Williamson v. Stephens

140 So. 2d 743, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1895
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1962
DocketNo. 9684
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 140 So. 2d 743 (Williamson v. Stephens) 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
Williamson v. Stephens, 140 So. 2d 743, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1895 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

This is an action ex delicto by plaintiffs, husband and wife, for damages resulting from an automobile collision. Named as defendants, were Claude D. Stephens, driver of the allegedly offending vehicle, his employer, The B. F. Goodrich Company, and the public liability insurer of the vehicle, American Motorist Insurance Company. From judgment rejecting plaintiffs’ demands, they prosecute this appeal.

This case was consolidated with another suit, being a cross action by Claude D. Stephens claiming damages resulting from injuries sustained in the same accident, in which Mr. and Mrs. Williamson and their liability insurer, Granite State Fire Insurance Company, were named as defendants, and the plaintiff, Stephens, appealed from judgment rejecting his demands.

[745]*745No written opinions having been given by the trial judge, it can only be concluded that he found both Mrs. Williamson and Mr. Stephens guilty of negligence which caused or contributed to the accident, and therefore rejected the demands of plaintiffs in both suits.

There appears to be no real dispute as to the legal principles involved, and, accordingly, the issues presented are reduced to questions of fact.

The accident occurred about 9:00 o’clock, A.M. on Saturday, December 13, 1958, at the intersection of East Washington Street with the northbound lanes of travel of what is known as the Youree Drive Extension. The latter thoroughfare is a four-lane highway upon which the respective lanes for north and southbound traffic are divided by a broad neutral ground in excess of thirty feet in width. The two northbound lanes are shown to be approximately twenty-six feet in width. To the east of the northbound traffic lanes on Youree Drive there is another neutral ground in excess of thirty feet in width and a paralleling service road some twenty-five or twenty-six feet wide. From the intersection East Washington Street inclines to the east, reaching a crest some 150 feet, more or less, distant from its intersection with the service road. To the south, the direction from which Stephens was approaching, Youree Drive makes a perceptible curve at a distance of approximately 400 feet from the intersection. The intersection is controlled by five semaphore signal lights located on the two ends of the neutral ground and three of the corners of the intersecting streets. At the time of the collision Mrs. Williamson was driving the community owned 1955 Cadillac Tudor Sedan west on East Washington Street and defendant, Stephens, in the scope of his employer’s business, was driving his 1956 Chevrolet standard shift automobile north on Youree Drive. The point of impact can be established only with reference to measurements made by the investigating officers of the Shreveport Police Department, who reached the scene a few minutes after the occurrence of the accident.' According to a plat of the intersection and surrounding-area filed in evidence on behalf of Stephens and apparently accepted as reasonably accurate by all the parties, the impact occurred approximately in the center of the two northbound lanes of travel on Youree Drive and well within the north lane of East Washington Street, a two-lane highway approximately twenty-five feet in width. In the absence of operation of the controlling signal lights neither street is established as enjoying a preferred status by any law or ordinance. At the time of the accident a drizzling rain was falling and there is no question as to the fact that the traffic signals were functioning improperly. It was testified by Stephens — and we accept his testimony on this point — that the lights governing northbound traffic on Youree Drive were out as he approached and entered the intersection. It is the testimony of Mrs. Williamson, and this constitutes one of the hotly disputed material factual issues involved, that the lights governing westbound traffic on East Washington Street were operating, and that she entered the intersection on a green light signal. Photographs introduced in evidence graphically depict the areas of damage to the two vehicles involved, the right front and side of the Stephens Chevrolet being completely crushed and the left side of the Williamson Cadillac, from a point beginning about the middle of the door and extending to the front and including the left fender, headlight and bumper, evidencing serious damage. After the impact the Williamson Cadillac was propelled a distance of 43.7 feet north along Youree Drive, coming to rest headed in a northerly direction in the west lane of the northbound traffic section of Youree Drive; the Stephens car, moving a distance of 26 feet northwesterly, stopped' at the edge of the neutral ground of Youree Drive, north of the intersection. The drivers of the vehicles involved testified on trial, pf the case. The gist of Stephen’s testirqpny is that he observed that the lights were not operating in his direction; that [746]*746approximately 150 feet distant from the intersection he observed a car moving east on East Washington Street and crossing the lanes of southbound traffic on Youree Drive; that he focused his attention upon this vehicle and began sounding his horn, which he continued for the full distance of approximately 150 feet in order to assert and effect what he assumed was his right-of-way; that the car under his special observation stopped in the neutral ground area, whereupon he shifted into second gear and “proceeded through the intersection” (at one point in his testimony he declared that he “sped through the intersection”) ; that he first observed the Williamson car when he was about twenty-five feet south of the intersection, at which time it was moving slowly across the lateral service road to his right and that it appeared Mrs. Williamson was applying her brakes with the intention of stopping, and that he did not make any further observation and did not again see the Williamson car until he had an impression of the approach of a bulky object from his right, whereupon he turned sharply to the left in the attempt to dodge.

Mrs. Williamson testified that as she descended the slope of East Washington Street, and at about the time she reached the lateral service road, the signal lights in her direction changed from red to green, whereupon she entered the intersection with Youree Drive, slowing her car to permit a left-hand turn by an automobile, headed east on East Washington Street, into the northbound lane of Youree Drive and almost immediately thereafter she was struck by the Stephens’ car.

The testimony of Mrs. Williamson is corroborated by the deposition of a Mrs. LeMay, the only other eye witness to the accident. At the time of the taking of the deposition Mrs. LeMay was a resident of New Orleans, but at the time of the accident she resided in Shreveport on Kim-brough Street in what is known as the Anderson Island Subdivision located to the east of Youree Drive. This witness testified that she was following the Williamson car westbound on East Washington at a distance of approximately a half block; that she saw the collision which, as best she could estimate, occurred approximately in the center of the two northbound traffic lanes on Youree Drive, and that immediately thereafter she observed the signal lights facing her as showing the amber or caution signal, which, we here interpolate, follows a green signal and precedes a change to red.

In support of the contention on behalf of Stephens that the lights at the intersection were not operating in any direction, which would have the effect of impeaching the testimony of Mrs. Williamson and Mrs. LeMay, the testimony of two witnesses, Mrs. Bazer and Mrs.

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Related

Hadley v. Commercial Union Insurance Co. of New York
165 So. 2d 23 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
Soprano v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
155 So. 2d 287 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Stephens v. Williamson
140 So. 2d 749 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 2d 743, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 1895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamson-v-stephens-lactapp-1962.