Devall v. Morgan

424 So. 2d 522
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1982
Docket5-277 to 5-279
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 424 So. 2d 522 (Devall v. Morgan) 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
Devall v. Morgan, 424 So. 2d 522 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

424 So.2d 522 (1982)

Margaret Smith DEVALL
v.
Ernest J. MORGAN, et al.
Deborah K. RYBCZYK as Trustee of/and Government Employees Insurance Company
v.
Ernest J. MORGAN, et al.
Deborah KRELLER, Widow of Rhys S. Rybczyk
v.
Ernest J. MORGAN.

Nos. 5-277 to 5-279.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

December 9, 1982.
Rehearing Denied January 17, 1983.
Writs Denied March 4, 1983.

*523 Elsie B. Halford, Metairie, for Margaret Smith Devall, plaintiff-appellee.

Wells & Breaux, John H. Wells, New Orleans, for Deborah K. Rybczyk as trustee of/and Government Employees Ins. Co., plaintiffs-appellees.

Gordon Hackman, Boutee, for Ernest J. Morgan, defendant-appellant.

Philip K. Jones, Marshall W. Wroten, Robert J. Jones, Doran & Kivett, William J. Doran, Jr., Baton Rouge, for State of La., Dept. of Transp. and Development, defendant-appellant.

Before CHEHARDY, KLIEBERT and CURRAULT, JJ.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

These cases were consolidated for trial in the district court and for argument here. They arise from a head-on collision between two uninsured automobiles on U.S. Highway 61 (Airline Highway) in that section known as the Bonne Carre Spillway Bridge. Casper A. Rigamer, driver of one of the automobiles, and his guest passenger Rhys Rybczyk were killed and Ernest L. Morgan, the owner-driver of the other automobile, was injured.

Suit No. 5-277 of our docket was instituted by Rigamer's divorced wife Margaret Devall, as administratrix of the estate of the three minor Rigamer children, for loss of love and affection, pain and suffering and loss of their father's support. The principal defendants in the suit, and the only ones with which we are concerned in this court, are Ernest Morgan and the State of Louisiana, Department of Transportation and Development (Office of Highways),[1] hereinafter referred to as the Highway Department.

Morgan answered and reconvened for special and general damages, and the Highway Department answered asserting the defense of negligence and/or contributory negligence on the part of Rigamer and filed a third party demand against Morgan.

Suit No. 5-278 of our docket was filed by Mrs. Deborah Rybczyk as trustee of/and Government Employees Insurance Company against Morgan, the Highway Department (and other defendants not pertinent here) for $50,000 which had been paid to Mrs. Rybczyk under the uninsured motorists provision of her own policy with that insurer following the death of her husband.

Morgan reconvened in this suit for his injuries and the Highway Department filed a third party demand against Morgan, alternatively seeking solidary liability along with Morgan in the event that department was found liable.

Suit No. 5-279 of our docket was filed by Mrs. Rybczyk against Morgan for the wrongful death of her husband. She named no other defendant. Morgan filed the same answer and reconventional demand as he had in the other suits.

Following trial on the merits judgment was rendered against only the Highway Department in the various suits as follows:

*524 In Suit No. 5-277 there was judgment in favor of Margaret Devall as administratrix of the estate of the three minor Rigamer children in the sum of $50,000 each for general damages and additional special damages for each child for loss of support. (The latter awards were based upon a previous judgment for support rendered in the parents' divorce action, figured until each child was 18 years of age. The children were all in their teens at the time of Rigamer's death.)

Suit No. 5-278 relative to the $50,000 uninsured motorist claim of Mrs. Rybczyk, as trustee, and Government Employees Insurance Company was dismissed, as was Suit No. 5-279, Mrs. Rybczyk's personal suit against Morgan.

The trial court dismissed all claims against Morgan, finding he was free of negligence and had in no way contributed to the accident. The court ruled that the sole proximate cause of the accident was the failure of the Highway Department to inspect and maintain the bridge, which was found to be too narrow for the volume of traffic.

Morgan filed a motion for a new trial in each suit and Mrs. Rybczyk, as trustee, and Government Employees Insurance Company filed a motion for a new trial in their suit. Morgan's motion for a new trial was based upon his claim that, because of procedural difficulties, his claims had not been joined against the state and that the court had orally ordered severance of his claims as plaintiff.

At a hearing on the motions, the judge rendered an amended judgment whereby Morgan's claim for a bifurcated judgment was denied. He was found to be contributorily negligent to a sufficient degree so as to dismiss his cause of action, but not to such a degree as to be liable with the Highway Department.

The judgment was also amended in Suit No. 5-278, awarding Mrs. Rybczyk as trustee and Government Employees Insurance Company $50,000 against the Highway Department. As explained by the trial court in its reasons for judgment this claim had been denied in the original judgment because the court had overlooked the fact that the Highway Department was a named defendant in this suit and consequently entitled to a judgment. This inadvertence is explained inasmuch as the department was not a defendant in Mrs. Rybczyk's individual suit and had been named a defendant in her suit as trustee for/and the insurer by means of a supplemental and amended petition.

As in the original judgment, the Highway Department was found to be the sole proximate cause of the accident. The awards for the Rigamer children were maintained and the motions for a new trial were denied.

Morgan suspensively appealed from the original and amended judgments in Suits Nos. 5-277 and 5-278, as did the Highway Department. No appeal was taken in those suits by any other parties, apparently due to the insolvency of the individual defendant, and Mrs. Rybczyk did not appeal in Suit No. 5-279.

FACTS

The accident occurred about 5:50 a.m. on Saturday, May 28, 1977. Morgan, the sole survivor, was travelling from his home in Reserve to his place of employment in Avondale Shipyards. Rigamer and Ryczyk, the decedents, were travelling from their home in New Orleans to go fishing on the other side of the spillway. The weather was patchy fog. The vehicles were travelling on Highway 61 approaching in opposite directions. The speed limit on the highway and the narrower spillway bridge was 55 miles per hour.

The bridge itself is a four-lane undivided roadway about one mile long with concrete guard rails on either side about 3 feet from the highway. There is an 18-inch-wide walkway on each side which forms a curb 16 inches high adjacent to the outside lane in both directions. Thus the total surface available to traffic is 40 feet. There is a double yellow line painted down the center of the 40-foot width. Located between the lines are reflective buttons 3/4 inches high by *525 4 inches square, 40 feet apart. Each direction of travel is divided by a dashed white painted line. These markings total 20 inches in width. Thus the effective width of travel in each lane averages 9 feet 7 inches.

On one side of the center line there are two lanes reserved for traffic travelling eastward (i.e. toward New Orleans), and on the opposite side of the center line two lanes are reserved for traffic travelling westward toward Baton Rouge.

Morgan's version of the accident is that he was travelling 45 to 50 miles per hour as he approached the bridge from the highway.

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Bluebook (online)
424 So. 2d 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devall-v-morgan-lactapp-1982.