Babin v. Burnside Terminal

577 So. 2d 90, 1990 WL 211374
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1990
DocketCA 89 1808
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 577 So. 2d 90 (Babin v. Burnside Terminal) 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
Babin v. Burnside Terminal, 577 So. 2d 90, 1990 WL 211374 (La. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

577 So.2d 90 (1990)

Patricia BABIN
v.
BURNSIDE TERMINAL, GREATER BATON ROUGE PORT COMMISSION & State of Louisiana Through the Department of Transportation and Development.

No. CA 89 1808.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana First Circuit.

December 18, 1990.

*92 Robert Kleinpeter, Baton Rouge and Michael H. Schwartzberg, Lake Charles, for plaintiff-appellant, Patricia Babin.

O'Neal Walsh, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellant, Ormet Corp.

Before LOTTINGER, SHORTESS and CARTER, JJ.

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff and the defendant from a judgment in favor of plaintiff, Patricia Babin, and against defendant, Ormet Corporation (Ormet), for damages arising from a single vehicle accident which occurred on October 22, 1983. The trial court, sitting without a jury, awarded Mrs. Babin general damages of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000.00), and special damages of eighty thousand five hundred thirty-two dollars and seven cents ($80,532.07), for a total of two hundred thirty thousand five hundred thirty-two dollars and seven cents ($230,532.07), and apportioned fault at ten percent (10%) to Mrs. Babin, forty percent (40%) to Ormet, and fifty percent (50%) to others.[1]

*93 Ormet appealed suspensively and assigns the following errors:

1. The trial court erred in its use of circumstantial evidence to find that Ormet was responsible for the foreign material on the highway.
2. The trial court erred in finding that Ormet was negligent on any other grounds.
3. The trial court's judgment is not in conformance with its written reasons for judgment.
4. The trial court erred in its apportionment of fault.
5. The trial court erred in failing to consider the doctrine of avoidable consequences when determining quantum.
The plaintiff appealed devolutively and assigns the following error:
1. The trial court abused its discretion in awarding the plaintiff/appellee inadequate damage in the amount of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000.00) in general damages.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The plaintiff initially filed suit against Burnside Terminal, the Greater Baton Rouge Port Commission (Port Commission), and the State of Louisiana through the Department of Transportation and Development (DOTD). The Ormet Corporation was later added as a defendant by supplemental petition. The Port Commission then filed a third party demand for contractual indemnity against Ormet and its insurer. By a second amended and supplemental petition the plaintiff added International Terminal Operators of La., Inc. (ITO) as a defendant, and by third amended and supplemental petition ITO's insurer was added as a defendant.

Burnside Terminal is merely the name of a facility owned by the Port Commission and leased to Ormet. ITO provided the labor necessary to operate the facility for Ormet at the time of the accident. Since Burnside Terminal is only the name of the facility, and is not a legal entity, it was dismissed from the suit by stipulation of all the parties.

The plaintiff settled with and released the DOTD, and ITO and its insurer, and they were dismissed from the suit. The Port Commission was also dismissed prior to trial pursuant to the plaintiff's motion, and its third party demand was withdrawn. The sole remaining defendant at trial was the Ormet Corporation.

FACTS

The accident underlying this litigation occurred at approximately 6:15 a.m. on the morning of October 22,1983. At that time, the plaintiff, Patricia Babin, was alone in her car and proceeding north on La. 44 in Ascension Parish, also known as River Road. Mr. Greg Periman, a friend of Mrs. Babin, was following her on his motorcycle. It had been raining all night and at the time of the accident a light rain was falling and the sun was not yet up. Mrs. Babin testified that she had her lights and windshield wipers on and was traveling at approximately forty to forty-five miles per hour.

Burnside Terminal is a bulk materials handling facility operated by Ormet. The terminal consists of loading docks on the Mississippi River and overhead enclosed conveyor belts extending across the levee and La. 44 to a storage and weighing area adjacent to the highway. The north gate of Burnside Terminal leads from the storage area across the road from the levee onto La. 44 just south of a curve in the road. As Mrs. Babin went by this gate and entered the curve, she passed over a foreign substance on the road. Mrs. Babin never saw the substance in the roadway.

The foreign substance, together with the wet weather, the curve, and some degree of negligence on Mrs. Babin's part, combined to cause Mrs. Babin to lose control of her car. The car spun out of control and across the roadway, narrowly missing a *94 vehicle heading in the opposite direction. The car then exited the roadway on the left hand side, still spinning out of control, and struck an embankment which forms part of the Mississippi River levee. This caused the car to flip over once and land back on its wheels astride a drainage ditch along the left shoulder of the road.

Mrs. Babin, who was not wearing a seat belt, ended up on the floor between the front and rear seats of the vehicle. When Mrs. Babin attempted to get back into the front seat to get out of the car, she realized from the intense pain in her neck and her inability to hold her head upright, that her neck was broken. With assistance from Mr. Periman and the driver and passengers of the vehicle that she almost collided with, Mrs. Babin managed to get into a prone position in the front passenger seat of the car, which was placed in a fully reclined position for this purpose.

The car was then pushed out of the ditch by Mr. Periman and the others, and Mr. Periman drove it to the emergency room at East Ascension Hospital. After being examined, X-rayed, and immobilized by emergency room personnel, Mrs. Babin was transferred via ambulance to Baton Rouge General Hospital.

Meanwhile, shortly after Mrs. Babin's arrival at the emergency room of East Ascension Hospital, Louisiana State Trooper Robbie Hilburn II arrived at the hospital to investigate the accident. After talking with Mr. Periman, and very briefly with Mrs. Babin, Trooper Hilburn rode out to the scene of the accident with Mr. Periman.

Trooper Hilburn testified that he saw the foreign substance in the road and the marks in the embankment and astride the ditch where the car ran off the road, rolled over, and came to rest. He also testified that because of the rain and traffic in the area that there were no skid marks on the road or tracks through the foreign substance leading to the point where the car left the road, but that the car did leave the road in the area where the material was in the road.

Trooper Hilburn described the foreign substance as a grayish beige material with small white chips of shell or rock in it. He testified that it wasn't soft or gooey but had "some strength to it." He testified that the material was concentrated just north of the Burnside Terminal gate and that it was almost completely in the northbound lane and got fainter the farther away from the gate it was. All of the material was north of the gate, none was south of the gate.

Trooper Hilburn also testified the material was not evenly distributed but was in clumps of about six to eight inches in diameter, and had been flattened by traffic.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
577 So. 2d 90, 1990 WL 211374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babin-v-burnside-terminal-lactapp-1990.