Gasquet v. Commercial Union Ins. Co.

391 So. 2d 466
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 1980
Docket11140
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 391 So. 2d 466 (Gasquet v. Commercial Union 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.

Bluebook
Gasquet v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 391 So. 2d 466 (La. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

391 So.2d 466 (1980)

James F. GASQUET, Jr.
v.
COMMERCIAL UNION INSURANCE COMPANY, Stonewall Insurance Company, and H & B Construction Company of Louisiana, Inc.

No. 11140.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

October 9, 1980.
Rehearings Denied December 19, 1980.

*468 Carl W. Cleveland, Dawn M. Barrios, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Liskow & Lewis, Frederick W. Bradley, Donald R. Abaunza, New Orleans, for Stonewall Insurance Company, defendants-appellees.

Before SAMUEL, GULOTTA, GARRISON, CHEHARDY and SARTAIN, JJ.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

Plaintiff, James F. Gasquet, Jr., appeals from a trial court decision dismissing his suit for personal injury damages against Stonewall Insurance Company (Stonewall) and H & B Construction Company of Louisiana, Inc. (H & B). The judgment, which also ordered plaintiff to pay all costs of the proceedings, was in accord with a jury verdict which found the defendants were guilty of negligence and that such negligence was a proximate cause of the injuries suffered by the plaintiff. The jury further found, however, the plaintiff's failure to use ordinary care, under the circumstances, for his own safety, contributed to the injury he may have suffered.

Prior to the trial the plaintiff settled all claims against Commercial Union Insurance Company (Commercial Union), which was the primary insurer of H & B, in consideration of the payment of $200,000; and pursuant to that settlement agreement the plaintiff granted the excess carrier, Stonewall, a credit of $300,000 against any judgment that might be rendered against it by the trial court.

The facts of this case surround an accident which occurred when an airboat in which the plaintiff was a passenger came to a sudden stop as it hit a sandbar, resulting in severe skull, facial, eye, dental, and other injuries to Gasquet.

On November 28, 1976, the plaintiff, a supermarket owner, went on a duck hunting trip in Plaquemines Parish with several friends. The duck hunting camp, a houseboat, located in a canal near the Mississippi River, and the lease on which they hunted belonged to H & B. Access to the hunting lease from the hunting camp was provided by airboats owned by H & B. The particular airboat used to transport Gasquet to and around the hunting lease was a large, flat-bottomed, heavy-duty aluminum boat with *469 high sides and a huge aircraft engine mounted at the rear. Film which was part of the trial court record shows the airboat can travel over water, mud and even wet grass and that it has a large, powerful and very noisy engine with no mufflers. The operator of the airboat, Lloyd Boudreaux, an employee of H & B, sat on a raised platform toward the middle rear of the airboat, which he drove by means of a rudder lever on his left and an accelerator pedal in front of him.

The record establishes that on the morning of the accident the weather was very cold, the temperature near freezing, with strong winds blowing. Gasquet and several other hunters were taken to their duck blinds by Boudreaux in the airboat; however, the airboat passengers were not given any instructions or warnings by Boudreaux concerning their conduct in the moving airboat. The fact that oral communication was impossible because of noise from the airboat engine was demonstrated at trial by George Pappas, a sound expert who also testified that at all speeds, other than idling and cold, any spoken communication would be impossible on the airboat.

About 9:30 a. m., Boudreaux returned for the duck hunters. He first picked up Walnut Latham, who testified that since he was wrapping the weights on strings around the decoys to keep them from becoming entangled, his hands had gotten wet and he was almost freezing as he rode the airboat. The airboat operator then picked up Gasquet and proceeded to pick up another duck hunter, Floyd Barrios. (However, because of the accident, Barrios was not picked up until later.) After the airboat left plaintiff's duck blind, Boudreaux tapped Gasquet on the shoulder and motioned at Latham, who was standing. Gasquet then grabbed Latham by the leg and pulled him back. This occurred about a mile before they reached the sandbar.

The airboat then proceeded down a long straight pipeline canal and through a shallow, skinny, snake-like cut that emptied into the bay which was the accident site.

Earlier on the same day, when his only passenger was Floyd Barrios, Boudreaux had hit the sandbar that he was now approaching. Despite this, instead of selecting the alternative of going around the sandbar, he decided to jump the airboat over it. Furthermore, expert testimony indicated any oral warning would have been impossible to hear.

However, instead of going over it, as it did earlier in the day, the airboat stopped like "it hit a brick wall."

Gasquet testified that at the time the airboat struck the sandbar he was "holding on with one hand at least." Although in an earlier deposition Gasquet had indicated he had mixed feelings as to whether or not he was holding on, he stated on cross-examination, "At this time, I feel certain that I was holding on."

Nonetheless, Gasquet was thrown out of his seat and crashed face first into a large tool box in the bulkhead across the front of the airboat.

Barrios said that on his earlier trip in the boat Boudreaux operated it at 25 to 30 miles per hour in the canal and the cut, but slowed down to 15 to 20 miles per hour at the end of the cut. Boudreaux admitted he knew of the presence of the sandbar because he had proceeded over it earlier in the morning with Barrios. He also said he knew it was sand and not mud, because it nudged the bottom of the boat on the earlier trip. He added if it had been mud the airboat would have slid through it because "sand is the only thing that will stop it."

Boudreaux described the sandbar as approximately 20 feet wide and said it was about ½ inch out of the water. He also said, contrary to the plaintiff's testimony, that prior to the accident he told Gasquet, "We're going to go over a sand bar. Get Walnut, tell him to come sit down and hold on. We're going to jump that sand bar." Neither Gasquet not Latham, however, testified that there was a specific warning issued from Boudreaux regarding the sandbar they were approaching.

*470 Boudreaux also testified there was some bracing over the passenger seats in the airboat for the riders to hold to; however, Gasquet described it as merely a "lip" which extended from the side of the boat.

Boudreaux claimed that at the time of the crash Gasquet must have had his hands in his pockets, because he remembered the first thing he did, after the injury, was to remove Gasquet's hands from his pockets. The plaintiff's impression, however, was that he had been holding on with at least one hand. The other passenger (Latham) admitted he had not been holding on but that he had both hands in his own pockets due to the extremely cold and windy weather.

Boudreaux stated the sudden impact of the boat being stopped by the sandbar was like "hitting a brick wall." He said Latham "rode the pirogue" positioned in front of him as he was thrown forward and out of the boat, and Latham himself said he landed in the water some 15 to 20 feet in front of the airboat. According to Boudreaux, Gasquet was thrown forward into the bow of the boat where his face hit a tool box, resulting in his injuries.

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Bluebook (online)
391 So. 2d 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gasquet-v-commercial-union-ins-co-lactapp-1980.