Eloisa Gomes and Armando Gomes v. Mario Rosario

79 A.3d 1262, 2013 WL 6198184, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 27, 2013
Docket2012-2-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 79 A.3d 1262 (Eloisa Gomes and Armando Gomes v. Mario Rosario) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eloisa Gomes and Armando Gomes v. Mario Rosario, 79 A.3d 1262, 2013 WL 6198184, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 154 (R.I. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice GOLDBERG,

for the Court.

This appeal arises out of a seven-day jury trial resulting from an automobile collision that occurred more than ten years ago. The jury found that the plaintiff, Eloísa Gomes (plaintiff or Gomes), failed to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant, Mario Rosario (defendant or Rosario), was negligent. 1 The trial justice, however, granted the plaintiffs motion for a new trial, finding that the jury’s assignment of “no liability to the defendant demonstrates that this court’s instructions were not clear or properly understood or applied by the jury in this case.” 2 The defendant contends on appeal that the trial justice erred in granting a new trial. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment.

Facts and Travel

During the afternoon of September 23, 2003, Gomes, a certified nursing assistant, was driving from the home of one patient to the home of another; she was traveling south to north on Pine Street in Pawtuck-et. At the same time, Rosario was driving home from a bank, traveling west to east on Marrin Street. It is undisputed that the vehicles operated by Gomes and Rosario collided in the intersection — governed by a traffic light — bisecting Pine Street and Marrin Street. 3 The circumstances that led to that collision comprised the bulk of the relevant testimony at trial. 4

Two independent eyewitnesses testified at trial: Isabel Baldera (Baldera) and Robert Smith (Smith). 5 Baldera testified that she was on her way to work on the day of the accident and that she was stopped behind another vehicle in the right lane on Marrin Street. While waiting at the red light, Baldera noticed a red truck in her mirror. She testified that the truck, driven by Rosario, passed her on the left and proceeded through a red light into the intersection. Meanwhile, she testified that Gomes was proceeding down Pine Street, with a green light, and that she slowly entered the intersection. Baldera testified that the vehicles collided in the intersection and “[t]he front of [Rosario’s] truck hit the front left side of [Gomes’s vehicle].” Baldera admitted, however, that she did not see that Gomes had a green light directly, but rather assumed so because she (Baldera) had a red light.

*1264 Smith, the second eyewitness, testified that he was driving on Marrin Street on his way home from work as a taxi driver on the day of the accident. His testimony was in agreement with previous witnesses that Marrin Street was a one-way roadway and three lanes wide, and he stated that he was the first vehicle stopped at a red light in the middle lane. Smith testified that, while stopped at the red light, he saw Rosario’s truck pass him on the right and drive through the red light. As this was happening, Smith observed Gomes’s small, blue car traveling down Pine Street. He testified that both cars were traveling at around twenty miles per hour. Smith testified that when the cars collided, Rosario’s truck hit' Gomes’s “right broadside.” Then the following colloquy ensued:

“Q. What part of his [Rosario’s] car hit her [Gomes’s] car?
“A. His front right.
“Q. That would be the front passenger side?
“A. No, the other side.
“Q. And what part of her car was hit?
“A. The front part of her — the front part of her car.”

Smith testified that, after the initial collision, Rosario’s truck hit a fence and Gomes’s car remained in the middle of the road.

Pawtucket Police Officer Hermano Per-eira (Officer Pereira) investigated the accident. Although he testified that he did not recollect the incident at the time of trial, he testified about the contents of a police report that he prepared on the day of the accident. The police report, admitted as a full trial exhibit, contained a diagram of the damaged areas of the vehicles. Officer Pereira testified that the diagram showed damage to the front, front right, front left, and the left and right sides near the doors of Rosario’s vehicle. The diagram also depicted damage to the front, front'right, and front left of Gomes’s vehicle. Based on his conversations with Baldera, Smith, Gomes, and Rosario, Officer Pereira issued a citation to Rosario for failure to obey a traffic control device. Pawtucket Municipal Court records indicate that the ticket was paid and not contested by Rosario.

Gomes testified that she was working as a certified nursing assistant and traveling between patients on September 23, 2003. She testified that she was driving in the left lane of Pine Street at about twenty miles per hour. Gomes testified that she had a green light and entered the intersection, but at about the middle of the intersection she “heard the impact with [Rosario’s] car.” She testified that her car spun around, made a second impact on the left side, and finally hit a sidewalk. According to Gomes, a photograph depicting the damage to her driver’s side rear door was the result of the second impact. On cross-examination, Gomes stated that the initial impact involved the front of her car, but she could not remember what part of Rosario’s truck was hit or which vehicle struck the other vehicle.

Rosario testified that he was traveling west to east on Pine Street and proceeding at ten to fifteen miles per hour. He contended that the traffic light was green “constantly” and that, as he approached the intersection, he saw Gomes’s car approaching at a high rate of speed from fifty feet away. Despite acknowledging that he saw Gomes’s car entering the intersection and his testimony that he was traveling only at ten to fifteen miles per hour, when asked why he did not brake to avoid the accident, Rosario responded, “I panic right there.” Rosario testified that the front of Gomes’s car contacted the front of his truck near the door. According to Rosario, after the collision, his truck’s passenger-side front wheel and door were damaged as a result of the accident. Rosario testified that, after the collision, his truck traveled onto a grassy *1265 area and hit a fence. He testified that he had the truck repaired and never took any pictures of the damage. Finally, he testified that he did not contest the traffic citation because he wanted to “get over with it” and that he “didn’t want any problem.”

The jury found that Gomes had not proven, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that Rosario was negligent. The plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial, arguing that the verdict failed to respond to the evidence, and, in a bench decision, the trial justice granted the motion and ordered a new trial. The trial justice found both of the independent, neutral witnesses, Baldera and Smith, to be “highly credible.” Regarding the testimony of the parties, he noted that both Gomes and Rosario had an interest in the outcome of the trial and pointed to inconsistencies and a lack of clarity in their testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 A.3d 1262, 2013 WL 6198184, 2013 R.I. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eloisa-gomes-and-armando-gomes-v-mario-rosario-ri-2013.