Grimes v. Patterson Insurance Co.

822 So. 2d 199, 2001 La.App. 4 Cir. 2098, 2002 La. App. LEXIS 2199, 2002 WL 1424640
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 2002
DocketNo. 2001-CA-2098
StatusPublished

This text of 822 So. 2d 199 (Grimes v. Patterson Insurance 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
Grimes v. Patterson Insurance Co., 822 So. 2d 199, 2001 La.App. 4 Cir. 2098, 2002 La. App. LEXIS 2199, 2002 WL 1424640 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

JjBYRNES, Chief Judge.

Defendants-appellants, Tamira L. West and her insurer, Patterson Insurance Company, appeal a judgment pursuant to a judge trial on the merits condemning them to pay the plaintiff, Benjamin Jones, $6,138.49 in general damages and $3,861.51 for medical expenses, for a total of $10,000.00. The judgment was subsequently amended to award Mr. Jones legal interest and costs against Patterson Insurance Company.

[201]*201The defendants appealed contending that the trial court erred in finding that, more probably than not, Mr. Jones, as a pedestrian, was injured on January 10, 1997 by a motor vehicle driven by Tamira West. Defendants do not contest their negligence; they contest only that Mr. Jones proved that he was injured. In other words, there are no legal issues in dispute and the entire case turns on the sole fact question of whether the plaintiff, Mr. Jones, was actually involved in the accident or whether he was merely an unscathed pedestrian onlooker. It is not disputed that another pedestrian, his niece, Tazariah Earls was injured.

Accordingly, we will review the fact findings of the trial judge according to a manifest error standard of review.

IgAt the time of the incident, Tamira West was operating a 1997 Toyota Camry in a northerly direction on Paris Avenue. At the accident scene, Paris Avenue is two lanes in each direction divided by a neutral ground. Ms. West, testified by deposition that there was an RTA bus stopped in front of her to the right directly behind an Orleans Parish school bus in such a manner as to obstruct her view of the school bus until she passed the RTA bus in the left lane. She was unable to see the school bus’ stop-bars until after she had begun to pass the RTA bus. As Ms. West’s vehicle drew parallel to the front left side of the school bus, plaintiff, Tazariah Reeyan Paris Earls, was struck by the right-hand mirror of defendant’s Camry. Ms. West further testified that she immediately stopped her vehicle, looked back and saw the plaintiff, Benjamin Jones, helping Ta-zariah Earls to her feet.

Prior to trial, Paterson Insurance Company settled Tazariah’s claim, but Mr. Jones also filed suit contending in his petition that he had thrown “himself on top of [Tazaría] as he pulled her away and likewise he received injuries by coming into contact with the child and the ground as he attempted to protect her from the impact of the Toyota Camry.” Defendants deny that Mr. Jones was involved in the incident and argue that, therefore, he could not have been injured as a result of it.

Tamira West was released from personal liability, and it was stipulated that should a judgment be rendered in favor of Mr. Jones it would be limited to the Patterson Insurance Company policy limits of $10,000.00 plus interest and costs.

The school bus driver, Diana Armour, and Mr. Jones were the only two witnesses to give live testimony at the trial. The testimony of the defendant, Tamira West, and the independent witness, Isaiah Washington, was submitted in deposition form.

l3Mr. Jones testified that in the evenings he would meet several nieces and nephews at the school bus stop, including the plaintiff, Tazariah Earls, who was five years old at the time of the incident. He would take them off the bus and walk them across the street. He testified that on January 10, 1997:

... I got my niece off of the bus and my nephew. And my nephew and Kim ‘lil kids, but they stood in the neutral ground; Tazariah was still right there with me. And we walked from right there by the doors in front of the bus and was attempting to cross the street when this car came and I saw it coming and I pulled Tazariah, but I didn’t pull her fast enough. The mirror hit her and when it hit her it knocked me back. And I tried to catch myself with my right hand and that’s how I mess my thumb up. And I just covered her up ‘cause I thought maybe something was going to come and hit her because nobody was not there to stop the traffic or nothing.
[202]*202[[Image here]]
Well, through the impact from Tazari-ah — the mirror hitting Tazariah, it knocked her back, but then I pulled myself back up and tried to cover her up.

As a result, he testified that his back, neck and right hand were injured. He also testified that he told the EMT team that he was injured. He testified initially that he thought he talked to the police on the scene, but his name does not appear on the police report. He later explained that in all of the confusion following the incident that he may not have seen the police at the scene and may never have actually talked to them. He further testified that Isaiah Washington had gotten his child off of the bus before Mr. Jones had gotten Tazariah off and was going up Paris Avenue on the same side of the street that the bus was on. It was not necessary for Mr. Washington to cross the street because he lived on the same side that the bus was on. Mr. Jones explained that neither Mr. Washington nor anyone else was on the left side of the bus next to the driver’s window.

| ¿Mr. Jones testified that he was standing in front of the bus on the left hand side when he sent the first children for whom he was responsible across the street. He then walked back to the right-hand side of the bus where Tazariah was waiting for him near the door to the bus and walked her in front of the bus to the left-hand side of the bus where she was struck by the defendant’s vehicle.

Mr. Jones explained that although Dr. Miller’s report dated January 20, 1997, states that the accident occurred on January 15, 1997, that it actually occurred on January 10, 1997. He further explained that he told Dr. Miller that he was “hit from the impact of the car hitting my niece,” in spite of the fact that Dr. Miller’s report states that:

At that time the patient states that he was walking across the street, when a car hit him on his right side. Patient stated that he fell backwards on to the ground.

Mr. Jones admitted that Mr. Washington was at the scene getting his child off the bus that day. He could offer no explanation for why Mr. Washington would testify that Mr. Jones was not with Tazariah when she was hit other than “maybe he didn’t see what he thought he saw.”

Diana Armour, the school bus driver, confirmed the fact that there was an RTA bus behind her positioned in such a way as to obscure the defendant driver’s view of her bus’ stop arm, but one of her flashing lights was probably visible. She said that when Tazariah was struck Mr. Jones was “no where around. He was on the opposite side of the bus when the accident happened,” by the door of the bus waiting for additional children to get off. She described the accident as follows:

I seen the accident. I seen when the mirror, it hit her hand. Now which hand it was I don’t remember, but it spun her. She spun around and she came to, like, a sit. And when she came to the sit, then he came out and went over.

1 kMs. Armour explained that Mr. Jones did not come over until after the accident had occurred and the vehicle had passed. She did agree that Mr. Jones usually held on to Tazariah’s hand, but that on the day and time of the incident he did not. However, on cross-examination she testified that Mr. Jones “went on top of her after the accident,” and at the time of the accident “he was close.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
822 So. 2d 199, 2001 La.App. 4 Cir. 2098, 2002 La. App. LEXIS 2199, 2002 WL 1424640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimes-v-patterson-insurance-co-lactapp-2002.