Everette Davis, Jr., Et Ux. v. State of La, Thru the Dotd

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 2011
DocketCA-0011-0625
StatusUnknown

This text of Everette Davis, Jr., Et Ux. v. State of La, Thru the Dotd (Everette Davis, Jr., Et Ux. v. State of La, Thru the Dotd) 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
Everette Davis, Jr., Et Ux. v. State of La, Thru the Dotd, (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

11-0625

EVERETTE DAVIS, JR., ET UX.

VERSUS

STATE OF LOUISIANA THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT

********

SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CATAHOULA, NO. 19,677 “A” HONORABLE KATHY JOHNSON, DISTRICT JUDGE

JIMMIE C. PETERS JUDGE

Court composed of John D. Saunders, Jimmie C. Peters, and Marc T. Amy, Judges.

REVERSED AND RENDERED.

Jack F. Owens, Jr. Attorney at Law P. O. Box 595 Harrisonburg, Louisiana 71340 (318) 744-5431 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLEES: Everette Davis, Jr. Sheila Creel Davis

James D. “Buddy” Caldwell Attorney General J. Albert Ellis Assistant Attorney General Louisiana Department of Justice Litigation Division-Monroe 130 DeSiard Street, Suite 812 Monroe, Louisiana 71201 (318) 362-5250 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: State of Louisiana, Through the Department of Transportation and Development PETERS, J.

This litigation arises from a September 1, 1995 single-vehicle automobile

accident wherein the plaintiff, Everette Davis, Jr., sustained severe personal

injuries. After a jury rejected Mr. Davis’ claims against the defendant, the State of

Louisiana, through the Department of Transportation and Development

(hereinafter referred to as DOTD), the trial court granted a judgment

notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) finding that Mr. Davis and DOTD were

equally at fault in causing the accident and Mr. Davis’ resulting injuries. The trial

court made the conditional ruling that it would grant a new trial in the event that its

JNOV were reversed. DOTD has appealed that trial court judgment, asserting

seven assignments of error. For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court’s

grant of the JNOV, reverse the conditional grant of a new trial, and reinstate the

jury verdict.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

This litigation arises out of a single-vehicle accident that occurred at

approximately 7:55 p.m. on September 1, 1995, on Louisiana Highway 3101 in

Catahoula Parish. Mr. Davis was traveling west along Louisiana Highway 3101

when he lost control of his vehicle while traversing a slight curve to the left in the

highway. When Mr. Davis initially entered the curve, his right wheels left the

roadway and he traveled down the shoulder of the road in that position for

approximately 251 feet. He then attempted to return the right wheels to the

highway pavement. When he attempted this maneuver, the vehicle rotated a

quarter of a turn and skidded west down the highway another eighty-eight feet.

The vehicle then exited the roadway on the left side of the road and travelled 203

feet through the adjacent field before it flipped upside down and skidded an

additional twenty-eight feet in that position. The vehicle then flipped again, landing right side up. At some point as the vehicle was flipping over, Mr. Davis

was ejected from the vehicle and landed approximately thirty feet from where the

vehicle came to rest. Mr. Davis suffered severe injuries in this accident and is now

a paraplegic.

On August 23, 1996, Mr. Davis and his wife, Sheila Creel Davis,1 brought

suit against DOTD, asserting that DOTD failed to inspect and maintain the

highway such that it contained “unprecedented pot holes and dips, and unsafe

shoulders;” that DOTD failed to properly post speed, curve, or other warning

signs; and that DOTD failed to establish a restricted speed zone because of the

highway’s substandard condition. The matter finally went to trial some thirteen

years later, beginning August 10, 2009.

At trial, Mr. Davis described the vehicle he was driving at the time of the

accident as a 1975 Dodge camper van with the camper portion having been

removed by the previous owner. It had two tires on the front, but dual tires on the

rear. Mr. Davis had intended to convert the van into a flatbed truck, but had not

done so before the accident. According to Mr. Davis, the vehicle would not

accelerate past fifty to fifty-five miles per hour without “sputtering and spitting.”2

Additionally, he suggested that when driven, the vehicle “kinda shimmied on the

front end.”

According to Mr. Davis, the accident happened as he was returning from his

mother-in-law’s home. He described the mechanics of the accident in the

following manner:

As far as I can remember I run[sic] off the right hand side of the road and just went down the road for a ways. Because it was a bad

1 Both the jury and the trial court rejected Mrs. Davis’ claim for damages and that issue is not before us in this appeal. 2 He later admitted in his testimony that the truck might reach speeds of up to seventy- five miles per hour “going downhill.” 2 drop off. I drove down the road on the right, you know, on the curved side for a while because I thought I could get back on the road, I reckon. So I went a ways trying to get back up on it. Eased back up on the road and that was when it started flipping. I don’t remember nothing after that.

Mr. Davis testified that he did not observe any traffic control signs as he

approached the curve, and that he did not remember seeing any centerline on the

highway. He described the ride along the road as “like riding a roller coaster”

because of the patchwork and potholes on the highway. With regard to why he left

the highway surface initially, he suggested that he did so to avoid a pothole.

However, with regard to the size of the pothole, he could not remember.

Additionally, he testified that he did not realize he was in a curve because he was

“kind of disoriented.” He described the surrounding conditions as “dusk” but

could not remember if he had his lights on. When asked his speed at the time he

left the road, he stated that he had “no idea” as to his speed, but knew he was not

speeding because of the truck’s defects. When questioned further concerning his

speed, he stated that it would be impossible to ascertain because he was not even

certain if the speedometer worked.

Mr. Davis had paid $300.00 for his truck while living in Texas, and it was

not in the best of shape.3 Additionally, although the first time he negotiated this

particular curve with the 1975 Dodge was the evening of the accident, he was very

familiar with the highway itself and he had traversed this curve in at least twelve

other vehicles “over the years” before the accident. When questioned about his

sobriety at the time of the accident, Mr. Davis acknowledged that his truck may

have contained half-empty beer bottles, but when asked if he had consumed a beer

before the accident, he stated that “I don’t think I did.” He suggested that if the

3 Mr. Davis acknowledged on cross-examination that the tires were not in the best of shape when he bought the vehicle and he had not changed them since acquiring ownership. 3 odor of beer were at the accident scene, it was present because “any roughneck’s

vehicle, after you turn it, after you flip it a few times, it’s going to smell like a

beer.” However, when questioned concerning his prior deposition testimony, Mr.

Davis acknowledged that he had previously testified he had consumed “a few beers

when [he] was swimming” that day. When pressed in the deposition, he stated that

he had consumed three or four cans of beer.

Former Louisiana State Trooper and accident reconstruction expert, John

Blunschi of Ferriday, Louisiana, testified on behalf of the plaintiffs and concluded

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