Esta v. Dover Corp.

385 So. 2d 439, 1980 La. App. LEXIS 3938
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 1980
Docket13319
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 385 So. 2d 439 (Esta v. Dover Corp.) 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
Esta v. Dover Corp., 385 So. 2d 439, 1980 La. App. LEXIS 3938 (La. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

385 So.2d 439 (1980)

Dennis ESTA
v.
DOVER CORPORATION et al.

No. 13319.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 5, 1980.
Rehearing Denied July 7, 1980.

*441 Allen J. Borne, Franklin, for plaintiff.

John Nickerson Chappuis, Lafayette, for intervenor Continental Cas. Co. (Transp. Ins. Co.), defendant.

J. Walter Ward, Jr., New Orleans, for third party petitioners Joseph E. Hoy and The Continental Ins. Co., defendant.

Robert E. Kerrigan, Jr., New Orleans, for Continental Cas. Co., original defendant, third party defendant and intervenor and for Hoy's Pontiac-Buick-Olds, Inc. and Joseph E. Hoy, original defendant and third party plaintiffs.

L. Lane Roy, Lafayette, for Bayou Tractor, Inc. & John Deere Ins. Co., defendants.

James R. McClelland, Franklin, for Hoy's Pontiac-Buick-Olds, Inc., defendant and third party plaintiff.

Before COVINGTON, LOTTINGER and COLE, JJ.

COVINGTON, Judge.

Dennis Esta instituted this action against a number of defendants for damages arising out of an accident in which he was seriously injured when a vehicle hydraulic lift fell on him while he was under the lift working on his automobile. After trial by jury, a verdict was returned with the jury responding to special interrogatories.[1] The *442 trial judge signed a judgment in accordance with the verdict. Plaintiff has appealed. We affirm.

This suit arises from an accident which happened on November 16, 1976, while the plaintiff was employed as an automobile tire salesman for Hoy's Pontiac-Buick-Olds, Incorporated, an automobile dealership located in Franklin, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana. On the date of the accident, the plaintiff closed the tire department shortly before his usual quitting time to work on his personal automobile. He drove his automobile onto the vehicle hydraulic lift which was located in the rear of the place of business. With the automobile on the lift, the plaintiff activated the air valve near the lift to raise the automobile. When the car reached the lift's maximum height, the plaintiff placed a heavy steel pipe beneath the lift as a safety measure and went to get some tools to work on his car. He spent a brief period of time away from the lift in obtaining the tools, and then returned to work on his car. As he commenced his work, the lift and car fell, pinning him underneath the car and causing him serious injuries resulting in paralysis below the waist.

The plaintiff sued the alleged owner of the building and the hydraulic lift (as an appurtenant of the building), Joseph E. Hoy; the alleged employer and lessee of the building and lift, Hoy's Pontiac-Buick-Olds, Incorporated (Hoy's Pontiac); and the alleged manufacturers and sellers of the lift, Dover Corporation, Rotary Lift Company and Ernest Holmes Company. The alleged insurer of the manufacturers-sellers, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, and the alleged insurer of Hoy and of Hoy's Pontiac, Continental Insurance Company, were joined in the suit as defendants.

More than one year after the accident, the plaintiff sued Bayou Tractor Company and John Deere Insurance Company, its insurer, alleging that Bayou Tractor was responsible for the accident because of repair work it had improperly done on the lift. They filed a plea of prescription which is re-urged here.

Before trial, the plaintiff settled his claims against Dover Corporation, Rotary Lift Company, Ernest Holmes Company, Inc., Hoy's Pontiac, Joseph E. Hoy, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company and Continental Insurance Company. The claims against all defendants, except Bayou Tractor and its insurer, were thus settled and the suit was partially dismissed.

The suit went to trial against Bayou Tractor and John Deere Insurance before a jury, with the jury being asked to respond to interrogatories, including questions concerning the negligence of the parties with whom the plaintiff had settled. The specific answers by the jury stated that Esta was not in the course and scope of his employment *443 at the time of the accident and was not guilty of negligence or contributory negligence which was a cause of the accident, and that he had not assumed the risk; that Hoy's Pontiac, through its employees Joseph E. Hoy, Johnny Martin and Tom Boudreaux, was negligent; and that Joseph E. Hoy, as an employee of Hoy's Pontiac, was negligent. The jury found that Hoy's Pontiac had custody of the lift, which they found to have created an unreasonable risk of harm to others, including Dennis Esta. Further, the jury responded that Rivers Simoneaux, an employee of Bayou Tractor, and defendant Bayou Tractor were not negligent. An award of $800,000.00 was made by the jury, but only against parties who had already been released from Esta's claims in the settlement.

In post-trial argument, the plaintiff contended that John Deere Insurance Company provided some insurance coverage to the parties found liable by the jury, but the trial judge ruled that, based on the jury's verdict and on the specific answers to interrogatories, the plaintiff had no collectible judgment against any party remaining in the law suit. The judge found that Esta had chosen to settle with the parties who were eventually found to have caused his injuries, and that there was no coverage for those parties under the John Deere policy.

The principal issues before us concern:

(1) Whether Bayou Tractor, through its employees, particularly Rivers Simoneaux and Joseph E. Hoy, was negligent in repairing the hydraulic lift, which negligence was a cause-in-fact of the accident;

(2) Whether the trial judge committed error in failing to give certain requested jury charges pertaining to the "borrowed servant" doctrine, the doctrine of strict liability of the owner of the building in which the lift was situated, causation of the accident in duty-risk terms and the effect of remedial measures taken after the accident;

(3) Whether the trial judge erred in failing to find coverage under the John Deere Insurance Company insurance policy; and

(4) Whether the trial judge erred in denying the plaintiff's request to call Joseph E. Hoy under cross-examination.

Under our Constitution of 1974, Article 5, § 10(B), and the case of Arceneaux v. Domingue, 365 So.2d 1330 (La.1978), this court is mandated to give a thorough review of the factual findings of the jury. We must find from the record that there is a reasonable factual basis for the findings of the jury and trial court, and that the record establishes that the findings are not clearly wrong (manifestly erroneous) in order for us to affirm the judgment. B & L Associates, Inc. v. Crump, 369 So.2d 1094 (La.App. 1 Cir. 1979).

1. Was Bayou Tractor negligent in such a way as to have been a cause in fact of the accident?

We have carefully examined the record and we see no manifest error in the jury's finding that Bayou Tractor was not negligent. The only persons connected with Bayou Tractor who are said by plaintiff to have been negligent were Joseph E. Hoy and Rivers Simoneaux. Mr. Simoneaux was a mechanic and shop foreman at Bayou Tractor Company. He is the employee who, at the direction of Joseph Hoy, repacked and repaired the lift in question. He testified that he had performed this repacking work some time before the accident; that he had done the repacking properly; and that after the work, he tested it and it worked properly without leaking. The cylinder and ram were not corroded and the lift operated satisfactorily when he tested it.

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Bluebook (online)
385 So. 2d 439, 1980 La. App. LEXIS 3938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esta-v-dover-corp-lactapp-1980.