Chiasson v. Whitney

427 So. 2d 470
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1983
Docket5-221
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 427 So. 2d 470 (Chiasson v. Whitney) 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
Chiasson v. Whitney, 427 So. 2d 470 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

427 So.2d 470 (1983)

Michael CHIASSON
v.
Roland WHITNEY, Jr., Horace Mann Insurance Company, Sentry Insurance Company, and the Louisiana Department of Transportation & Development.

No. 5-221.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

January 10, 1983.
Rehearing Denied March 17, 1983.

*471 Stephen F. Griffith, Sr., Ltd., Destrehan, Stephen B. Murray, New Orleans, for Michael Chiasson, plaintiff-appellee.

Robert J. Young, Jr., Young, McMahon & Richaud, New Orleans, for Sentry Ins. Co., defendant-appellant.

Irving H. Koch, Nelson, Nelson & Koch, Ltd., New Orleans, for Roland Whitney, Jr., defendant-appellant.

Robert A. Vosbein and Mark C. Suprenant, New Orleans, for Louisiana Services of Norco, Inc. d/b/a Louisiana Ins. Service, Arthur L. Smith, and Equity General Ins. Co., defendants-appellants.

Jesse S. Guillot, New Orleans, for Louisiana Dept. of Transp. & Development.

Before BOUTALL, BOWES and CURRAULT, JJ.

BOUTALL, Judge.

This lawsuit arose out of a car-pedestrian accident on Highway 18 at the Taft-Norco Foot Ferry pedestrian crossing. From a judgment in favor of plaintiff, Michael Chiasson, Sentry Indemnity Company and the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development have appealed. In addition, Sentry Indemnity Company has appealed from a summary judgment dismissing Sentry's third-party demand against Louisiana Insurance Services and Arthur L. Smith, and their insurer Equity General Insurance Company, and from a judgment dismissing Sentry's third-party demand against Roland Whitney, Jr. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.

Michael Chiasson, an eighteen-year-old apprentice carpenter was seriously injured on February 1, 1979, when a car driven by Roland Whitney, Jr., struck him as he crossed the highway to take the ferry across the Mississippi River. The van in which Chiasson had hitched a ride stopped on the highway at the crosswalk, letting Chiasson out on the passenger side. Chiasson walked behind the van and in front of other stopped vehicles and then proceeded across the highway toward the levee. An inattentive driver came upon the line of vehicles, realized that he was about to drive into them and moved into the other lane to avoid the cars, but in doing so he struck Chiasson with the left front section of his car. Chiasson was hurled some 35 feet, landing on a shelled area adjacent to the *472 road. He suffered a head injury and a fractured shoulder.

On July 12, 1979, Michael Chiasson filed suit against the driver, Roland Whitney, Jr., his insurer, Horace Mann Insurance Company, and Sentry Indemnity Company, the insurer of Chiasson's parents, seeking damages, including past and future loss of earnings.

Whitney pleaded the affirmative defense of poverty and carried liability insurance of only $5,000.00. Sentry was named defendant as carrier of Chiasson's parents' insurance in the hope of recovering under their uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage.

The parents' insurance policy, which included Michael as he was then living at home, provided for liability limits of $300,000.00 per accident, but uninsured or underinsured motorist's coverage of only $5,000/$10,000. Arthur Smith, the agent who placed the policy with Sentry, admitted having designated the lower limits and having an employee sign Harold Chiasson's name on the document waiving the $300,000.00 coverage to which the insureds were entitled under Louisiana R.S. 22:1406.

Sentry filed a third-party demand against Roland Whitney, Horace Mann Insurance Company, Louisiana Insurance Service (LIS), Arthur L. Smith, and Equity General Insurance Company seeking indemnification for any sum which it might be required to pay to the plaintiff.

Michael Chiasson filed a supplemental petition on January 31, 1980, adding the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development as a defendant, alleging negligence in the design, construction, and maintenance of the pedestrian crossing. Also on that date the parents, Harold L. Chiasson, Jr., and Rosemary Chiasson, and Michael filed a separate suit against LIS, Arthur L. Smith, John Faucheaux, Sr., and Equity General, alleging negligence and/or fraud on their part in failing to inform the Chiassons of the lower uninsured motorist coverage and in forging Harold's name and submitting the coverage selection with lower limits. They sought payment for Michael's damages and their own mental anguish.

Horace Mann Insurance Company paid its policy limits of $5,000 and was dismissed on a motion for summary judgment on March 14, 1980.

The two lawsuits were consolidated but were severed on February 3, 1981, the first day of the trial. Also on February 3, 1981, a jury began hearing Michael Chiasson's case as to all defendants except the Department of Transportation and Development. The district judge heard the case against the Department in June, 1981. Just prior to the jury trial Chiasson dismissed his suit against Roland Whitney, reserving rights against all other defendants. At the end of the jury trial Sentry's third-party demand against Whitney was also dismissed on a directed verdict.

The jury found that Whitney was negligent and that his negligence was a legal cause of Chiasson's injury; that the plaintiff's damages amounted to $531,133.00, including future loss of $300,000.00 in wages; and that the Chiasson's policy with Sentry provided uninsured motorist coverage up to $300,000.00. After hearing the trial against the Department of Transportation and Development, in which the parties adopted the testimony brought out in the jury trial, the judge rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff assessing damages of $526,133.00 ($531,133.00 minus the $5000 paid by Horace Mann Insurance Co.). On the judge trial he cast the State in judgment for $526,133.00, and on the jury verdict he rendered judgment of $309,132.90 against Sentry, but limited plaintiff's recovery to no more than the higher figure. The court adopted the jury's findings of fact as to defendants Whitney and Sentry, and found that the Department was negligent in designing, constructing, and maintaining the pedestrian crossing and was strictly liable under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2317.

After the Department and Sentry appealed, Roland Whitney filed a motion to dismiss the appeal as to the directed verdict in his favor on grounds of his having been discharged in bankruptcy.

*473 On this appeal the parties have argued the following issues: (1) Whether the Department is liable either on grounds of negligence or of strict liability under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2317; (2) whether the insurance contract should be reformed to provide uninsured motorist coverage equivalent to the limits of liability; (3) whether the court correctly dismissed Sentry's third-party claims against LIS, Arthur L. Smith, and Equity General Insurance Company and against Roland Whitney; (4) where there is a judgment against a solvent joint tort-feasor, and the other tort-feasor has been dismissed because of poverty, whether plaintiff's uninsured motorist insurer must pay part of the judgment and then seek reimbursement; (5) whether the award of $9,132.90 in medical expenses over and above the uninsured motorist insurance was correct; and (6) whether the award of $300,000 for future earnings is correct.

Negligence of Roland Whitney.

Roland Whitney admitted that he had bent down to look for a cigarette and consequently did not see that the cars ahead had stopped. He violated at least two motorist's statutes: LSA R.S. 32:58, failing to maintain control of a vehicle and LSA R.S.

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Bluebook (online)
427 So. 2d 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chiasson-v-whitney-lactapp-1983.