Hammond v. Jim Hinton Oil Co., Inc.
This text of 530 So. 2d 995 (Hammond v. Jim Hinton Oil Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Carol Ann HAMMOND, As Personal Representative of the Estate of Michael Lynn Parker, Deceased, Appellant,
v.
JIM HINTON OIL COMPANY, INC., and Alvin J. Holmes, Appellees. Marie Ezell Agner, As Personal Representative of the Estate of Michael Mantzanas, Deceased, Appellant,
v.
JIM HINTON OIL COMPANY, INC., and Alvin J. Holmes, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*996 D. Andrew Vloedman and William N. Avera of Avera, Perry & Vloedman, Gainesville, for appellants.
W.C. O'Neal of O'Neal & O'Neal, Gainesville, for appellees.
ZEHMER, Judge.
This is a consolidated appeal from a jury verdict in a wrongful death action entered in favor of appellees Jim Hinton Oil Company, Inc. and Alvin J. Holmes. Appellants raise two issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in admitting portions of the Florida Highway Patrol Traffic Homicide Investigation Report into evidence; and (2) whether the trial court erred in denying appellants' requested jury instruction on careless driving. For the reasons stated below, we reverse.
These actions were filed pursuant to the Wrongful Death Act. Appellants alleged that on or about July 25, 1981, appellee Jim Hinton Oil owned a motor vehicle that was operated by appellee Alvin Holmes, and that Holmes negligently operated the vehicle so that it caused the motorcycle being driven by Michael Parker to collide with the rear of a Mustang being operated by Linda Hilson-Brown. Appellants contended that prior to the accident appellees' truck had been tailgating the Mustang for a considerable distance and that appellees' tailgating obstructed the rearward view of the driver of the Mustang and the forward view of the driver of the motorcycle, so that neither vehicle could see the other until it was too late to avoid a collision. As a result, Michael Hilson (age 17) and passenger Michael Mantzanas (age 15) suffered multiple injuries that caused their deaths. The cases were consolidated and a jury trial held in September 1987.
Clyde Merritt of the Florida Highway Patrol was sent to the scene of the accident as a vehicular homicide accident investigator. Over appellants' objections, Merritt testified about two diagrams that were part of his Florida Highway Patrol Traffic Homicide Investigation Report and the diagrams were admitted into evidence. Exhibit A is a photocopy of a reconstruction diagram that Merritt drew based on the physical evidence at the scene and the measurements turned over to Merritt by another officer coupled with the statements of witnesses. Exhibit B is a photocopy of the final rest diagram of the homicide investigation which Merritt drew up based upon the measurements and physical evidence he observed at the scene and the measurements given to him by Sheriff Whittle.
Linda Hilson-Brown, the driver of the Mustang, testified that when she first noticed the tanker it was about 100 yards behind her but that as she proceeded down the highway
He just followed me closer. He got, I don't know, he was right on me, you know, not too close, but the further we got to where I turn off all I could see was the truck.
He tailgated me for a long ways. And from the time, I'd say about 100 yards from where I turned he might have been five feet behind me.
All I could see in my rear view mirror and my side mirror was the grille, that's all I could see.
(T. 162). Ms. Brown stated that when she signaled and slowed to make her turn the truck did not back off in any way. She also stated that she never saw the motorcycle prior to the accident. Plaintiffs' accident reconstruction expert opined that given the position of the tanker behind Ms. Brown, Ms. Brown did not have an ample *997 opportunity to see or react to the presence of Michael Parker, and that correspondingly, Michael Parker had no opportunity to avoid the accident because he would not have been able to see the Mustang in time.
Appellee Alvin Holmes testified that he initially noticed Ms. Brown's vehicle about 1/2 mile ahead of him and was thinking about passing it when Ms. Brown signaled her intention to make a left-hand turn. Holmes backed off the accelerator and was about 100 feet behind the Mustang when he looked in his rear view mirror and "`Zoom,' and the motorcycle [was] passing [me] and she [Brown] had passed the center line, and it hit it." Holmes denied tailgating the Brown vehicle. Appellees' accident reconstructionist opined that the tanker was 147 feet east of the intersection at the time of the impact between the Mustang and the motorcycle. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the appellees.
Appellants first contend that the final rest diagram and reconstruction diagram were part of a traffic homicide report and thus were inadmissible pursuant to the accident report privilege contained in § 316.066. Section 316.066(3)(a), Florida Statutes (1987), provides in part that:
Every law enforcement officer who in the regular course of duty investigates a motor vehicle accident:
1. Which resulted in death or personal injury shall, within 24 hours after completing the investigation, forward a written report of the accident to the department.
The statute also provides that "[n]o such report shall be used as evidence in any trial, civil or criminal, arising out of the accident... ." See also White v. Kiser, 368 So.2d 952 (Fla. 1st DCA 1979). Tangible evidence of an automobile accident, such as location of accident, vehicle locations, skid marks and damage to vehicle observed by the investigating officer, are not confidential pursuant to § 316.066 and may be admitted into evidence by the investigating officer in an action arising from the accident. Brackin v. Boles, 452 So.2d 540 (Fla. 1984). Here, Officer Merritt testified that the diagrams were prepared as part of the homicide report he filed in the case. The diagrams were based not only on Merritt's personal observations but also on those of Sheriff Whittle (another investigating officer) and on statements given to Merritt by witnesses, including Ms. Brown, the driver of the Mustang. Because some of the information used to construct the diagrams was not based on first-hand knowledge and was based in part on the testimony of a driver of one of the vehicles involved in the accident, the diagrams were privileged under § 316.066 and it was error to admit them into evidence.
Appellees argue that any error in admitting these documents was harmless because this information was testified to by other witnesses. However, on direct examination Sheriff Whittle and Officer Merritt were questioned only about matters they actually observed at the scene of the accident. In addition, the diagrams did not show the tanker in the position testified to by Ms. Brown and appellants' expert, so the diagrams could be interpreted by the jury as contradicting the testimony presented by appellants' witnesses and being consistent with appellees' version of the accident. For this reason, we cannot agree that the error should be treated as harmless. See Dinowitz v. Weinrub, 493 So.2d 29 (Fla. 4th DCA 1986), in which it was held a violation of § 316.066 to admit an officer's testimony that a map he had drawn, which was based on the statement of the driver, indicated that the vehicle struck the pedestrian on the road rather than on the grass.
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530 So. 2d 995, 1988 WL 86355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-jim-hinton-oil-co-inc-fladistctapp-1988.