Geraldine Simco v. Willie R. Ellis

303 F.3d 929, 59 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 934, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19101
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 2002
Docket01-2095, 01-2167
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 303 F.3d 929 (Geraldine Simco v. Willie R. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geraldine Simco v. Willie R. Ellis, 303 F.3d 929, 59 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 934, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19101 (8th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

*931 BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

In this negligence case, Willie R. Ellis, doing business as Ellis Trucking, and Andrew McCalpin appeal from the judgment of the District Court 2 in favor of plaintiffs Geraldine Simco, administratrix of the estate of Doris Smith, and Patti Lynn Bradley and her husband, Dan David Bradley. Simco cross appeals, raising an evidentiary issue. We affirm.

On a March morning in 1999, a tractor-trailer flat-bed truck loaded with lumber and driven by McCalpin 3 overturned on a rain-soaked Arkansas state highway as the truck approached the second part of a sharp downhill s-curve. The truck and its load slid across the center line and smashed into a pickup truck driven by Doris Smith, who had pulled her truck over to the guardrail in an attempt to avoid the collision. Smith was killed and her passenger, Patti Bradley, was injured. In October 1999, the plaintiffs brought a state-court lawsuit, which was timely removed to the District Court, against Ellis, the owner of the truck and McCalpin’s employer at the time of the accident, and against McCalpin, alleging that McCalpin’s negligence was the cause of the accident.

At the end of a three-day trial, the jury found for the defendants on the question of McCalpin’s negligence. The District Court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial “solely on the grounds that the verdict was against the great weight of the evidence.” Simco v. Ellis, No. 99-2194, Memorandum & Order at 5 (W.D.Ark. July 21, 2000) (granting motion for new trial). After a second trial, a different jury awarded $60,000 to Smith’s estate, $225,000 to Patti Bradley, and $25,000 to Dan Bradley. McCalpin appeals, challenging the District Court’s decision to grant a new trial and raising several issues related to the second trial. In a cross appeal, Simco challenges the exclusion of evidence relating to a drug test performed on a blood sample taken from McCalpin shortly after the accident.

We will reverse a district court’s decision to grant a motion for a new trial only if it reflects a clear abuse of the court’s broad discretion. Walzer v. St. Joseph State Hosp., 231 F.3d 1108, 1111 (8th Cir.2000). We do require from the district court, however, an articulation of the basis for granting the motion “to permit meaningful review of its decision.” Children’s Broad. Corp. v. Walt Disney Co., 245 F.3d 1008, 1017 (8th Cir.2001). Here, the District Court in its order granting a new trial carefully laid out the evidence that was before the jury and clearly spelled out the reasons for granting the motion. Recognizing the import of a decision to abrogate a jury verdict, the court nevertheless concluded that such a course of action was warranted in this case. We agree.

The transcript of the first trial included the following evidence. McCalpin was twenty-one years old and had been licensed as a truck driver for a few months at the time of the accident. He had never before driven a load for a long distance unaccompanied by his boss, and when he left Port Gibson, Mississippi, the evening before the accident, he was unfamiliar with the roads he was to take to his final destination, Kansas City, Missouri. In fact, McCalpin missed the turnoff to a route *932 that would have avoided altogether the perilous stretch of road where the accident occurred. McCalpin was accompanied on the trip by his brother and a younger cousin.

The scene of the accident was an s-curve on old highway 71 near Mountainburg, Arkansas. Because of a steep hill, there were two lanes southbound, one of which served as a lane for vehicles to use in order to pass slower-moving traffic ascending the hill. There was only one northbound lane. The weather shortly after 8 a.m. on March 8, 1999, was cloudy and rainy. As McCalpin’s northbound truck approached the first part of the curve, it was traveling at a speed exceeding the recommended twenty miles per hour, despite the signs and flashing lights posted along the highway warning of the approaching dangerous curves and steep descent. McCalpin testified that he was blinded by a flash of light (although the length of time this visual impairment lasted is unclear) as he approached the first curve, yet he continued to drive without attempting to slow down. McCalpin lost control of the truck, and it turned over and slid across the center line into the southbound pickup truck driven by Doris Smith, which she had pulled over as far from the tractor-trailer as she could when she first saw it approaching, as McCalpin’s truck already had crossed the center line and was tipped up on its left wheels.

The court advised the jury of the duty incumbent upon drivers of motor vehicles on the roads in Arkansas to keep a lookout, to keep their vehicles under control, and to drive at a reasonable and prudent speed under the circumstances, and the jury was instructed that the failure to conform to these rules was negligence. See Instruction No. 14 (Common Law Rules of Road). Negligence also was defined for the jurors as “the failure to do something which a reasonably careful person would do, or the doing of something which a reasonably careful person would not do, under circumstances similar to those shown by the evidence in this case.” Instruction No. 15 (Negligence-Definition). The jury was further instructed that it is negligence to fail to exercise ordinary care — “how a reasonably careful person would act under [the] circumstances.” Instruction No. 16 (Ordinary Care).

Notwithstanding this evidence and these instructions, the first jury to hear the evidence in the case determined that McCal-pin was not negligent. The District Court, in its review of the record upon the plaintiffs’ motion for new trial, determined that “all of the evidence presented indicated that the accident was caused by McCal-pin’s negligence .... [I]t was a miscarriage of justice for the jury to conclude that the defendants were not at fault in causing the fatal crash or that the accident was unavoidable.” Simco, No. 99-2194, Memorandum & Order at 5 (granting motion for new trial). The court granted the motion, and McCalpin contends that decision was an abuse of the court’s discretion.

Ironically, McCalpin faults the District Court for relying solely on his, McCalpin’s, description of events that day, while ignoring the supposedly contrary testimony of his passengers. According to McCalpin, his own sworn testimony was “implausible,” and the passengers’ versions were “much more logical.” Br. of Appellant at 50. But when a district court is considering a new trial motion on the grounds that the verdict is against the great weight of the evidence, the court “is entitled to interpret the evidence and judge the credibility of witnesses” for itself. Van Steenburgh v. Rival Co., 171 F.3d 1155, 1160 (8th Cir.1999). This is not a case where the court has “usurp[ed] the role of the jury by granting a new trial simply because it believes other inferences *933 and conclusions are more reasonable.” Id.

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Related

Simco v. Ellis
303 F.3d 929 (Eighth Circuit, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
303 F.3d 929, 59 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 934, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geraldine-simco-v-willie-r-ellis-ca8-2002.