Eric Brown v. American Central Casualty Co.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 2010
DocketCA-0010-0135
StatusUnknown

This text of Eric Brown v. American Central Casualty Co. (Eric Brown v. American Central Casualty Co.) 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
Eric Brown v. American Central Casualty Co., (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

10-135

ERIC BROWN

VERSUS

AMERICAN CENTRAL CASUALTY CO., ET AL.

************

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 08-0276 HONORABLE ALONZO HARRIS, DISTRICT JUDGE

DAVID E. CHATELAIN* JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Shannon J. Gremillion, and David E. Chatelain, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Robert L. Bordelon, Jr. Bordelon Law Firm Post Office Box 451 Opelousas, Louisiana 70571 (337) 594-8181 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: ACCC Insurance Company (formerly American Century Casualty Co.)

Sherman Stanford Attorney at Law Post Office Box 1237 Opelousas, Louisiana 70570 (337) 948-4113 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Eric Brown

* Honorable David E. Chatelain participated in this decision by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court as Judge Pro Tempore. Michael J. Breaux Attorney at Law Post Office Box 51106 Lafayette, Louisiana 70505-1106 (337) 235-8000 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Marshall Williams

Marshall Williams In Proper Person 123 Saylock Lane Opelousas, Louisiana 70570 Defendant/Appellee: Marshall Williams CHATELAIN, Judge.

In this suit for damages arising from a motor vehicle accident, the defendant

insurer appeals the trial court’s judgment in favor of the plaintiff, complaining that

the plaintiff failed to satisfy his burden of proof and that the trial court improperly

took judicial notice of a fact not in evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm

the judgment.

FACTS

In the early morning hours of March 10, 2007, the plaintiff, Eric Brown, was

injured in a single-vehicle accident, which occurred between Nuba and Opelousas in

St. Landry Parish. Mr. Brown filed suit against Marshall Williams, the owner of the

vehicle involved in the accident, and his insurer, ACCC Insurance Company (ACCC),

formerly American Century Casualty Company, to recover damages he suffered in the

accident.

Trial in the matter was held September 10, 2009. Mr. Williams and ACCC

were represented by separate counsel because the potential for an excess judgment

against Mr. Williams existed. Before trial began, the parties stipulated that

Mr. Brown limited his claim to the $10,000 coverage provided by the policy ACCC

issued to Mr. Williams and that there would be no excess judgment sought against

Mr. Williams. In light of the stipulations, counsel who had been appointed to defend

Mr. Williams withdrew from participation in the trial.

The issues presented to the trial court for its determination were whether

Mr. Brown or Mr. Williams was driving Mr. Williams’s vehicle when the accident

1 occurred and what amount of damages, subject to the stipulations, Mr. Brown was

entitled to be awarded.1

Mr. Brown testified that he and Mr. Williams had gone to a bar in Washington

the evening before the accident and that the accident occurred as he and Mr. Williams

were traveling to Opelousas from the bar after it closed at approximately 3:00 a.m.

He explained that Mr. Williams was driving his vehicle and that after they left the bar,

Mr. Williams rear-ended a vehicle at the Nuba intersection. At that time, he and

Mr. Williams got out of the vehicle, and Mr. Williams started “fussing” with the

driver of the other vehicle; they then got back into his vehicle and “took off fast.”

Mr. Brown estimated that he and Mr. Williams stayed at the Nuba intersection

accident about five minutes.

Mr. Brown testified that shortly after the Nuba intersection accident, the

accident, which is the subject of this litigation, occurred about two blocks after the

Nuba intersection when Mr. Williams quickly turned from the road on which they

were traveling onto a gravel road. He further explained that when Mr. Williams

turned onto the gravel road, his vehicle started spinning then flipped over. As a result

of the accident, one of his ears was partially severed. He estimated that the accident

occurred approximately three minutes after they left the Nuba intersection.

Mr. Brown testified that Mr. Williams was driving when the accident occurred

and that Mr. Williams was stuck under the steering wheel after the accident. He

further testified that he attempted to pull Mr. Williams from under the steering wheel

but could not, then he crawled out of the vehicle and called an ambulance. Next, he

related that he passed out and did not wake until the sheriff’s deputy arrived at the

1 Mr. Brown’s medical expenses associated with his injuries exceeded $20,000.

2 accident. Although Mr. Brown testified that Mr. Williams was driving when the

accident occurred, he admitted that he had probably informed the ambulance

attendants and the sheriff’s deputy who responded to the accident and personnel at

the hospital where he was treated, that he, not Mr. Williams, was driving when the

accident occurred but claimed that he did not remember doing so. When asked why

he told the sheriff’s deputy he was driving when the accident occurred, Mr. Brown

stated that he was “really tore up” and in a lot of pain and that Mr. Williams was

“wanted” for child support at the time.

Juliet Robinson was Mr. Brown’s girlfriend when the accident occurred and his

wife when the trial was held. She testified that she was a passenger in a vehicle that

was traveling behind Mr. Williams’s vehicle shortly before the accident occurred and

that Mr. Williams was driving his vehicle at that time. According to Ms. Robinson,

she, Mr. Brown, Mr. Williams, and her friend were at Turk’s bar in Washington

before the accident occurred and that the bar closed at 1:30 a.m. She testified that

when the bar closed, Mr. Brown and Mr. Williams left in Mr. Williams’s vehicle with

Mr. Williams driving and she and her friend followed Mr. Williams’s vehicle in her

friend’s vehicle.

Ms. Robinson explained that as the vehicles approached the traffic signal in

Nuba, Mr. Williams struck a vehicle stopped at the traffic signal and that he got out

of his vehicle and approached the driver of the vehicle he struck. Ms. Robinson

testified that she got out of the vehicle in which she was riding and asked

Mr. Williams to allow her to drive his vehicle, but he refused; instead, he jumped

back into his vehicle and sped off. She related that her friend tried to follow

Mr. Williams’s vehicle but was unable to keep up with it. Lastly, Ms. Robinson

3 testified that Mr. Williams was driving his vehicle the last time she saw it. However,

she admitted that she did not witness the subsequent accident and, therefore, did not

see who was driving Mr. Williams’s vehicle when the accident occurred.

Deputy Ernest Lazard of the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office investigated the

accident. Deputy Lazard testified that when he arrived at the accident, Mr. Brown

was sitting on the back of Mr. Williams’s vehicle and “seemed like he was out of it.”

He further testified that another person was inside the vehicle, which had flipped

upside down in the accident, on the driver’s side. During examination by

Mr. Brown’s counsel, Deputy Lazard testified that the paramedics at the accident told

him that Mr. Williams was trapped on the driver’s side of the vehicle and had to be

extricated from behind the steering wheel. Deputy Lazard stated that Mr. Brown told

him he was driving the vehicle when the accident occurred and that Mr. Brown did

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Eric Brown v. American Central Casualty Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eric-brown-v-american-central-casualty-co-lactapp-2010.