Amy Brossett v. Melody Howard

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 2008
DocketCA-0008-0535
StatusUnknown

This text of Amy Brossett v. Melody Howard (Amy Brossett v. Melody Howard) 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
Amy Brossett v. Melody Howard, (La. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

08-535

AMY BROSSETT, ET AL.

VERSUS

MELODY HOWARD, ET AL.

********** APPEAL FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 193,801 HONORABLE F. RAE D. SWENT, DISTRICT JUDGE **********

CHRIS J. ROY, SR.1 JUDGE

**********

Court composed of John D. Saunders, James T. Genovese, and Chris J. Roy, Judges.

EXCEPTION OVERRULED; JUDGMENT AFFIRMED, AS AMENDED.

Joseph J. Bailey Provosty, Sadler & deLaunay P. O. Drawer 1791 Alexandria, LA 71309-1791 (318) 445-3631 Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellees: Amy Brossett, et al.

1 Judge Chris J. Roy, Sr. appointed judge pro tempore of the Court of Appeal, Third Circuit. Barry Ray Laiche Provosty, Sadler 237 S. Washington Street Marksville, LA 71351 (318) 253-4435 Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellees: Amy Brossett, et al

Ian Alexander Macdonald Longman Russo P. O. Drawer 3408 Lafayette, LA 70502-3408 (337) 262-9000 Counsel for Defendants/Appellants: Progressive Security Ins. Co. Melody Howard ROY, Judge (pro tempore).

This is an appeal brought by defendants, Melody Howard (Howard) and her

insurer, Progressive Insurance Company (Progressive), of the judgment rendered after

the jury trial of a personal injury and wrongful death action. The plaintiffs, Amy

Brossett and her daughter, Emily Brossett Porche (Emily), were awarded general and

specific damages, including damages for the death of Brossett’s husband and Emily’s

father, Craig Brossett. The defendants argue that the damage awards are unsupported

by the evidence and should be reversed and that Emily’s claims should be dismissed

because they were prescribed and the citation to the amended petition asserting her

claims was never properly served. The defendants have also filed with this court an

Exception of No Right of Action, asserting that Amy Brossett lost her standing to

seek damages through this action when she filed for bankruptcy while the lawsuit was

pending. Amy Brossett has answered the appeal, asking this court to reverse the

jury’s denial of exemplary damages.

For the following reasons, the Exception of No Right of Action is overruled

and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed, as amended.

ISSUES

1. Should the Exception of No Right of Action, raised for the first time on appeal, be sustained due to the failure of Amy Brossett’s bankruptcy trustee to be substituted as the plaintiff in this action?

2. Was Emily’s claim for wrongful death damages prescribed when it was filed years after the commencement of the action?

3. Should Emily’s damage awards have been excluded from the judgment due to plaintiffs’ failure to serve the defendants with a citation of the suit?

1 4. Did the jury abuse its discretion in awarding to Emily $500,000.00 in damages for the wrongful death of her father despite the fact that she was an infant when he died?

5. Did the jury abuse its discretion in awarding future medical expenses in the amount of $50,000.00 to Amy Brossett, when the only expert testimony offered regarding the value of future medical expenses was $36,052.00?

6. Were the awards to Amy Brossett of $750,000.00 for her pain and suffering and $75,000.00 for her loss of enjoyment of life abusively high considering the evidence presented?

7. Did the jury abuse its discretion in awarding to Amy Brossett a $40,000.00 disability award, considering the evidence presented of her status of recovery from her injuries?

8. Did the jury abuse its discretion in awarding Amy Brossett and her daughter, a total award of $500,000.00 for loss of future economic support, when the expert testimony presented at trial quantified the loss as $394,531.00?

9. Did the jury abuse its discretion in failing to award exemplary damages to the plaintiffs when it was stipulated that Howard was intoxicated and at fault in causing the accident and resulting injuries?

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On March 7, 1998, shortly after midnight on Louisiana Highway 107, Melody

Howard drove her 1992 Toyota 4-Runner into the Brossetts’1995 Pontiac Grand Am,

causing the death of Craig Brossett and causing serious injuries to Amy Brossett. It

is undisputed that Howard was legally intoxicated at the time of the crash. Since

approximately 4:00 p.m. that day, she had been celebrating her fortieth birthday with

friends and co-workers, beginning with drinks and appetizers at a local restaurant.

2 The evening ended near midnight at a local hotel’s bar. Although Howard has no

memory of leaving the hotel’s bar, it is undisputed that she was driven by two of her

co-workers to her car, which was parked at another location and was left to drive

herself home.

Howard was alone in her vehicle and attempting to drive herself home when

the accident happened. She had fallen asleep at the wheel and was seen by following

drivers, swerving multiple times from her southbound lane of travel across the

northbound lanes and back. Immediately prior to the accident occurring, she had

crossed the entire highway and was driving on the shoulder of the northbound side

of the highway, facing oncoming, northbound traffic.

The Brossetts, who were traveling north on Highway 107, were returning home

after having had dinner with friends; they had not consumed any alcohol that evening.

Amy Brossett was driving, as her husband, Craig, lay reclined and sleeping in the

front passenger seat. As Howard’s vehicle and the Brossetts’ vehicle approached,

Howard woke up and jerked her steering wheel into the oncoming traffic, striking the

Brossetts’ vehicle. She denied seeing the Brossetts’ vehicle until immediately before

the impact.

Craig Brossett died in the vehicle without regaining consciousness. Amy

Brossett suffered multiple injuries, the most serious of which were the fractures to her

right hip, a broken femur, an open fracture of the kneecap, and multiple fractures to,

and a dislocation of, her right foot. She was pinned in the vehicle under the wreckage

for well over an hour. While efforts were being made to extricate Amy Brossett from

the vehicle, she remained conscious and suffered excruciating pain.

Results from toxicology tests performed on the night of the accident resulted

3 in Howard being arrested and charged with Vehicular Homicide for Craig Brossett’s

death and also First Degree Vehicular Negligent Injury for the serious injuries caused

to Amy Brossett. Howard subsequently submitted a “blind plea” to the court in that

proceeding. That is, she voluntarily pled guilty to the charges with no pre-agreement

as to sentencing.

Craig was twenty-four years old when he died. Amy was twenty-three. The

Brossetts had been married since November of 1996— approximately sixteen months

at the time of the accident—and had a nine-month old daughter, Emily, who was

being babysat by her grandmother that evening.

Amy Brossett filed a Petition on behalf of herself and “the Estate of Craig

Brossett” on October 23, 1998, originally seeking multiple general and specific

damages for her personal injuries, as well as wrongful death and survival damages2

due to her husband’s death. On January 19, 2007, Amy Brossett filed her Fifth

Supplemental and Amending Petition, adding their daughter, Emily Brossett Porche,3

as a plaintiff in the action. The parties jointly stipulated to the court that the claims

of Emily were not prescribed and would related back to the date of the filing of Amy

Brossett’s original petition.

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