Worley v. Heinen

280 So. 2d 301
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 1973
DocketNo. 9415
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 280 So. 2d 301 (Worley v. Heinen) 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
Worley v. Heinen, 280 So. 2d 301 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

PICKETT, Judge.

This is a tort action which arose out of a collision between a 1962 Volkswagon owned and operated by plaintiff, Susan Worley, and a 1968 Chevrolet automobile owned by Diamond M Drilling Company, and driven by Martin J. Heinen, Jr., an employee. The accident occurred at about 10:15 P.M. on June 3, 1971, at the intersection of a private road known as Guarisco Road and U. S. Highway 90. The defendants are Martin J. Heinen, Jr., Diamond M Drilling Company, and its public liability insurer, Argonaut Insurance Company. The defendants have appealed from a judgment awarding the plaintiff total damages of $19,797.61.

The evidence shows that the Volkswagon owned and driven by the plaintiff, Susan Worley, was proceeding easterly on U. S. Highway 90 and while engaged in making a left hand turn from U. S. Highway 90 into Guarisco Road was struck on the left side by the vehicle driven by Martin J. Hei-nen, Jr.

The plaintiff testified that after she crossed the Bayou Ramos Bridge, she slowed her speed to approximately twenty miles per hour and began looking for the Guarisco Road into which she intended to turn. She located the Guarisco Road, and when she was about 200 feet from it she looked in her rear view mirror, and observed a vehicle following her, which car was referred to by the district judge as Car X, for the reason the driver was unknown. At that point, the appellee activated her left turn signal, and proceeded at about the same rate of speed with her left turn signal blinking, until she reached a point almost opposite the Guarisco Road, when she again looked in her rear view mirror. She observed no one approaching except Car X. She then looked to her left and front, and finding the way clear she began turning at an angle to the left across the west bound traffic lane. Appellee testified that about the time her front tires reached the shell shoulder on the North side of the High[303]*303way, she was violently struck by another vehicle which she had not seen. Mrs. Worley was rendered unconscious as a result of the collision.

The defendant Martin J. Heinen, Jr., testified that at the time of the accident he was the off-shore drilling superintendent of the Diamond M Drilling Company, and as such he was subject to twenty-four hours call. The automobile that he was driving was equipped with a telephone so that he could be in constant touch with the home office, his employer and any of the drilling rigs that might require his attention. We deem his recitation of his activities for several hours preceding the collision to be of some significance. Mr. Hei-nen said he arrived at his office about 5 :00 o’clock in the morning and worked until noon. He went to the Petroleum Club for lunch; and thereafter, he played golf until 6:30 or 7:00 P.M. on the St. Mary Golf course, during which time he drank three cans of beer. Mr. Heinen said that he returned to his office and worked until about 9:00 P.M. Thereafter, he stopped at the Marine Rental Tools and discussed some company business, and had two mixed drinks. He left the office of Rental Tools about 10:00 P.M. to go to his home in Amelia, Louisiana, which was about eight miles away, and he was involved in the collision on his way home. Mr. Heinen said he saw Car X traveling in front of him when he reached the crest of the Bayou Ramos Bridge, but that he did not see the Worley vehicle. He testified that he was traveling easterly at a speed of about sixty miles per hour and when he reached a point about four car lengths behind Car X he commenced a passing maneuver by pulling into the left lane, at which time he probably increased his speed. Almost immediately after he turned into the passing lane he saw the Worley vehicle for the first time, at about a 45 degree angle across the west bound lane right in front of him. At that time Car X was to his right, and he could not turn, back into the east bound lane. Mr. Heinen said he locked his brakes, but that he was traveling too fast to avoid colliding with the Volks-wagon, and his vehicle struck the left rear portion of the Worley vehicle and scraped along the left side and ended up crushing in the left front of the Volkswagon.

Trooper Ray Quebedeaux investigated the accident. He testified that he was called to- the scene of the accident shortly after it occurred. When he arrived at the scene of the accident he found that both vehicles involved had traveled in an easterly direction a distance of ninety feet and two inches, and had come to rest in a ditch which runs along parallel to, and on the north side of, Highway 90. The Volkswa-gon was facing west, and the Chevrolet was facing north. The right front fender of the Chevrolet was in the left front fender of the Volkswagon. Trooper Que-bedeaux found debris which indicated the point of impact was, about midway of the west bound lane near the entrance of the Guarisco Road. His investigation disclosed no skid marks in the west bound lane, but he did find some tire tracks on the north shoulder of the Highway. Trooper Quebe-deaux testified further that he detected the odor of alcohol on Mr. Heinen’s breath when he interviewed him at the scene of the accident. Some two hours later he gave Mr. Heinen a Breathometer test, which showed .06 grams per centimenter. The Trooper was unable to interview Mrs. Worley because of her condition resulting from her injuries sustained in the accident.

Mr. Heinen made a statement in the presence of Officer H. E. Beaver at the Morgan City Police Station on the night of the accident to the effect that at the time of the accident and immediately prior thereto, he was talking over his mobile car radio. Mrs. Worley’s mother and grandmother testified that Mr. Heinen made substantially the same statement in their presence at the hospital where Mrs. Wor-ley was taken for treatment. On the trial of the case, Mr. Heinen admitted that he made the statements, but he had concluded he was not talking on the telephone at the [304]*304time of the accident. The trial judge in his written reason for judgment, commented on Mr. Heinen’s repudiation of his former statements, as follows:

“Mr. Heinen admitted making these statements to the persons named but at the trial he stated that upon reflection he had later decided that he could not have been talking on his mobile radio at the time because he remembered that following the accident his speaker phone was in place in it’s rack and that if he had had but one hand on his sterring wheel he would have received an injury and actually was unhurt. Although I have no reason .to believe that Mr. Heinen would deliberately contradict this prior admission against interest without his being first convinced of its inaccuracy, his testimony being otherwise most honest and candid, I must conclude that this statement made by him immediately following the accident correctly sets forth his actions immediately before and at the time of the collision.”

The duty of a motorist who attempts a left turn is well expressed by the Court in Sonnier v. Hardware Mutual Casualty et al., La.App., 242 So.2d 900, as follows:

“A motorist who attempts to make a left turn on a public highway is required to ascertain in advance that the way is clear, and that the turn can be made safely and without endangering overtaking or oncoming traffic. His failure to make such a determination and to exercise the required degree of caution before undertaking to make such a turn constitutes negligence. LSA-R.S. 32:104; Hayes v. Travelers Indemnity Company, 213 So.2d 119 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1968).”

However, in Dorty v.

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Bluebook (online)
280 So. 2d 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worley-v-heinen-lactapp-1973.