Hannie v. Guidry

48 So. 3d 396, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 216, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1330, 2010 WL 3893935
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 6, 2010
Docket10-216
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 So. 3d 396 (Hannie v. Guidry) 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
Hannie v. Guidry, 48 So. 3d 396, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 216, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1330, 2010 WL 3893935 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DAVID E. CHATELAIN, * Judge.

I,The defendant driver and his insurer appeal the trial court’s determination that the driver was 100% at fault for a center turn lane collision between his vehicle and the plaintiffs. Finding no manifest error in the trial court’s findings of fact, we affirm its assessment of fault and its general damage award. We also deny the plaintiffs damages and attorney fees request for a frivolous appeal.

FACTS

On November 28, 2003, vehicles driven by Nicol Hannie and Ray Guidry collided in the center turn lane on Kaliste Saloom Road in Lafayette as Mr. Hannie attempted to exit a shopping center parking lot situated at the corner of Kaliste Saloom Road and Ambassador Caffery Parkway. Mr. Hannie filed suit for damages against Mr. Guidry and his insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.

A trial on the merits was held on November 25, 2009. The parties stipulated that Mr. Hannie’s vehicle sustained property damage totaling $19,202.99 and that Mr. Hannie incurred a rental expense of $5,039.05 and medical expenses totaling $1,155.50.

Evidence presented at trial established that the collision occurred on the day after Thanksgiving and that traffic was heavy at the time. Mr. Hannie was exiting the shopping center, intending to turn left onto Kaliste Saloom Road. At that point, Kaliste Saloom Road consists of five lanes, two lanes headed in opposite directions on either side of a designated center turn lane. *399 Accordingly, Mr. Hannie had to cross two lanes of traffic and the center turn lane to complete his turn.

1 ?Mr. Hannie testified that traffic was stopped in the two traffic lanes he had to cross and was backed up as far as he could see to his left and right. He further testified that motorists in those two lanes provided him an opening to allow him to proceed with his turn, then waved him through the opening. Mr. Hannie related that he proceeded slowly across the two lanes and came to a stop before entering the turn lane. He described the opening in the traffic the motorists created as approximately fifteen or twenty feet. According to Mr. Hannie, he looked to the left and right before entering the turn lane, and, seeing no traffic approaching him, he proceeded forward; the impact took place “instantaneously” as he entered the turn lane. Mr. Hannie testified that he never saw Mr. Guidry’s vehicle approaching him.

Todd Landry was in the vehicle immediately behind Mr. Hannie waiting to turn left as Mr. Hannie attempted to exit the parking lot. Mr. Landry testified that the two travel lanes of Kaliste Saloom Road heading toward Ambassador Caffery Parkway were occupied with vehicles as far left and right as he could see. He described the traffic as moving “at a snail’s pace.”

According to Mr. Landry, Mr. Hannie was at a complete stop at the shopping center exit when two vehicles on Kaliste Saloom Road stopped to allow him to exit. He described Mr. Hannie’s maneuver as a “careful process of trying to go through ... those vehicles to stop and observe if it’s clear.” Mr. Landry explained that Mr. Hannie carefully crossed the first lane of travel, then the second lane of travel, stopping and going. As Mr. Hannie was proceeding into the center turn lane, Mr. Landry saw a dark-colored truck exit the travel lane closest to the turn lane “in an erratic” manner, then accelerate quickly and proceed at “a rapid rate of speed,” which he thought was “way too fast for the turning lane”; he estimated Mr. Guidry’s Isspeed at forty miles per hour. Mr. Landry continued, relating that the turn lane was clear as Mr. Hannie proceeded into it, then “before you could honk the horn or anything there was a big collision” between Mr. Guidry’s truck and Mr. Han-nie’s car. He further testified that before Mr. Guidry entered the turn lane, he (Mr. Guidry) was six or seven vehicles behind the vehicle in the travel lane closest to the turn lane that stopped to allow Mr. Han-nie and him to exit the parking lot. Mr. Landry did not see any other vehicles in the turn lane before the accident. Mr. Landry opined that there was nothing Mr. Hannie could have done to avoid the collision.

Mr. Landry next testified that immediately after the collision he exited his vehicle to check on the people involved in the accident and was surprised that rather than asking Mr. Hannie if he was okay, both the driver and the passenger of the truck that collided with Mr. Hannie approached Mr. Hannie “accusing him of pulling out in front of them.” Mr. Landry further testified that immediately after the collision, the driver and the passenger stated they were “turning up the road” with no explanation or description of where they were going. Mr. Landry related that at first he overheard Mr. Hannie ask Mr. Guidry why he was traveling in the turn lane if he was going to turn up the road. Later, after he had given his statement to the police, Mr. Landry overheard Mr. Guidry and his passenger state they were going to Sonic, the first establishment they would have encountered in the turn lane from where they were in traffic. Mr. Landry believed Mr. Guidry *400 changed his destination to give him “justification for being in that turning lane.”

Mr. Guidry testified that cars obstructed his view of Mr. Hannie’s vehicle. He estimated that Sonic was approximately the distance of three car lengths from where he entered the turn lane and that he traveled at a speed of approximately thirty-five |4miles per hour in the turn lane. He denied that he was traveling too fast for the traffic conditions, stating, “I was driving at a normal speed[,] and I observed the traffic to ensure that I wasn’t going to hit anybody.”

On cross-examination, Mr. Guidry agreed that Mr. Hannie cautiously began his turn and inched forward slowly. He also agreed that he could have stayed in the inside travel lane until he got closer to Sonic before entering the turn lane, as there was no place to turn left before Sonic, and Sonic was 697 feet from where he entered the turn lane, not the three to four car lengths he initially stated. Mr. Guidry testified that he first saw Mr. Han-nie’s vehicle when it was about three car lengths in front of his truck but denied having an opportunity to avoid the collision, testifying that he hit his brakes in an attempt to do so. Mr. Guidry further testified that the vehicles that stopped to let Mr. Hannie exit were large, similar to a Suburban, and prevented him from seeing Mr. Hannie’s vehicle as it moved toward the turn lane. He also denied seeing the opening through which Mr. Hannie was proceeding.

Mr. Guidry’s passenger, Peggy Prossen, is a resident of Florida; her testimony was presented via video deposition. Ms. Pros-sen testified that Mr. Guidry’s truck was “high enough where I could see out and see a distance” and that she first saw Mr. Hannie moving across the first lane of traffic, then saw him move a second time. She recalled Mr. Guidry being maybe three or four car lengths behind the vehicles that stopped to let Mr. Hannie exit. She stated that however far back they were nothing interfered with her ability to see Mr. Hannie’s car and that “probably nothing” prohibited Mr. Guidry from seeing it either. Ms. Prossen described the opening through which Mr. Hannie was proceeding as fifteen to twenty feet wide. She testified that she thought Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 So. 3d 396, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 216, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1330, 2010 WL 3893935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannie-v-guidry-lactapp-2010.