Bourgeois v. Roudolfich

580 So. 2d 699, 1991 WL 84282
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1991
Docket90-CA-830
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 580 So. 2d 699 (Bourgeois v. Roudolfich) 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
Bourgeois v. Roudolfich, 580 So. 2d 699, 1991 WL 84282 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

580 So.2d 699 (1991)

Eve BOURGEOIS and David Elliott
v.
Val ROUDOLFICH, Champion Insurance Company, and Allstate Insurance Company.

No. 90-CA-830.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

May 15, 1991.

Patricia D. Miskewicz, Clyde A. Ramirez, New Orleans, for plaintiff/appellant.

Stephen N. Elliott, Lisa C. Winter, Metairie, Barbara Stavis Wolf, New Orleans, for defendants/appellees.

Before GRISBAUM and WICKER, JJ., and FINK, J., pro tempore.

WICKER, Judge.

David Elliott, the plaintiff in this personal injury suit, appeals a judgment finding him forty percent at fault; awarding him damages in the amount of $4,259.39; and dismissing his claims against Empire Fire and Marine Insurance Company. The issues are Elliott's right to appeal the judgment, the apportionment of fault, and the amount of damages. We dismiss the appeal against Allstate Insurance Company and otherwise affirm the judgment.

MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL

Allstate moved to dismiss this appeal on the grounds it had paid the judgment against it, along with judicial interest. Elliott executed and filed a Certificate of Docket Satisfaction acknowledging payment of the judgment and authorizing the clerk to cancel it from the records. Elliott admits that he has settled with Allstate. This compromise has a res judicata effect. *700 La.C.C. arts. 3071, 3078. We dismiss the appeal against Allstate Insurance Company.

Elliott and his girlfriend [now wife] Donna Reno went for a ride in his mother's [Eve Bourgeois'] car about midnight, August 8, 1986. They had picked up David's friend, Mark Burke, and were just cruising around for something to do. Reno was driving because Elliott didn't have a drivers' license. When the left front tire blew out, Reno pulled over to the side of Highway 45, a two-lane highway. The shoulder was narrow, about two or three feet wide, and sloped down into the ditch, so Reno stopped with at least half of the car still in the roadway. She explained that the car had aluminum rims and she didn't want to damage them by continuing to drive until she found a place to pull completely off the road.

Elliott and Burke got out to change the tire but were having trouble seeing because the road was so dark. Robert Verdin, a stranger, came along from the opposite direction and parked his truck so that one of the headlights shone down the side of the car, enabling the men to change the tire. They put the tire and jack into the trunk. Elliott realized he'd forgotten to get the tire iron, so he picked it up and put it in the car through the driver's side front window.

While Elliott was thus standing in the road alongside the car, Verdin pulled out into the roadway and left the scene. Val Roudolfich was coming down the road in the same direction as Elliott's car at the same time. He was temporarily blinded by Verdin's headlights and, when he could see again, saw Elliott and Burke in the road a few feet in front of him. He swerved his truck, clipping the left rear of Elliott's car and smashing his own right front quarter panel. Elliott was hit, jumped, or fell; and he was injured either by being hit by the truck or by falling to the ground.

Elliott and Bourgeois, owner of the totalled car, sued Roudolfich, alleging that his negligence and/or the negligence of Reno was the sole cause of the accident. They also sued Champion Insurance Company, Roudolfich's insurer; Empire, Roudolfich's excess insurer; and Allstate, Bourgeois' insurer. Elliott settled with Roudolfich and Champion prior to trial, dismissing these defendants but reserving his rights against the remaining defendants, specifically Empire and Allstate. Empire then moved for summary judgment on the grounds that Elliott's dismissal of Champion, the primary insurer, released it as excess insurer from further liability. Empire's motion was denied.

A twelve-person jury heard the case and unanimously assessed forty percent of the fault to Elliott, forty percent to Reno, and twenty percent to Roudolfich. It awarded $5,000.00 for past, present, and future pain and suffering and $7,780.97 for past, present, and future medical expenses. The award was reduced by the $2,132.49 in medical expenses already paid by Allstate and by Elliott's forty percent fault, resulting in a judgment of $4,259.39. The judge gave Empire a credit of $10,000.00 for the underlying limits previously paid by Champion and dismissed the claims against Empire.

We believe the testimony supports the jury's assessment of fault and affirm it under the principles of Rosell v. ESCO, 549 So.2d 840 (La.1989). Reno stopped the car in the highway blocking about three-quarters of the lane. Elliott was standing even further in the highway next to the driver's window, and Verdin's headlight was shining in such a manner as to temporarily blind Roudolfich.

DAMAGES

Elliott had dropped out of high school when he was in the ninth grade, at least partly because of a hereditary kidney disease which caused him to miss a lot of school. At the time of the accident, he was seventeen years old; and he and Reno were living with and being supported by Bourgeois. Elliott had worked as a busboy at Shoney's and on and off with his brother as a helper in construction work. His father, a construction supervisor, had promised to get him a job when he turned eighteen. He did not, however, have a job at the time of the accident. He testified of unsuccessful *701 attempts to work since the accident, each time having to quit because of pain or dizziness.

Elliott's family drove him to the hospital after the accident with complaints of a bruised calf and a cut shoulder. Later on, he said he developed headache and neck pain unlike anything he'd ever had before. He now complains of pain, dizziness, "episodes", mood changes, and confusion. Reno and Bourgeois confirm these complaints and changes.

All objective medical tests, including CAT scan, brain scan, EEG, and MRI, have been normal. The medical issue is whether Elliott is suffering from a post-concussion syndrome which has damaged his mental and emotional functions and which can be detected only through neuropsychological testing. Two neurologists, a neurosurgeon, an orthopedist, and a psychologist testified; and the medical evidence is inconclusive.

The orthopedist, Robert A. Fleming, Jr., M.D., saw Elliott in October of 1986, two months after the accident, with complaints of neck pain, headaches, neck stiffness, and pain and swelling in the ankle. Elliott gave a history of landing on his face and hands. He found some restriction in neck motion and minimal spasm, and he thinks under ordinary circumstances this would have cleared up. He diagnosed resolving cervical sprain and prescribed analgesics and muscle relaxants. Elliott did not return.

A neurologist, Patricia Cook, M.D., treated and evaluated Elliott both before and after his accident. She first saw him in 1979 and 1980 for headaches, stomach aches, nausea and vomiting, and impaired balance. Although he was not epileptic, she treated him with dilantin because some children with recurring headaches and stomach aches respond to this drug. She referred him to a psychologist, Dr. York, because he was having difficulty in school, had a school phobia, and had recurring stomach aches. Dr. York's report indicated average intelligence with no significant learning dysfunction and educational underachievement. He wrote that Elliott was an anxious, depressed, passive, dependent boy who used some somatic complaints to deal with anxiety and loss. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
580 So. 2d 699, 1991 WL 84282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bourgeois-v-roudolfich-lactapp-1991.