Brandon v. Trosclair

800 So. 2d 49, 2001 WL 1346080
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 2001
Docket2000-CA-2374
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 800 So. 2d 49 (Brandon v. Trosclair) 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
Brandon v. Trosclair, 800 So. 2d 49, 2001 WL 1346080 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

800 So.2d 49 (2001)

John BRANDON and Chris Brandon
v.
Mickey C. TROSCLAIR, Chevron Chemical Company, Je Merit Constructors, Inc., and A & B Insurance Companies.

No. 2000-CA-2374.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

October 17, 2001.

*50 Walter J. Leger, Jr., Michael J. Mestayer, Leger & Mestayer, New Orleans, LA, Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants.

*51 Boris F. Navratil, Navratil, Hardy & Bourgeois, L.L.P., Baton Rouge, LA, Counsel for Defendant/Appellee.

Court composed of Judge MIRIAM G. WALTZER, Judge PATRICIA RIVET MURRAY and Judge MAX N. TOBIAS, JR.

Judge MIRIAM G. WALTZER.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

John Brandon and his wife, Chris, filed suit on 27 May 1994 against Mickey C. Trosclair and his alleged employers, Chevron Chemical Company and J.E. Merit Constructors, Inc. and their insurers for damages arising out of a collision that occurred when Brandon's vehicle struck the rear of the Chevron truck Trosclair was driving. Defendants answered. The case was consolidated with Insurance Company of North America, ESIS Incorporated and J.E. Merit Constructors, Inc v. John R. Brandon, Barrilleaux Truck Service, Inc., Ace Transportation, Inc. and Lloyds of London, involving the same injured party, accident and defendants.

On 25 July 1997, the trial court granted defendants' motion for partial summary judgment dismissing with prejudice Brandon's claim for punitive damages. Following trial on the merits, on 18 November 1999 the trial court determined that the law and evidence favor the conclusions that the accident was caused solely by Brandon's negligence and fault, and that defendants-appellees did not cause or contribute to the injuries sustained by Brandon or damages to his wife, and rendered judgment in favor of defendants, dismissing plaintiffs' suit with prejudice at plaintiffs' cost. From that judgment, the Brandons appeal. We affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

The parties entered into the following stipulations prior to trial:

1. J. E. Merit Constructors, Inc., was hired by Chevron U.S.A., Inc. to perform various work functions in conjunction with Chevron's Belle Chasse refinery.

2. In conjunction with the work in question, Chevron supplied to Merit various pieces of equipment, including the flat bed trailer and tractor unit involved in the accident in question.

3. The contract between Merit and Chevron classifies the Merit employees as special employees of Chevron and these employees were required to sign an agreement that in the event of personal injury or death their sole remedy against Chevron was in workers' compensation.

4. On 3 June 1993, Trosclair, an employee of Merit under contract to Chevron, was operating a Chevron-owned 1978 Freightliner tractor and 1974 Lufkin trailer on Louisiana Highway 23 in Plaquemines Parish.

5. Loaded on the Chevron trailer were fifty-eight 42-gallon drums containing lube oil additive.

6. The Trosclair rig entered the highway from a location on the west side of Highway 23 and proceeded north toward the Chevron plant in Belle Chasse, Louisiana, located less than one mile away.

7. On the same day, Brandon, operating a 1988 Peterbilt tractor unit pulling a 1987 Lufkin trailer, was proceeding northbound on Louisiana Highway 23 in Plaquemines Parish.

8. As a result of the collision, all of the drums loaded on the Chevron trailer became dislodged from the trailer.

The trial judge entered detailed reasons for judgment, including specific findings of fact. He found that the rear end collision occurred on a clear day at about 1:30 p.m. on the four lane Belle Chasse highway *52 (Louisiana Highway 23), in front of the Chevron Chemical Company plant and one hundred feet south of Gate 3 to the plant. The highway at this location is a four-lane highway embracing two roadways divided by a twenty-four foot wide compacted neutral ground. The north bound roadway where the accident occurred consists of two asphalt topped concrete lanes each twelve feet in width with a ten foot hard surface shoulder on the right (east) side and an eight foot hard surface shoulder on the neutral ground (west) side. From the right hand surfaced shoulder there is an additional compacted grass covered shoulder extending about sixty feet to railroad tracks running parallel to the highway. Just off the hard surface right shoulder and on the grass covered right of way at about 300 feet from the plant entrance are two continuously flashing yellow caution lights warning of the plant entrance ahead and of congesting, crossing or emerging traffic moving into and out of the entrance.

The trial court found that both tractortrailer trucks were traveling north toward the plant at the time of the accident. Brandon was operating a tractor trailer loaded with seven tons of steel beams, sheets of metal grating, a welding machine and two air tuggers, which were strapped down and secured to the trailer bed. Brandon had driven 120 miles from his home in LaRose to Venice, where he picked up his cargo, and then an additional sixty miles from Venice to the Chevron plant.

Trosclair testified that he drove his rig only between the barrel warehouse and the Chevron plant's barrel annex, a distance of only one-half mile on Louisiana Highway 23. He testified that he never transported the drums to any other location, but only back and forth on this half-mile stretch of highway. He testified that in the approximately two thousand trips he made between the warehouse and the Chevron plant, carrying the drums in the same manner as on the day of the accident, he never had a drum fall off or slide, no matter whether the load was only one drum or a full load of 84 drums. The issue of sliding barrels never came up at safety meetings.

Trosclair's trailer was loaded with fifty-eight barrels of lube oil additive owned by Chevron and loaded four abreast from the front of the trailer continuing for fourteen rows or a distance of twenty-eight feet toward the rear of the trailer. The trailer measured eight feet wide and forty feet long and had a capacity of eighty barrels standing upright, four abreast and twenty deep. The trailer was equipped with fixed two inch pipe railings around the sides and back of the trailer about nine to ten inches high. At the front of the trailer, the railing was over three feet high. The side and rear railings were exactly one-third the height of a barrel of lube oil additive. The drums were not otherwise secured to the bed of the trailer. Each drum or barrel is thirty inches high and two feet in diameter. Trosclair testified that he had never been instructed to load the barrels in any other way, or to use straps or to tie down or otherwise secure the drums in any other manner than to place them together within the railing. We note that Brandon testified that his own load was tied down, but admitted that his flatbed, unlike Trosclair's, was not equipped with side bar rails, a rear gate or a "headache bar" in front. Brandon also admitted that his load came loose apparently from the force of the collision.

The trial court noted Trosclair's testimony that he regularly tested the vehicle's brakes and lights, that he tested all his lights, hazard flashers and four brake lights before the trip that culminated in the accident and that the vehicle is inspected *53 at least three times each month.

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Bluebook (online)
800 So. 2d 49, 2001 WL 1346080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandon-v-trosclair-lactapp-2001.