Wolfe v. Baumer Food Products Co.

171 So. 155
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1936
DocketNo. 16484.
StatusPublished

This text of 171 So. 155 (Wolfe v. Baumer Food Products 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
Wolfe v. Baumer Food Products Co., 171 So. 155 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Eli Baer died in the Charity Hospital at New Orleans on November 18, 1935, as the result of injuries which he had received on November 5, 1935, on or near United States highway No. 90, about a half mile west of Westwego in this state. Mrs. Fanny Wolfe, who alleges that she is his sister and only surviving relative, seeks recovery in tort for his death, claiming $20,220 for her own loss in being deprived of his love and affection and potential support, for funeral expenses, and for the claim which she alleges has survived to her under article 2315, R.C.C., resulting from her brother’s suffering during the thirteen days in which he lived after he received the injuries.

She charges that her brother’s injuries and subsequent death were the result of his having been struck by an automobile truck of defendant Baumer Food Products Company, which truck, at the time, was operated by one of its employees, Claude Boehm, who, acting within the scope of his employment and operating the truck “at a reckless and wanton rate of speed of approximately fifty-five miles per hour, * * * lost control of it,” and permitted it to run “off of the highway into the right-hand ditch and over the bridge on which petitioner’s brother was seated'. j{í jjc w

Under the provisions of Act No. 55 of 1930, plaintiff makes American Mutual Liability Insurance Company party defendant together with the Baumer Food Products Company and Boehm, the operator of the truck, the allegation with reference to the insurance company being that it had issued to the Baumer Company a policy of liability insurance under which it had agreed to indemnify and hold harmless the said company against loss resulting from the negligent operation of the truck.

The three defendants, in most instances, denied the important allegations of the petition for want of sufficient information, but on the trial they conceded that plaintiff’s brother had received injuries on the day in question and had subsequently died in the Charity Plospital, maintaining, however, that the truck had had nothing whatever to do with the said injuries. They also admitted that the truck left the paved portion of the highway and traveled on the shoulder of the road for a short distance and that its two right wheels even went over the edge of the shoulder of the road and into the bordering ditch and then passed lengthwise over the roadside edge of the small bridge on which plaintiff alleges her brother was seated, but they maintain that the said brother was not seated on the bridge and that he was not struck by the said truck, though they concede that almost immediately after the truck had passed over the edge of the bridge and had been brought to a stop some distance beyond and on the other side of the highway plaintiff’s brother was found, in an injured condition, lying in the field to which the said bridge gave access and a few feet from the edge of the bridge.

The only question presented is one of fact: Whether the truck in question struck plaintiff’s brother, or whether he had already been injured in some other manner and the truck of defendant, by a mere coincidence, left the highway just at that point.

In the district court there was judgment for defendant dismissing plaintiff’s suit, and she has appealed. ■

For the plaintiff there is one witness, C. E, Stovall, who claims to have seen the truck strike Baer, and there are five others who do not claim to have seen the impact but who arrived on the scene soon afterwards and whose testimony, if unexplained, is extremely harmful to defendants’ contention. Against these witnesses defendants have only one, Boehm, the driver of the truck.

Boehm states that he was proceeding on the right-hand side of the paved surface of the road “at a moderate rate of speed,” when he noticed coming towards him, on its left-hand side of the road, a brown sedan, which was approaching at a speed of about 65 miles per, hour, and that he believed that, if he crossed to his wrong side, the driver of the sedan might, at the last instant, go back to his proper side and that a collision would occur and that he instantaneously concluded to drive his truck as far as possible to the right *157 and upon the shoulder of the road, as he believed that, by doing so, he would afford to the oncoming sedan sufficient space to pass, even if it did not return to its correct side of the road. He also states that, when he drove upon the shoulder of the road, he turned his truck a little too far, with the result that the right wheels went into the edge of the ditch alongside; that he feared that, if he stopped in that position, he might later encounter difficulty in driving the truck out of the said ditch, and that therefore, taking’ advantage of its momentum, he attempted to turn it and regain the proper position on the road; that before he could do so he crossed over the edge of the small bridge which spanned the ditch and that then his right wheels, after running along the edge of the bridge, again entered the ditch and proceeded some distance further before he could turn to the left and force the car to regain its position- on the road; that, as he did so, he found his steering apparatus damaged; and that, as a result, the truck crossed the road and stopped only after it had struck a “guy” wire attached to a post located alongside the road. Boehm states positively that Baer was not on the bridge as the truck passed over it; that he was not struck by the truck, and that it was several minutes later that Baer was found lying about 10 feet or so from the bridge in the nearby field and that the blood which was in Baer’s mouth, some of which had spilled to the ground, had coagulated to such an extent as to indicate that it must have been there for a longer time thail would have been possible had it been shed as a result of injuries caused by the truck as it passed only a few seconds before. He also states that ants had already gathered at the spot of blood which had formed on the ground under Baer’s head.

If the blood had already coagulated and if ants had already gathered, it is most probable that it had resulted from some earlier accident, because these things would probably not have occurred in the short period of a minute or two which elapsed between the time of the passing of the truck and that of the discovery of Baer iying on the ground.

Plaintiff denies that the blood had coagulated or that ants had gathered, and her counsel point to evidence which tends to contradict Boehm on these features. Mr. Vic Pitre, clerk of court of Jefferson parish and mayor of the town of West-wego, arrived at the scene probably twenty or thirty minutes after the injured man was discovered and he states that at that time Baer seemed to be bleeding “from the nose, and the head, and from his mouth.” Dr. J. J. Massony was called to the scene and arrived there only a few minutes after he was sent for. He says Baer “was bleeding right profusely when I got theré,” and also that he was bleeding “from his mouth and ears and nose and he had a slight bleeding from the left leg.” He also states that the blood had not coagulated at the time he arrived.

Leroy Merriday had been working near a house a short distance away and had seen Baer pass along the road a few minutes before the truck passed.

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171 So. 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfe-v-baumer-food-products-co-lactapp-1936.