Zuvich v. Ballay

149 So. 281, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1923
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1933
DocketNo. 14388.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 149 So. 281 (Zuvich v. Ballay) 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
Zuvich v. Ballay, 149 So. 281, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1923 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

*282 JANVIER, Judge.

Zuvich received injuries when he was struct by a Chevrolet automobile driven at the time by Joseph Paul Hingle, Jr., a minor.

The Chevrolet belonged to Lionel A..Bal-lay, also a minor, who had loaned it to Hin-gle.

Just before the Chevrolet struck Zuvieh, it had passed a stationary disabled Nash car, striking it a slight, glancing blow as it passed.

The Nash belonged to Paul Ballieviero, and was in charge of his minor son, Norman Bal-lievier'o.

Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York had issued to young Ballay, the owner of the Chevrolet, a policy of insurance under which it had agreed to indemnify and hold him harmless against all claims resulting from the negligent operation of his said Chevrolet, and the policy contained a provision for what is termed “omnibus coverage,” under which the protection of the policy, was made available “to any person * * ⅜ while * * ⅜ legally operating the said automobile * * * with the permission of the assured,” etc. The same company had also issued to Paul Ballieviero, owner of the Nash car, a similar policy of liability insurance.

Plaintiff!, Zuvich, seeks judgment against (1) Joseph Ballay, father of Lionel A. Ballay, owner of the Chevrolet; (2) Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company as the insurer of Lionel A. Ballay, owner of the Chevrolet, and named as “assured” in one of the policies referred to; (3) Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company as the insurer, under the omnibus clause, of Hingle, Jr., who is alleged to have been operating the Chevrolet with the permission of its owner; (4) Paul Ballieviero, father of the minor, Norman Ballieviero, who was in charge of the disabled Nash car, which said minor is alleged to have been at fault in several particulars; (5) Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company, insurer in the policy of insurance issued to Paul Ballieviero. Neither Hingle, Jr., driver of the Chevrolet, nor his father, is made defendant.

The facts of the accident are in dispute only in one or two particulars.

Young Ballay and young Hingle were attending a dance near the town of Buras in this state. Hingle borrowed Ballay’s Chevrolet-to take to her home a young lady who was attending the dance with Hingle as his guest, or, as such a guest is now commonly known among young people, as his “date.”

After taking the young lady home, Hingle returned to the scene of the dance, but, before entering, was informed that the train at Buras was about to depart, and that many of those at the dance would find it difficult to reach Buras in time to embark on the said train. He was prevailed upon to lend assistance, and seven young men, in addition to himself, thereupon crowded into and upon the Chevrolet and started for Buras. While on the way they noticed ahead of them a Nash automobile, which had backed out of a lane into the highway, and had then come to a stop at an angle partially blocking the highway. The front of the Nash was towards them, and its dim lights were turned on. As they approached the Nash, its bright lights were flashed on — though this is denied by Ballieviero — and Hingle, driving the Chevrolet, somewhat blinded by the lights of the Nash, in attempting to negotiate the narrow space between the edge of the roadway and the front of the Nash, struck the latter a slight, glancing blow, and a second or so later ran into young Zuvieh, who was walking in the roadway a few feet beyond the Nash. Young Zuvieh received severe injuries and another boy, Albert Cosse, Jr., -who was riding on the running board of the Chevrolet, was jolted from his position when that ear struck Zuvich, and he also received serious injuries, which form the basis of another suit. 149 So. 285.

In the district court there was judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $4,500 against the defendants Joseph Ballay and the Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York jointly and in solido. From that judgment the two defendants mentioned have appealed, and plaintiff has also appealed, contending that there should be judgment also against Paul Ballieviero.

It is charged that young Ballieviero, in charge of the Nash, was negligent, in that ho allowed it to stand at an angle across the greater portion of the road, contrary to law, and in that he permitted the bright headlights of the Nash to be flashed on just as the Chevrolet was about to pass it, with the result that the driver of the Chevrolet was blinded, and it is also said that he was at fault in that one of the lights of the Nash was improperly adjusted and was permitted to throw its beam into the air in violation of law and to thus add to the blinding effect to which we have already referred.

It is also asserted that Lionel A. Ballay was at fault in that he permitted young Hin-gle to drive his car, knowing that at the time Hingle was “in a drunken condition.”

In the petition we find no detailed charge of negligence against young Hingle, who, as we have stated, was not sued, but who was operating the Chevrolet, except that we do find a charge that he was in a drunken condition, which, let us say in passing, was not in any way borne out by the evidence. But the evidence with regard to the actions of young Hingle greatly enlarges the pleadings in this regard, and we reach the conclusion that he was at fault, and that that fault was responsible for the accident.

As he approached the Nash, which was at a standstill, and which partially blocked the road, he knew, or should have known, that *283 the passageway left for the Chevrolet which he was driving was so narrow that only skillful manipulation could negotiate that passage.

He also knew that the Chevrolet was occupied by eight persons, three in the front seat, three in the rumble seat, and one on each running board. He thus should have known that his own movements would, in an emergency, be hampered by the crowding of •his associates.

He was at least 40 feet, according to his own statement, and from 200 to 400 feet, according to other witnesses, from the Nash when the bright headlights of the latter were flashed on, and in that distance he could have stopped or reduced the speed of the Chevrolet to a minimum, if he was to any appreciable extent blinded by the glare of the headlights of the Nash. He was at fault in attempting, without a substantial reduction in his speed, to pass that car, and in dashing into the darkness beyond at a rate of speed in excess of that which would have permitted of the stopping of the Chevrolet in the event of the sudden disclosure, after passing the Nash, of some one or something in the road ahead. He was only a short distance from the building in which a dance had been in progress only a few moments earlier, and which dance he had himself attended. He knew that the road which he was traversing must be used by those persons at the dance who found "it necessary to go to the railroad depot to take the train for their respective homes, and he also knew that the road at that point was not bordered by sidewalks, and that persons walking on it could not escape, especially at night, since there was no shoulder or other safety zone in which, in an emergency, they might seek refuge. Xoung Hingle, then, was at fault.

Nor was Zuvich himself at fault.

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 281, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zuvich-v-ballay-lactapp-1933.