Glenda Faye Owens v. Carl Kelley

191 So. 3d 738, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 480, 2015 WL 5554760
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 22, 2015
Docket2014-CA-00553-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 191 So. 3d 738 (Glenda Faye Owens v. Carl Kelley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenda Faye Owens v. Carl Kelley, 191 So. 3d 738, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 480, 2015 WL 5554760 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

WILSON, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Late at night on May 26, 2005, Laura Wilburn turned out in front of an eighteen-wheeler tractor-trailer that was hauling lumber north on. Highway 7 between Oxford and Holly Springs. The truck’s driver, Willie Taylor, was unable to avoid Wilburn’s car, and two of Wilburn’s grandsons, who were in the backseat of her car, suffered serious injuries in the collision. This is a negligence action ■brought on behalf of one of the grandsons against Taylor and his employer. The basic issue at trial was whether Wilburn was entirely to blame for the wreck or Taylor was also partially at fault based on the plaintiffs disputed claim that he was driving seven to twelve miles per hour above the speed limit. The jury returned a unanimous verdict finding Wilburn one-hundred percent at fault, and the court entered a judgment on the verdict.

¶ 2. On appeal, the plaintiff argues that the trial judge erred by allowing Wilburn to be cross-examined.about, and other limited references to, the fact that she was cited for failure to yield and paid a fine rather than contesting the citation. We conclude that Wilburn’s payment of the ticket was proper impeachment of her testimony, in which she generally sought to blame Taylor for the wreck. Therefore, the judge did not abuse his discretion by allowing Wilburn to be cross-examined on the subject. In addition, considered in the cpntext of all the evidence at trial, and given that Wilburn’s payment of the ticket was proper impeachment,, any other mention of the ticket during the course of .trial was harmless, even assuming that it was error. Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 3. On May 26, 2005, Wilburn ■ drove from Memphis, Tennessee, to Take her son .to his home in Laws Hill, Mississippi, near Highway 310, west of Highway 7 between Holly Springs and Oxford. . Four other family members made the trip with them. When Wdburn left her son’s home that evening to return to Memphis, Wilburn’s mother, then approximately one hundred years old, was in the front passenger seat, and three of Wilburn’s grandchildren, ages eight to eleven, were in the backseat. Around 10:45 p.m., Wilburn approached Highway 7 traveling east on Highway 310. Wilburn testified as follows:

I pulled up to the stop sign [on Highway 310 at the intersection with Highway 7], I stopped. I looked both ways, wasn’t nothing coming. So I sit there for a while because wanted to pour some peanuts off into my soft drink. And I got the drink -out of the thing and put it between my legs, opened the peanuts up. A car pulled up behind me and blowed his horn. So I then got the *740 peanut — the can and put it back into the thing and looked both ways and nothing was coming from my right — my left I mean. And to my right the top of the, it seemed like a hill, it was a light. So it was enough distance from where I was stopped at where the light were for me to proceed out; so I proceeded out into the street. And as I was turning [north on Highway 7], the truck got I guess so close to me — I guess I estimate how far it was from me. And I was turning it hit me in the back.

¶ 4. The “light” that Wilburn saw before pulling out onto Highway 7 was an eighteen-wheeler with a forty-eight-foot flatbed trailer fully loaded with lumber. Taylor was driving the truck north on Highway 7, en route to Jackson, Tennessee. Wilburn testified that she “couldn’t tell how far” away the truck was when she pulled out onto Highway 7, but she thought “it was enough distance for [her] to ... proceed out into the [northbound] lane” of Highway 7, and then “the car behind [her],” which had honked its horn at her, “could go.” Tragically, Wilburn made a serious misjudgment, the truck hit the side of her car near the back door on the passenger’s side, and two of her grandsons suffered severe injuries.

¶ 5. Wilburn testified that she could not estimate “how fast [the truck] was going,” “just [that it] was speeding”:

A. Well, I say he was doing over the speed limit. I’ll say that. That’s what I was saying.
Q. What did you tell me the speed limit was?

A. I didn’t really know the speed limit. At one point, Wilburn erroneously stated she believed that the speed limit on Highway 7 was “40 or 45” (it is actually 55 mph), and she eventually admitted that she did not observe the truck long enough to make any judgment about its speed before she pulled out onto Highway 7. Wilburn further admitted that once she pulled out in front of the truck, there was nothing else the truck (i.e., Taylor) could have done to avoid the accident.

¶ 6. Taylor, an experienced truck driver, testified that he had driven up Highway 7 transporting lumber hundreds of times. He testified that he was traveling between 45 and 50 mph (below the speed limit of 55 mph). Taylor testified that Wilburn pulled out in front of him as he neared the intersection, and although he tried to brake as hard as he could and did his best to avoid her car, it was too late for him to do anything to prevent the collision.

¶ 7. Mississippi Highway Patrol Trooper Johnnie Smith arrived at the scene following the accident. Trooper Smith took photographs and measurements of the scene, and he interviewed Taylor. Trooper Smith testified that Taylor told him he was traveling 50 mph when Wilburn’s car pulled out in front of him. Trooper Smith did not talk to Wilburn at the scene but nonetheless issued her a ticket for failing to yield the right of way. Upon receipt of the ticket via mail, Wilburn testified that she called the justice court and was told that she had to pay the ticket or else her license would be suspended, and so she paid the ticket.

¶ 8. Two lawsuits were filed as a result of the wreck. The first, which is the subject of this appeal, was filed by Glenda Faye Owens on behalf of Brandon Townsel, one of Wilburn’s grandsons who sustained serious injuries in the wreck. Owens is Townsel’s mother; she is also Wilburn’s daughter. This suit named only Taylor and Carl Kelly (the truck’s owner and Taylor’s employer) as defendants. A second lawsuit was filed on behalf of Jayelon Boyd, who was also injured in the collision. The second suit *741 named Wilburn as a defendant in addition to Taylor and Kelly. The two cases were consolidated, but the Boyd lawsuit was settled prior to trial.

¶9. At trial, . Owens’s accident recon-structionist — John Corbitt, a retired Jackson police officer — estimated the truck’s speed as between 62 and 67 mph before Taylor began braking. On cross-examination, however, Corbitt readily agreed that Wilburn was also at fault and, indeed, that there was “no question in [his] mind that part of the cause of this accident was that Ms. Wilburn failed to yield the right of way to [the] truck.” He testified that visibility from the intersection to the south along Highway 7 was about 1,500 feet and that a vehicle traveling 65 mph would cover that distance two to three seconds faster than a vehicle traveling at the speed limit.

¶ 10. Defendants’ accident reeonstruc-tionist, James Hannah, also a retired Jackson police officer, estimated that the truck was traveling only forty to 45 mph, consistent with Taylor’s testimony.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Russell v. City of Lexington
S.D. Mississippi, 2025
Jew v. Dobbins
S.D. Mississippi, 2024
Lori Griffin v. State of Mississippi
269 So. 3d 337 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2018)
Sean Harden v. Danielle Dawn Scarborough
240 So. 3d 1246 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2018)
Jemarcus Curry v. State of Mississippi
202 So. 3d 294 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 So. 3d 738, 2015 Miss. App. LEXIS 480, 2015 WL 5554760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenda-faye-owens-v-carl-kelley-missctapp-2015.