Butterfield v. Saucier

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 20, 2003
DocketCUMcv-01-466
StatusUnpublished

This text of Butterfield v. Saucier (Butterfield v. Saucier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butterfield v. Saucier, (Me. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

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A STATE OF MAINE CUMBERLAND, "GUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss 1 ee cer if€IVIL ACTION ‘Docket No. CV-01-46 nA 349 TEH-CUM sjao [2° DES

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GREGORY L. BUTTERFIELD, Individually

and as Personal Representative of

the Estate of Brandy M. Butterfield, and

LINDA M. BUTTERFIELD, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Brandy M. Butterfield,

Plaintiffs Vv. DECISION AND ORDER JOE PETE SAUCIER and NORFOLK & DEDHAM MUTUAL FIRE INS. CO., DONALD 1 BOSAL ow Defendants LAW LBA ‘APR gam:

This matter is before the court for a determination of damages on the claims of the plaintiffs, as Personal Representatives of the Estate of Brandy M. Butterfield, against the defendant Saucier for wrongful death (Count I) and conscious suffering (Count II), and the claim of the plaintiff Gregory Butterfield against the defendant Norfolk & Dedham for breach of contract (Count V).

BACKGROUND

On December 12, 1999 Brandy Butterfield died. Moments before her death, she had been riding as a passenger in a pick-up truck operated by the defendant Joe Pete Saucier. Saucier had led police on a high speed chase that ended when the truck crashed into a concrete embankment, plunged fifteen to twenty feet into the Nonesuch River, and landed upside down in approximately three to four feet of water. When the pursuing officer arrived at the scene,

Saucier was sitting in the water on the driver's side of the vehicle yelling that the driver was still in the truck.

Additional police arrived. Sgt. Jipson and those officers went to both doors of the pick up. They were able to open the driver's side door, but not the passenger's. No one was inside. After five or ten minutes, Jipson got out of the water. Fire and rescue personnel arrived and Brandy was soon found unconscious beneath the bed of the truck on the passenger's side near the rear tire.

Brandy was later pronounced dead at Maine Medical Center. She was 21 years old at the time of her death and the plaintiffs are her parents and only heirs.

Saucier was not insured and the pick up truck was an uninsured vehicle. On September 27, 2001, a default was entered against him in this case. Brandy was insured under two separate policies with North East Insurance Company, each providing $50,000 in uninsured motorist coverage.! North East paid the limits of both policies to the plaintiffs in their capacity as the personal representatives of Brandy's estate.

Gregory Butterfield was a named insured under an automobile policy issued by the defendant Norfolk & Dedham that included uninsured motorist coverage. By order dated August 27, 2002, this court declared that the Norfolk & Dedham policy provided uninsured motorist coverage to Gregory for those damages which he is legally entitled to recover under Maine's wrongful death

statute as an heir of Brandy Butterfield. See 18-A M.R.S.A. § 2-804.

1Brandy was the named insured under one of the policies. Her mother, Linda Butterfield, was the named insured under the other. At the time of her death, Brandy resided with her mother and qualified as an insured under the latter policy.

2 DISCUSSION

I. Claims Against Defendant Saucier

The wrongful death statute permits the personal representatives of an estate to seek damages for the benefit of the deceased's heirs (i) for the deceased's conscious pain and suffering, (ii) up to $150,000 for the heirs' loss of comfort, society and companionship of the deceased, including damages for emotional distress, (iii) for pecuniary loss to the heirs, (iv) for reasonable funeral expenses and medical expenses, and (v) up to $75,000 for punitive damages. 18-A M.R.S.A. § 2-804. With the exception of pecuniary damages for which there has been no evidence presented in this case,? Brandy's personal representatives seek to recover under the remaining categories of damages.

A. Conscious Suffering

Based upon the credible direct and circumstantial evidence, the court concludes that Brandy endured conscious suffering in this case. She was not thrown from the interior of the vehicle and there were no signs of trauma to her body. The passenger door of the pick up could not be opened and it is not likely that she exited through the driver's door.? The only other exit from the interior of the pick up was the rear window of the truck's cab. It is reasonable to infer from the direct and circumstantial evidence that Brandy reached the

point under the truck's bed where she was found by exiting the vehicle through

2It is inherently difficult to determine pecuniary loss upon the death of a child. Carter v. Williams, 2002 ME 50, 7 10, 792 A.2d 1093, 1097. Damages are not recoverable if they are speculative and not grounded on facts established by the evidence. Id. at I 9 (citations omitted).

3 Sgt. Jipson observed Saucier sitting in the water near the driver's door.

3 that window. Because of her size and that of the window, it is highly unlikely that this maneuver could have been performed if she was unconscious. Accordingly, the court concludes that it is more likely than not that Brandy was conscious inside the overturned truck and remained conscious during her exit from its cab and until she drowned beneath the pick up's rear bed. Although the evidence does not allow a precise determination of the length of time that the young woman consciously suffered, there is sufficient evidence to permit a reasonable determination of damages. Sgt. Jipson observed the truck's lights "quite a ways ahead" as he pursued the vehicle on the dirt way leading to the river. The officer saw the lights go up, then drop straight down at the embankment. Jipson drove his cruiser near to the embankment, ran to its edge, and saw the overturned pick up. Within a “couple of minutes" he went into the water with other officers who had arrived at the scene. He got out of the water after five or ten minutes and Brandy was found unconscious a short while later. It is not known whether there was an air pocket available to Brandy or used by her either in the cab or the overturned bed of the truck. If there was, there is no way to tell how long she remained conscious, other than to know that she was not conscious at the moment she was found. If there was no air pocket, then she could not have remained conscious longer than the few minutes she could hold her breath. The plaintiff has the burden on this issue and, understandably, can only meet it as to the shorter time period. Although the time necessary for her to lose consciousness in the drowning process have may have been brief, it had to

have been harrowing and frightening beyond description. The court concludes

4 that $200,000 is an appropriate award for damages on account of Brandy's conscious suffering. It must be stressed that this modest amount is not intended to diminish or minimize the actual suffering that the court is convinced that Brandy endured. Rather, it is intended to fairly and accurately reflect the shorter duration of that suffering established by the plaintiff's proof.

B. Loss of Comfort, Society, Companionship and Emotional Distress

The court finds that Gregory Butterfield suffered a genuine loss of his daughter's comfort, society and companionship. Brandy was approximately 25 years old when she died. She was not married, had no children, and was financially independent. Although Brandy lived with her mother, she had a good relationship with her father and frequently visited with him.

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