Wright v. Barnes

56 So. 2d 425, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 447
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 1952
DocketNo. 3493
StatusPublished

This text of 56 So. 2d 425 (Wright v. Barnes) 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
Wright v. Barnes, 56 So. 2d 425, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 447 (La. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is an action for damages ex-delicto instituted by E. E. Wright and his employer, Union City Transfer, against J. E. Barnes. Wright seeks damages for personal injuries in the sum of $1,000.00, and Union 'City Transfer seeks property damages in the sum of $480.33. Defendant Barnes filed a reconventional demand wherein he originally sought personal and property damages in the sum of $35,254.75. By an amended answer and reconventional demand, defendant’s claim was increased to $41,921.75. Joined as defendants in re-convention were E. E. Wright, Union City Transfer, and The American Fidelity and Casualty Company of Richmond, Virginia, the liability insurer of Union City Transfer. The lower court rendered judgment in fav- or of Union City Transfer in the sum of $480.33, and in favor of Wright in the sum of $50.00, and rejecting defendant’s recon-ventional demand. Defendant has taken this appeal.

The accident occurred at a point on U. S. Highway 90 at the western edge of the corporate limits of the town of Sulphur, Louisiana, between the hours of 9:00 and 10:00 o’clock on the night of Saturday, May 13, 1951. The highway at that point is a paved 18 foot concrete slab running east and west, and is straight and level for several hundred yards in either direction from the point of impact. There was nothing unusual, or particularly dangerous, about the shoulders of the highway at the scene of the collision, except that a few feet west of the point of impact the highway crossed [426]*426over a canal and, although the road remained level, the shoulders were not as wide over the canal as they were on either side of it. There was no bridge in the normal sense of the term, the canal apparently ran under the highway through a culvert. From photographs introduced into evidence, the shoulders at the crossing were evidently about four or five feet in width. It had been raining prior to the accident, and was raining when the collision occurred. The night was a .misty one, with intermittent rains. The highway and shoulders were wet, and visibility was poor.

The findings of fact, by the lower court, were as follows:

“Immediately prior to the time of the collision Barnes was driving his 1941 automobile in a westerly direction on U. S. Highway 90, and Wright was driving a 1946 model International truck with a pole trailer attached in an easterly direction along the same highway. Both vehicles at that time were in good mechanical condition, with lights and brakes in proper working order. The truck which was being driven by Wright was loaded at the time with a load'of casing pipe, the truck, trailer and load having an over-all gross weight of more than 41,000 pounds. The truck with its load was approximately eight feet wide and forty-five feet long.
“The evidence indicates to the satisfaction of this court that as the two vehicles approached each other from opposite directions, Barnes permitted the right front wheel of his car to run off the north edge of the concrete slab. In order to get his car back on the pavement he turned the front wheels sharply to his left. He was successful in getting his car back on the paved portion of the highway but a collision between his car and the approaching truck occurred about six or eight feet west of the point where his car regained the pavement. The left front portion of the Barnes car struck the left front corner of the 'bed of the Union City Transfer truck. The automobile and the truck were both damaged as a result of the collision.
“The impact caused Barnes to1 (be thrown out of his automobile and his car after skidding around on the highway one or more times, came to rest from 35 to 60 feet west of the point of impact, facing in a southeasterly direction, with its back wheels on the pavement and its front wheels on the south shoulder of the highway. The truck came to. rest about 200 feet east of the point of impact, parked parallel to and along the south side of the highway, facing in an easterly direction.”

The above findings of fact by the lower court were substantially in accord with the allegations of petitioners. The defendant, on the other hand, alleges several factual conditions which are directly in conflict with those of petitioners.

The defendant claims that shortly prior to the collision, he was proceeding westerly along the highway at a speed of 30 miles per hour. Upon rounding a curve some few hundred yards from the point of impact, he noticed the headlights of the truck at a distance. Upon proceeding further, and upon reaching a distance of about one city block from the truck, defendant alleges that he noticed the truck to be on defendant’s side of the highway, whereupon he blinked his headlights several times in order to attract the attention of the truck driver. Upon the truck driver’s failure to heed the warning of defendant, the defendant turned his car to his right to avoid being struck head-on by the truck. During all this time, the defendant claims that he continued to slow his speed from the original 30 miles per hour. At the moment of impact, defendant claims that his car was in his right-hand lane, with the right-hand wheels of his car some two or more feet on the shoulder. He further contends that, at the time, his car was parallel to the highway.

The lower court found that the collision was due to the negligence of defendant, and that there was no contributory negligence on the part of Wright. In accordance with its findings it gave judgment in favor of petitioners, in the amounts mentioned above, and dismissed defendant’s demand in recon-vention. Defendant filed this appeal contending that the judgment of the lower court was contrary to the greater weight of the testimony and the evidence.

As is usually the case in a suit of this nature, the testimony elicited by the oppo[427]*427site sides in this controversy is greatly contradictory and irreconcilable. Photographs introduced into evidence conclusively show that the car belonging to Barnes suffered its greatest amount of damage on its left front side. The truck, on the other hand, suffered no damage to its front portion. The point of impact on the truck was to the rear of the cab, on the left side. We believe that the photographs conclusively show that the point of impact on the car was at the extreme front left end, whereas the impact on the truck was some two feet to the rear of the cab, on the left side; at a point some seven or eight feet from the extreme left front end of the truck. Thus, at the moment of impact, the vehicles must have been traveling at an angle away from each other. Assuming that the car driven by Barnes was traveling parallel to the highway at the moment of the impact, as was testified by Barnes, then the truck must have been traveling at an angle to the highway from the truck’s left to its right. Further assuming the correctness of Barnes’ testimony relative to the position of his car at the moment of the impact with its two right wheels “at least two feet on the right shoulder” would place the truck at an angle across the highway with the front end of the truck in its right lane and the rear portion of the truck on the left lañé, or possibly on the shoulder. If our assumptions were Correct, the point of impact would have been at' approximately four feet south of the north edge of the concrete slab. Considering further the length of the truck to be about 45 feet, as was shown on trial, and the point of impact on the truck to be some eight feet from the front end, would place the point of impact some 37 feet from the rear end of the truck.

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Bluebook (online)
56 So. 2d 425, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-barnes-lactapp-1952.