Fontenot v. Boehm

512 So. 2d 1192
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 8, 1987
Docket85 CA 1457
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 512 So. 2d 1192 (Fontenot v. Boehm) 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
Fontenot v. Boehm, 512 So. 2d 1192 (La. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

512 So.2d 1192 (1987)

Marian R. FONTENOT, et al.
v.
Jeoffrey J. BOEHM, et al.

No. 85 CA 1457.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

July 8, 1987.

William Reinhardt, Jr., Metairie, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Edward Lobman, Metairie, for defendants-appellees.

Before LOTTINGER, SHORTESS, CARTER, SAVOIE and LeBLANC, JJ.

SHORTESS, Judge.

Marian Rousset Fontenot (plaintiff) and her husband James Fontenot brought suit against Jeoffrey J. Boehm (Boehm) and his mother Evelyn C. McGee and Evelyn C. McGee, Inc.,[1] for damages resulting from an automobile accident. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company was also joined as a defendant. It provided liability insurance for the Boehm vehicle and underinsured motorist coverage for the Fontenot *1193 vehicle. On April 17, 1982, plaintiff was driving her 1981 Pontiac Firebird and proceeding in a westerly direction on U.S. Highway 190, a two-lane, east-west highway in Mandeville. Boehm was driving a 1980 Ford half-ton truck equipped with oversized tires and was also proceeding in a westerly direction on U.S. 190, behind plaintiff. Plaintiff's infant daughter and babysitter were passengers in her car, and she had just stopped at the intersection of U.S. 190 and Carondelet, where she intended to make a left turn to go to her home. While stopped with her left turn indicator on, plaintiff's vehicle was struck violently in the rear by Boehm's truck. Considerable property damage was done to her Pontiac.

The Fontenots brought suit for their damages. After a trial by jury, their suit was dismissed, and they have brought this devolutive appeal.

LIABILITY

Four witnesses testified on the liability aspect of the case. Mario Arthur, assistant chief of the Mandeville Police Department, was proceeding in an easterly direction on U.S. 190 and was approximately five car lengths away from its intersection with Carondelet when he saw plaintiff's vehicle stopped with its left turn indicator on. He did not see the collision but heard the impact several seconds after he first saw plaintiff's vehicle. He saw no vehicle pass on plaintiff's right immediately before the accident, but after the accident he saw Boehm's truck pass on the right and proceed in a westerly direction. He put out a radio alert to look for the vehicle and testified that Boehm returned within several minutes thereafter.

Thomas Breazeale, a sergeant with the Mandeville Police Department, investigated this accident and prepared the accident report. He had been advised by radio that a brown pickup truck had left the scene, and he intercepted it and directed Boehm to return to the scene. Boehm told Breazeale that he was travelling west on U.S. 190 behind a blue Volkswagen van; that the van veered onto the shoulder, and he saw plaintiff apparently making a left turn; that he tried to stop but could not and hit her. Breazeale noted heavy damage across the entire rear end of plaintiff's vehicle. He also noted that there was a moderately heavy rain at the time of the accident.

Plaintiff testified that she was proceeding west on U.S. 190 and was going to make a left turn at Carondelet when a truck rammed into the back of her car; that she had her left turn indicator on and was going "real slow," between one and five miles per hour, but had not actually stopped; that U.S. 190 is the main commercial street through Mandeville and she traveled it every day; that there are many intersecting streets and motorists had to stop constantly for vehicles making left and right turns; that it was raining; that the impact pushed her car forward about fifteen feet; that after the impact she looked in her rear-view mirror, saw a tan or brown truck with high wheels, much higher than her car; that she saw a blue van come from behind the truck that had hit her and pass on the right; and that the truck that hit her left the scene. On cross-examination, plaintiff admitted she did not remember whether she told Boehm to go after the van.

Boehm testified that he was going west on U.S. 190 in his Ford pickup truck which was equipped with oversized tires; that traffic was busy; that a blue Volkswagen van was in front of him; that it was narrow and tall; that he followed the van all the way through town; that he was going between 30 and 35 miles per hour; that it was raining very heavily; that he saw the driver of the van hit his brakes "kind of hard" and it slid off to the side of the road; that he looked up, saw plaintiff stopped with her blinker on; that he hit his brakes but the road was very wet at the time; that he could not take to the shoulder because the van was there and there was oncoming traffic; that he had not seen plaintiff's vehicle before the van moved; that when he applied his brakes his truck started sliding and he slid into her vehicle, the front of his truck hitting the back of her car; that he estimated he was going 20 miles an hour at the time of the collision; that after the *1194 collision plaintiff's vehicle was about four feet in front of him; that he started pulling off to the side of the road when plaintiff got out of her car and yelled for him to catch the van; that he went after the van but could not find it and returned to the scene of the accident. On cross-examination, Boehm admitted that he traveled this stretch of highway two or three times a week and knew that there were many intersecting streets where motorists turned left or right off the highway, and that he surmised that the blue van was probably passing to plaintiff's right at the time he collided with her vehicle.

The primary thrust of plaintiffs' appeal is that the trial court erred in improperly charging the jury. The portion of the charge plaintiffs' find most egregious we quote as follows:

The driver of a following vehicle must be alert to the actions of motorists preceding him on the highway. When a rear-end collision occurs, the driver of the following vehicle is generally presumed to be negligent. However, the driver will be exonerated where he can reasonably explain the cause of his running into the vehicle ahead.

A driver confronted by a sudden emergency or danger not of his own making and to which he did not contribute is not responsible for error in judgment committed by him in the [face] of this emergency. When faced with sudden peril, not of one's own making, one is bound to exercise only that caution and judgment which we would reasonably expect from an ordinarily prudent person under the same circumstances.

This ordinary prudent person, although he need not act in a calm, cool and collected manner, or [choose] the wisest [course] of conduct, is one who exercises reasonable care under the circumstances.

The jury returned a general verdict which said simply, "We, the jury, find for the defendants." The conclusion is inescapable that it exonerated Boehm from fault because it applied the sudden emergency doctrine to him. Under the facts of this case, we find that the trial court was clearly wrong in giving its charge because of the evidence which the jury had before it. We dealt with the sudden emergency doctrine in Welch v. Thomas, 263 So.2d 427 (La.App. 1st Cir.1972), writ denied, 262 La. 1132, 266 So.2d 434 (1972) and discussed an exception to the general rule that a following motorist is presumed negligent if he collides with the rear of a leading vehicle; i.e., when a following motorist is suddenly confronted with an unanticipated hazard created by a forward vehicle, which could not be reasonably avoided, the following driver would be adjudged free from fault. Plaintiff was guilty of no fault.

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Bluebook (online)
512 So. 2d 1192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontenot-v-boehm-lactapp-1987.