Finley v. State Farm Ins. Co.
This text of 598 So. 2d 537 (Finley v. State Farm Ins. 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.
Opinion
David FINLEY and Mary E. Finley, Wife of David Finley
v.
STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANY, William Richard Bayhi and Elfreeda D. Bayhi.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*538 James Farrier, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant David Finley, et ux.
Andrew A. Lemeshewsky, Jr., New Orleans, for intervenor-appellant 2nd Hartford Acc. & Indem. Company.
William E. Willard, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellee State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., et al.
Before SHORTESS, LANIER and CRAIN, JJ.
LANIER, Judge.
This action is a suit for damages in tort against the owners of a piece of residential property and their liability insurer. The plaintiffs (a husband and wife) alleged that the husband was crossing the yard of the property when he stepped in a hole, fell and injured himself. The workers' compensation insurer of the husband's employer intervened for recovery of all medical and benefit payments it made to him. The trial court ruled that the husband stepped in an imperfection, depression or hole in the yard on the premises, and the imperfection, depression or hole did not constitute an unreasonable risk of harm. Accordingly, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants dismissing the plaintiffs' suit with prejudice.[1] The plaintiffs and the intervenor took this devolutive appeal.
FACTS
William Richard Bayhi and Elfreeda D. Bayhi (the Bayhis) are the owners of the residential premises located at 712 Aster Street in the City of Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana. The Bayhis leased this property to tenants. State Farm Fire & Casualty Company (State Farm) was the liability insurer of the property.
In July of 1986, the Bayhis contracted with the All Star Flooring Company (All Star) of Baton Rouge to install new carpet in the house on the Aster Street premises. On July 30, 1986, the plaintiff, David Finley, and his helper, Crafton Earl Lingfelt, were employees of All Star and were sent to install the carpet. The utilities were not connected to the premises on July 30 and 31. Because electricity was required to seam the new carpet, Finley and Lingfelt could not complete the job until August 1, 1986, when the utilities were connected.
*539 On the morning of August 1, 1986, Finley and Lingfelt drove to the Aster Street premises in Finley's van. Finley parked in the driveway. The men went into the house to complete their work. The seaming was completed at about mid-morning and the men left the house. Finley left first. Finley went out of the front door, stepped onto the sidewalk leading from the house and turned to cross the lawn. When Finley stepped onto the lawn, he did so in the area of an imperfection, depression or hole. This imperfection, depression or hole was described by the trial court judge as "about a foot in diameter by about anywhere from two to max three inches deep." Finley claims the hole caused him to fall and injure himself.
ADMISSIBILITY OF DEMONSTRATIVE EVIDENCE
(Assignment of error 1)
The plaintiffs assert that the "Trial Court erred in excluding from evidence an exhibit prepared by plaintiff's expert purporting to demonstrate the dimensions of the alleged defect ..."
The plaintiffs presented the testimony of J.D. Roberts, who was qualified by the trial court as an expert witness on the subject of safety. During Roberts' testimony the following occurred:
Q. OKAY. NOW, MR. ROBERTS, DID YOU PREPARE FROM MR. VANDERBROOK'S MEASUREMENTS, DID YOU PREPARE ON A FLAT SURFACE WHAT
A. YES, SIR.
THE COURT: FLAT SURFACE WHAT, PLEASE?
BY MR. FARRIER:
Q. A FACSIMILE OF THE MEASUREMENTS OF A HOLE?
A. YES, SIR, I PREPARED A MODEL WHICH RESEMBLED THE MEASUREMENTS THAT THE VANDERBROOK REPORT GAVE AND WHICH DEPICTED A HOLE THAT WAS APPROXIMATELY ONE FOOT IN DIAMETER AND TWO-AND-¾'S DEEP.
MR. WILLARD: OBJECT TO THAT TOO, YOUR HONOR.
THE COURT: YES, I'M NOT GOING TO LET THAT IN, YOU CAN SHOW IT TO THE COURT.
A. I WAS TRYING TO SHOW THE SIZE OF THE HOLE TO INDICATE THE REPORT ABOUT IT BEING A VARIATION IN NATURAL TERRAIN.
THE COURT: WELL, NONE OF THOSE PICTURES LOOK LIKE THAT THOUGH THAT I'VE SEEN.
A. WELL, I'VE NEVER SAW [sic] THIS HOLE, BECAUSE I WAS `WAY PAST THE TIME.
THE COURT: NO, BUT THE PICTURES THAT DEPICT SUPPOSEDLY A HOLE THERE.
MR. FARRIER: LET ME ASK THIS QUESTION, JUDGE.
MR. WILLARD: YOUR HONOR, I OBJECT TO HIM TESTIFYING FROM IT, IT DOESN'T DEPICT THE TERRAIN THAT'S AROUND THERE IN ANY WAY, SHAPE OF [sic] FORM.
THE COURT: IT'S A FACSIMILE OF A HOLE TWO AND THREE-QUARTERS BY ONE FOOT, THAT'S WHAT HE'S SAYING.
A. YES, SIR, THAT'S WHAT IT IS.
MR. FARRIER: THAT'S WHAT I WANT HIM TO QUALIFY BECAUSE THIS DOESN'T HAVE GRASSES GROWING OUT AND THAT'S THE DIFFERENCE.
A. THAT'S CORRECT, YES, SIR.
MR. FARRIER: STATEMENTS HAVE BEEN MADE THAT THIS IS A NATURAL INDENTATION AND TO MITIGATE THE EFFECT OF IT I WANT HIM TO SHOW THE COURT WHAT A HOLE TWO AND THREE-QUARTERS INCHES LOOKS LIKE WHEN IT'S ON A FLAT SURFACE.
BY MR. FARRIER:
Q. GO AHEAD, MR. ROBERTS.
A. THAT'S BASICALLY WHAT IT DEPICTS.
MR. FARRIER: I WANT TO OFFER IT TOO, YOUR HONOR.
*540 THE COURT: YOU CAN PROFFER IT.
MR. FARRIER: YES, I'M GOING TO.
THE COURT: WE'VE [sic] HAVEN'T GOT NOTHING IN EVIDENCE THAT EVERYTHING ELSE IS FLAT AROUND THERE. THAT'S A FLAT SURFACE.
MR. FARRIER: I KNOW.
THE COURT: I DON'T THINK YOU HAVE ANY YARD LIKE THAT WITH A COMPLETELY FLAT SURFACE.
MR. WILLARD: YOUR HONOR, THAT'S BEING PROFFERED OVER AN OBJECTION?
THE COURT: IT'S BEING PROFFERED TO THE COURT OF APPEALS.
MR. WILLARD: JUST WANT TO BE CERTAIN IT'S BEING PROFFERED OVER MY OBJECTION.
THE COURT: YES.
The plaintiffs offered the exhibit as a model of a hole twelve inch in diameter and a two and three quarter inch in depth; the exhibit was not offered as a duplicate of the hole located on the Bayhis' premises.[2] A trial court has much discretion in determining the admissibility into evidence of a model. E. Cleary, McCormick's Handbook of the Law of Evidence, § 213, pp. 528-530 (2d ed 1972). The trial judge refused to admit the model into evidence because it did not look like the hole in the numerous pictures filed in evidence and because the yard was not a flat surface. Undoubtedly, the trial judge was influenced by the extensive photographic and testimonial evidence in the case pertaining to the hole. In this evidentiary posture, the admission of the model was merely cumulative and of little, if any, weight. After reviewing all of the pertinent evidence on this issue, we conclude that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in refusing to admit the model into evidence.
This assignment of error is without merit.
REASONABLENESS OF THE RISK
(Assignment of error 2)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
598 So. 2d 537, 1992 WL 81963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-state-farm-ins-co-lactapp-1992.