DocketNumber: No. 12,014
Citation Numbers: 14 La. App. 488
Judges: Janvier, Takes, Westerfield
Filed Date: 1/13/1930
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/24/2022
This suit grows out of an intersectional collision of automobiles. Plaintiff, the owner of a Packard car, which at the time of the accident was being driven by his son, brought this suit for damages sustained by his car as a result of the collision, and defendant, the owner of the Chrysler automobile, at the time of the accident driven by her son, reconvened and claimed damages for injury to her automobile. The trial court dismissed both the main and reconventional demands. The defendant alone has appealed.
The collision occurred at the intersec-' tion of Hurst street and Henry Clay avenue. The driver of the pláintiff’s car had the right of way under the traffic ordinance, because he was on Hurst street, a street with a double car track, at that time traversed by street cars, though presently not so used. He contends that his car, the Packard, entered the intersection at approximately the same time as the Chrysler, which was on Henry Clay avenue, and that, in view of the fact that he had the right of way, the driver of the Chrysler ear should have permitted him tp cross the intersection.. On behalf of the driver of the Chrysler car it is contended that he had arrived at the intersection an appreciable time before the Packard car and had. almost traversed the crossing, when the Packard car, proceeding at great speed, struck his car near the rear wheel.
We are referred to the numerous decisions of the Supreme Court and of this court in which the statement is made that, upon questions of fact, the conclusion of the trial court will not be lightly disturbed, and it is pointed out that in this case the court below, in denying recovery to both plaintiff and defendant, must necessarily have resolved the conflicting testimony adversely to both and reached the conclusion that each driver was at fault. It seems to us, however, that in this case the court fell into manifest error, for, as we appreciate the testimony, the Chrysler car had entered the intersection before the Packard, and the accident was due entirely to the excessive speed at which the Packard was being driven. Marshall v. Freeman, 10 La. App. 12; Griffin v. Chalmette Laundry & Dry Cleaning Co., 8 La. App. 146; Wm. P. Ross, Inc., v. Corcoran, 10 La. App. 305. The Chrysler was traveling in a direction from the lake towards the river, on Henry Clay avenue, and the Packard from Canal street in .the direction of Audubon Park, on Hurst street. The point of contact was near the uptown river corner, the front of plaintiff’s ’car striking defendant’s car in the rear. The testimony of the driver of plaintiff’s car as to his speed is unconvincing. He says that he was traveling twenty miles an hour and
There is no dispute as to the amount of damages suffered by defendant’s car, which she places at the sum of $298.50. The claim of $150 for "the use of the car for 30 days at $5.00 a day” will not be allowed, as there is ho proof in the record to sustain it.
For the reasons assigned the judgment appealed from is reversed insofar as it dismisses the reconventional demand of defendant, and it is now ordered that there be judgment in favor of Augusta Elmer Massey, defendant, and plaintiff in reconvention, and against James Wittenberg, plaintiff herein, in the full sum of $298.50, with legal interest from judicial demand and all costs. In all other respects the judgment appealed from is affirmed.