Evans v. Newton
This text of 459 So. 2d 586 (Evans v. Newton) 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
Joseph R. EVANS, individually, and on Behalf of the Minor, Laura Evans, and May M. Evans
v.
Denis O. NEWTON, Ambassador Insurance Co., and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
Clarence F. Favret, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Lobman & Carnahan, Burt K. Carnahan, Metairie, for defendant-appellee.
Before BOUTALL, CURRAULT and GRISBAUM, JJ.
GRISBAUM, Judge.
This is a personal injury case resulting from an automobile accident in a shopping center parking lot. The plaintiffs-appellants, Joseph Evans (individually and on behalf of his minor child, Laura,) and May Evans, devolutively appeal from a judgment *587 (incorporating a jury trial verdict) finding May Evans 50 percent at fault and awarding to her and her husband medical expenses against State Farm of $4091.38 thereby entitling them to a judgment of $2045.69. We amend and affirm.
Two issues are presented:
(1) Whether the jury erred in finding the plaintiff negligent (50 percent); and
(2) Whether the jury abused its "much discretion" in not awarding plaintiff general damages.
The facts surrounding the legal cause of the accident are in dispute. Ms. Evans testified to the following events which preceded the accident:
I started my car up and went into the driving lane... started driving towards Transcontinental. He was crawling very, very slowly ... the fire lane. There was a lady in the truck with him. Well, I was driving very slowly and he kept creeping, stopped, hesitated a moment, and he continued and I kept going very slow ... because I didn't know exactly where the truck was headed for ... He continued straight up to Eckerd's and I'm still traveling going towards Transcontinental and when he got by Eckerd's he's here ... and all of a sudden he just swerved into the right lane and hit me, I mean he turned left and hit me on the right side of my car ... there was no signal. I looked at my little girl `cause she hit the dash on her head, I hit the uh my head hit the wheel steering wheel and then I got out and said I was going to call the cops, the police at least ... my knee at the top here hit the steering, I mean the dashboard.
Whereas Mr. Newton testified to the following:
... [he was] progressing towards Eckerd's... when I got in front of Winn-Dixie I had to slow down because of the people coming through with carts and stuff ... when I was clear to travel I progressed down towards Eckerd's. I was not accelerating when I was slowing down. My truck was idled high enough where I did not have to move the accelerator and all I had to do was ride my brake and my idle would keep me going. I was probably going a little bit over zero miles an hour. I got right about the edge of Eckerd's ... I started to turn into the parking spot ... when the Evans' vehicle raced across in front of my vehicle and I slammed on my brakes ... as she slammed on her brakes so severely that her head almost hit the steering wheel ... the little girl in the front seat slammed into the dashboard and the little girl in the backseat almost hit the floorboard... On my car I have extra-wide mirrors with the peripheral vision I would have noticed another vehicle trying to pass, trying to attempt to pass me to the left. I had no warning at all except when I started to turn her vehicle appeared in front of me. It appeared that she was speeding to try to get ahead of me before I could turn.
As an aid in exercising our standard of review, our circuit in Baach v. Clark, 442 So.2d 514, 517 (La.App. 5th Cir.1983) embraced the method outlined in Pierre v. Allstate Insurance Company, 257 La. 471, 242 So.2d 821, (1970) in determining legal fault by first determining whether the act complained of was a substantial factor in causing the accident, then by determining what duty was imposed and whether the risk of harm suffered and created by a failure of that duty was a risk for which the statute intended to offer protection, and, finally, by determining whether there was a breach of that duty. The Pierre court further stated that every act leading up to an accident is not a cause-in-fact; to be deemed a legal cause, the act must be a substantial factor without which the accident would not have occurred.
Before applying the foregoing methodology of the "duty-risk" analysis, we are further guided by the Baach decision wherein it is stated:
It is firmly established that the operator of a following vehicle is required to keep his car under control, to observe closely a forward vehicle, and to follow at a safe distance. As mentioned earlier, if a rear *588 end collision occurs, the following motorist is presumed negligent. In order for the following who collides with a preceding vehicle to exculpate himself, he must show that he closely observed the forward, that he followed at a safe distance under the circumstances, or that the driver of the lead vehicle negligently created a hazard which the following vehicle could not reasonably avoid.
In light of the foregoing, the ultimate question before us is whether Mr. Newton, the driver of the lead vehicle, negligently created a hazard which Ms. Evans, the driver of the following vehicle, could not reasonably avoid. On Mr. Newton's own admission and his testimony which was elicited at trial, we know he failed his legal duty to look into his rearview prior to making his left turn. Whereas Ms. Evans testified she was following at the same (slow) speed and was reluctant to pass without first ascertaining Mr. Newton's intentions. She also testified that she then pulled past the truck driven by Mr. Newton only after satisfying herself that he was going to continue "creeping" along the curb. From these record facts, it appears from the testimony and evidence Ms. Evans met her duty of due diligence in the operation of her car and was not put on notice of Mr. Newton's intention to make a left turn. However, the jury apparently disbelieved her testimony and believed Mr. Newton's testimony that Ms. Evans suddenly zoomed in front of him. Therefore, the jury apparently reasoned, and we agree, that even though Mr. Newton's negligence created a hazard but for Ms. Evans "zooming in front of him" she could have reasonably avoided the accident. Ms. Evans' act of speeding was a substantial factor in causing the accident and a fact which demonstrated she violated her duty in her capacity as the "following vehicle."
Recognizing the trier of fact's finding as to the percentage of fault is factual, such a determination will not be disturbed on appeal unless it is clearly wrong. Arceneaux v. Domingue, 365 So.2d 1330 (La.1978). We find no manifest error in this jury's factual determination and application of the applicable law regarding the apportionment of fault, and therefore, it did not err in finding the plaintiff comparatively negligent to the extent of 50 percent.
Regarding the question of whether the jury abused its much discretion in not awarding the plaintiff general damages after finding special damages, our scope of appellate authority is limited; however, we may amend a district court judgment by awarding only those damages which would be reasonably within the discretion of the lower court. Reck v. Stevens, 373 So.2d 498 (La.1979). The Reck court further stated that it is only after articulated analysis of fact discloses an abuse of discretion that an award may on appellate review, for articulated reasons, be considered either excessive or insufficient.
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459 So. 2d 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-newton-lactapp-1984.