Cradeur v. STATE EX REL. DOTD
This text of 607 So. 2d 1050 (Cradeur v. STATE EX REL. DOTD) 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.
Opinion
Larry CRADEUR and Gale Cradeur, Plaintiffs-Appellees/Appellants,
v.
STATE of Louisiana, Through the DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT, Defendant-Appellant/Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*1051 Marc T. Amy, Abbeville, for defendant/appellant.
Tynes, Fraser, Morris & Wheeler, Maurice Tynes, Lake Charles, for plaintiff/appellee.
Before DOMENGEAUX, C.J., LABORDE, J., and PATIN[*], J. Pro Tem.
DOMENGEAUX, Chief Judge.
Donna Cradeur, 20, was killed in a one vehicle accident which occurred while she was riding in a 1980 Mazda driven by 16 year old Shannon Benoit. Donna's parents, Larry and Gale Cradeur, filed a wrongful death action against the Department of Transportation and Development, alleging that a 3-5" shoulder drop-off caused Shannon to lose control of her vehicle. After a bench trial, the court found DOTD 70% at fault in the accident and Shannon 30% at fault. The court awarded the Cradeurs each $150,000, subject to a reduction for the percentage of fault assessed to Shannon. Both DOTD and the Cradeurs appeal.
FACTS
The accident occurred at approximately 3:00 p.m. on June 9, 1985, as Donna and Shannon were returning to Lake Charles after they had visited a friend in Marksville. While driving westward on La. Highway 106 at 50-55 mph, Shannon encountered a left hand, banked curve about 430' long near the Evangeline/Avoyelles Parish boundary line. The curve had a posted advisory speed of 35 mph, and it was marked with three chevron signs showing its direction.
In her deposition, Shannon testified that a field of standing corn on her left prevented her from appreciating the severity of the curve. She entered the curve at about 50 mph, but slowed down to 35-40 mph. She negotiated the curve for about 265' *1052 until her vehicle's right tires left the roadway. She continued to travel with two tires on the shoulder for about 101', at which point she attempted to re-enter the highway. Upon re-entry, the vehicle began a rapid rotation, slid across the roadway, and crashed into a metal culvert. Donna was killed, and Shannon was seriously injured.
Trooper Frederick Fontenot, the investigating officer, prepared a schematic diagram of the site and took pictures of the scene immediately after the accident. Tire tracks on the shoulder, as depicted in the photographs, indicate that the point of reentry was at the deepest part of an 18-20' long drop-off between the roadway and the shoulder. At trial, the parties presented much conflicting testimony, both expert and lay, regarding the exact depth of the drop-off at re-entry and the effect of the drop-off, if any, on the vehicle's path after re-entry.
Trooper Fontenot, who was accepted by the court as an expert in accident investigation, testified that he did not measure the drop-off, but he "eyeballed" it at approximately 2". On his official accident report, he checked "defective shoulders" as an observed roadway condition. At trial, he stated he believed the shoulder was a contributing factor, but he also believed the driver oversteered as she re-entered the highway.
Raymond Bradley, Shannon's stepfather, photographed the drop-off about a week after the accident. He, too, did not measure it, but he estimated its depth at 3-4". Lesson LeGros, an investigator hired by the Cradeurs, measured the drop-off on several occasions, the earliest being on January 15, 1986, some six months after the accident. On that date, LeGros measured a 4½" drop at the point of re-entry and a 3" drop several feet further down the road. LeGros also visited the site on three other occasions from about a year and a half after the accident through five years after the accident. He testified he measured the shoulder each time, and the subsequent measurements were approximately the same as those taken on his first visit, six months after the accident.
Gene Moody, the plaintiffs' accident reconstruction expert, testified that he believed Shannon oversteered as she attempted to re-enter the highway. The rapid rotation after re-entry, however, was caused by the vehicle's right wheel "scrubbing" for one wheel rotation against the 4½" drop. He further stated that a 2" drop would not have caused the drastic change in direction which was evidenced by yaw marks left on the roadway. The experts agreed that yaw marks are the result of the tires rolling forward while the vehicle is sliding sideways.
Duaine Evans, DOTD's expert, attributed the accident exclusively to driver error, specifically speeding and oversteering. He testified that even if the drop-off were 4½", it would not have contributed to the accident because Shannon had already lost control of her vehicle before she re-entered the highway. He based this conclusion on photographs of the vehicle's tire tracks which indicated the car was in a 10° rotation on the shoulder. Evans considered the substantial change in rotation that occurred upon re-entry to be a continuation of the rotation that had already begun on the shoulder.
At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court accepted Moody's testimony, finding that on the date of the accident, the drop-off was 4½", that the vehicle's tires scrubbed against the pavement, producing the rapid rotation, and that the driver was inattentive in ignoring the posted warning signs.[1] The court assessed DOTD with 70% fault, the driver with 30% fault.
RES JUDICATA
DOTD first argues the trial court erred in overruling DOTD's exception of res judicata, the exception being based upon a release executed by the Cradeurs three days after the accident. The Cradeurs executed the release, for policy limits *1053 of $10,000, in favor of Shannon Benoit, Peggy Bradley (Shannon's mother) and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (Shannon's liability insurer). The document also purported to release "all other persons, firms and corporations who might be liable...." The names of Benoit, Bradley and State Farm are either handwritten or typed in blanks on the form; the quoted language is found in the printed portion of the form.
In Aymond v. State, through the Department of Highways, 333 So.2d 380 (La. App. 3d Cir.1976), writ denied, 337 So.2d 875 (La.1976), this court considered the effect of the same above language as applied to a very similar situation. Aymond also presented the situation where the survivors of a guest passenger who was killed in a one car accident first released the driver's insurer and then pursued a claim against DOTD. In Aymond, we held DOTD could not claim any advantage from the release's broad, unrestricted language because DOTD was not a party to the release, nor did DOTD give any consideration for the execution of the release.
The Aymond case does contain one important distinction. There, the driver was absolved of any negligence and was therefore not solidarily bound with DOTD. In the instant case, for the reasons discussed below, we affirm the trial court's finding that Shannon and DOTD are joint tortfeasors.
In Highlands Insurance Co. v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Co., 532 So.2d 317 (La. App. 3d Cir.1988), affirmed, 540 So.2d 287 (La.1989), we summarized the recent changes in the law regarding the effect of the release of one solidary obligor as to the other obligors:
Former LSA-C.C. Art. 2203 provided that the release of one solidary obligor had the effect of releasing all solidary obligors unless the creditor expressly reserved rights against the others.
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607 So. 2d 1050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cradeur-v-state-ex-rel-dotd-lactapp-1992.