative, defendants plead that the truck whereon deceased was riding when injured had an open bed which extended beyond the wheels on either side and that the riding thereon by Odie May Williams, with her legs hanging down from the bed’s side, constituted contributory negligence on her part and for that reason plaintiff should not recover.

With these alternative averments as a basis, contributory negligence is specially pleaded.

From a judgment for defendants, plaintiff has appealed.

On objection of defendants’ counsel, testimony offered by plaintiff to prove that their truck was negligently and carelessly operated immediately prior to and at the time of the accident, was excluded. This ruling is based upon the vagueness and indefiniteness of plaintiff’s allegations However, subsequent to the ruling, defendants themselves, without reservation, ad-duced testimony, including their own, which fully described the movements of , both vehicles as they approached each other for a distance -of several hundred yards and to the point of impact. So far as concerns defendants’ truck, we find that their version of its said movements not at variance with the established facts of the case. We are of the opinion, howevér, that by the ^ procedure above mentioned, they waived the benefits of the exceptions and that we are warranted in considering and passing on the case as though such exception had not been filed and urged or objection to the admissibility of the ¡excluded testimony made. Fontenot v. Manuel, 46 La.Ann. 1373, 16 So. 182; Ducote v. Ducote, 183 La. 886, 165 So. 133; Yazoo & M. V. R. Co. v. Wagner, 5 Cir., 87 F. 855.

We are convinced that the charge of intoxication made against defendants is not sustained by the testimony. Mr. Sledge only testified that they were so affected after the accident. His testimony on the subject is really in the nature of an opinion based upon defendants’ physical movements immediately following the collision and the odor from their breath. They were suffering from acute shock and each had had a bottle or two of beer.

The accident occurred at a low place on the concrete highway from which the road gradually ascends southerly 505 yards to the crest of a hill, and ascends northerly 243 yards to a hill top. The concrete slab is 18 feet wide and the shoulders 4 feet wide. The Haines truck was traveling northerly at a moderate rate of speed. The Brown truck was going southerly at a faster speed, we think.

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-brown-lactapp-1937.