Opinion
No. 4205.
February 8, 1971. Rehearing Denied March 10, 1971. Writ Refused April 22, 1971.
APPEAL FROM CIVIL DISTRICT COURT FOR THE PARISH OF ORLEANS, NO. 481,929, DIVISION "D", S. SANFORD LEVY, J.
Badeaux Discon, J. Michael Cumberland, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Christovich Kearney, J. Walter Ward, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.
Before SAMUEL, REDMANN and Le SUEUR, JJ.
This is a suit for personal injuries and property damages sustained in an accident involving two automobiles. Plaintiffs are husband and wife; she seeks recovery for personal injuries sustained in the collision; he sues for medical expenses incurred on for behalf, loss of wages and services. The petition names three defendants: Gentilly Dodge, Inc. (improperly designated in the title as "Company"), with whom the defendant vehicle had been left for repairs; Fidelity and Casualty Co. v. New York, liability insurer of Gentilly Dodge; and Milton M. Byrd, the driver of the defendant automobile, an employee of Gentilly Dodge, who was operating the car in the course and scope of his employment at the time of the accident. Only Gentilly Dodge and Fidelity were served. They answered in the form of a general denial, alternatively pleaded contributory negligence, and reconvened for $732.95, the stipulated amount of damages to the defendant automobile, in the proportions of $100 to Gentilly Dodge and the balance to Fidelity under a $100 deductible policy.
The only witnesses who testified relative to the facts involved in the accident were Mrs. Wilkinson, Mr. Byrd and the investigating police officer. Following trial on the merits, the district judge found that, even under plaintiffs' version of how the accident happened, the plaintiff driver was negligent. Accordingly, judgment was rendered in favor of the two defendants, Gentilly Dodge and Fidelity, dismissing plaintiffs' suit. Inadvertently, neither the reasons for judgment nor the judgment itself considers or mentions the reconventional demand. Plaintiffs have appealed and Gentilly Dodge and Fidelity have answered the appeal seeking judgment on their reconventional demand.
The accident occurred on February 13, 1968 at approximately 11:45 a.m. in a residential neighborhood on Shalimar Drive in the City of New Orleans. Shalimar is a two-way, two-lane roadway, approximately 22 feet in width. There were vehicles parked on both sides of the street. While the plaintiff car, occupied only by its driver, Mrs. Wilkinson, was in the process of turning left into the driveway of the Wilkinson home it was struck in the area of the left front door by the right front of the defendant automobile. The latter was occupied only by its driver, Mr. Byrd, a mechanic in the employ of Gentilly Dodge. The Wilkinson home was in the middle of the block. As a result of the collision Mrs. Wilkinson was injured and the two automobiles were damaged.
Mrs. Wilkinson testified: Because her husband's truck had been in their driveway the night before the accident, she had parked the plaintiff automobile on the street directly across from her home and it had remained there overnight. The next morning she was returning from a laundry, traveling in a lake-bound or northerly direction, and proceeded to turn left into the driveway adjoining her residence. Using her hear view mirror, she saw the defendant automobile, also traveling in a northerly direction, approximately at the intersection one-half block away. At this time she activated her left turn indicator and was turning into the driveway when her car was struck by the defendant vehicle.
Mr. Byrd's version of the accident was quite different. He testified he was driving on Shalimar, at about 20 miles per hour, straddling the approximate center of the street due to parked cars on both sides. He had made minor repairs to the rear end of the defendant automobile and, for the second time that morning, was on Shalimar Drive for the purpose of test driving the vehicle. The plaintiff car was parked at the curb to his right, where it had been when he had driven by on the first testing occasion. Just before he reached the plaintiff automobile it suddenly pulled out from its parked position and made a left turn into his path. He swerved to the left but was unable to avoid the collision.
The police officer testified relative to the position of the cars when he arrived, various measurements made by him and similar matters. Of significance is that he found from the physical evidence at the scene that the impact occurred slightly to the drivers' left of the center of the street and that the defendant vehicle had left 10 feet 3 inches of skid marks to the point of collision. In addition, the statement made to the officer by the defendant driver not more than 30 minutes after the accident was the same as the testimony later given by that driver. Due to her injuries the officer did not speak to Mrs. Wilkinson until much later.
The motorist who makes a left turn, particularly at a private driveway or similar place other than an intersection, is required to exercise a very high degree of care; he must not only give a proper and timely signal, but also must make reasonably certain, after observing both oncoming and following traffic, that the turn can be made with safety. LSA-R.S. 32:104A; Ruthardt v. Tennant, 252 La. 1041, 215 So.2d 805; Brantley v. Clarkson, 217 La. 425, 46 So.2d 614; LeDoux v. Montgomery, La. App., 212 So.2d 562; Fontenot v. Pan American Fire Casualty Company, La. App., 209 So.2d 105; Huntsberry v. Millers Mutual Fire Insurance Co., La. App., 205 So.2d 617; Nugent v. Glover, La. App., 205 So.2d 129; Williams v. Callais, La. App., 204 So.2d 112; Thigpen v. Aetna Casualty Surety Company, La. App., 201 So.2d 525; Kugler v. Castjohn, La. App., 201 So.2d 9.
We are satisfied the plaintiff driver was guilty of negligence which bars a plaintiff recovery and, in the absence of defendant negligence, requires a recovery on the reconventional demand. In either event, if she began her turn from a parked position at the curb, as the plaintiff driver testified, or if she began the turn while proceeding to her home from the laundry, as she testified, she turned directly into the path of the approaching defendant vehicle when such a turn could not be made with safety.
We are also satisfied the record reveals no negligence on the part of the defendant driver. As substantiated in part by the physical evidence of the 10 foot 3 inch skid marks left by his vehicle prior to impact, which marks appear to have resulted only from an application of the brakes, even if Mrs. Wilkinson was in the process of driving to her home and activated her turn indicator when she began the left turn, as she testified, the turn was made too suddenly, and the signal given too late, for the defendant driver to take effective measures to avoid the collision. On the other hand, if the plaintiff automobile suddenly and without warning pulled out from a parked position at the curb into the path of the approaching defendant car, as the driver of the latter testified, quite clearly there was no defendant negligence.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from is amended, affirmed in part and recast so as to read as follows:
It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that there be judgment, on the main demand, in favor of the defendants in suit, Gentilly Dodge, Inc. and Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York, and against the plaintiffs in suit, Peggy Delores Smith, wife of, and Elmo J. Wilkinson, dismissing the said plaintiffs' suit.
It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that there be judgment, on the reconventional demand, in favor of plaintiffs in reconvention, Gentilly Dodge, Inc. and Fidelity and Casualty Co. of New York, and against defendants in reconvention, Peggy Delores Smith, wife of, and Elmo J. Wilkinson, in solido, in the full sum of $732.95 with legal interest thereon from date of judicial demand until paid.
It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that all costs in both courts be paid by the original plaintiffs-appellants.
Amended, affirmed in part and recast.
In my judgment both main demand and reconvention should be dismissed, because neither party proved negligence on the other's part.
The two drivers tell conflicting stories. The only reconciliation I can suppose is by accepting Mrs. Wilkinson's testimony she was returning from the laundry, but adding that she first slowed and turned to the right side of the narrow street (lined with cars on both sides) to enable her better to make her left turn into her driveway. By this supposition Mr. Byrd's testimony that she was coming from the right curb becomes somewhat reconcilable. The fact he was engaged in road-testing his car for rear-end noises might suggest he was not previously paying sufficient attention and had not observed Mrs. Wilkinson until he found himself running into her, and with more a broadside than a glancing blow!
This attempt to accept both drivers' testimony would suggest that each was negligent. Perhaps this was the trial judge's view of the evidence, since he stated his opinion that "the accident would not have happened had it not been for the negligence of both parties."
In the absence of a reconciliation, a choice between conflicting testimony would have to be made and there is nothing in the record to convince me that one driver's version rather than the other's ought to be accepted.
The only disinterested testimony is that of the investigating police officer. He stated that the gouge marks and skids in the street show the impact was to the left of the center of the street. Thus this is plainly not the typical case of the parked car just starting out as the other came abreast of it (as Byrd testified); in such a case, impact would be very near the right parking "lane". The contemporaneous sketch made by the officer as part of his report also shows the position of the cars after the accident. The Wilkinson car still forms about a 60 to 75 degree angle with the curb again making it plain this was not a typical case. (Suggestion: if Mrs. Wilkinson started up from a parked position, Byrd must have travelled several car lengths at 20 miles per hour while she travelled one, beginning at 0 miles per hour. Or if she were driving ahead of Byrd, he could never have passed her on the narrow street with cars parked on both sides, and whether or not she turned her car, Byrd would have run into her.)
In my opinion, neither party showed the other's negligence by a preponderance of the evidence, and each's demand should be dismissed.
The majority's argument (1) assumes Mrs. Wilkinson could not have made the turn safely, having no basis except that a collision did occur and that the other car left only 10 feet of skid before impact; (2) assumes Mr. Byrd was keeping a proper lookout and applied his brakes immediately but could not stop in 10 feet. The result of these assumptions, respectively, is (1) Mrs. Wilkinson was negligent and (2) Mr. Byrd was not.
This harmful reasoning might equally well have gone the other way: since there were only 10 feet of skid, Byrd obviously didn't apply his brakes soon enough, must not have been maintaining proper lookout, etc. In fact, of course, there being only 10 feet of skid tells us only that the brakes were forcefully applied 10 feet before impact, but does not tell us why. There simply are not enough data to support a logical inference, to justify making one of these drivers pay the other's damages.
Rehearing denied.
REDMANN, J., is of the opinion the rehearing should be granted.