Isabella Criswell v. Collette Kelley, City of Shreveport d/b/a Shreveport Police Department, and American Alternative Insurance Corporation

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 9, 2022
Docket54,188-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Isabella Criswell v. Collette Kelley, City of Shreveport d/b/a Shreveport Police Department, and American Alternative Insurance Corporation (Isabella Criswell v. Collette Kelley, City of Shreveport d/b/a Shreveport Police Department, and American Alternative Insurance Corporation) 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
Isabella Criswell v. Collette Kelley, City of Shreveport d/b/a Shreveport Police Department, and American Alternative Insurance Corporation, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Judgment rendered March 9, 2022. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 54,188-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

ISABELLA CRISWELL Plaintiff-Appellee

versus

COLLETTE KELLEY, CITY OF Defendant-Appellants SHREVEPORT D/B/A SHREVEPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT AND AMERICAN ALTERNATIVE INSURANCE CORPORATION

Appealed from the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, Louisiana Trial Court No. 607,014

Honorable Michael Pitman, Judge

LEON L. EMANUEL Counsel for Appellant Collette Kelley

SEABAUGH, JOFFRION, SEPULVADO Counsel for Appellee & VICTORY, LLC. By: Alan T. Seabaugh Michael C. Melerine

Before MOORE, THOMPSON, and HUNTER, JJ. MOORE, C.J.

Lieutenant Colette Kelly, a Shreveport police officer, appeals a

judgment that found her 50% at fault in an intersectional collision, awarded

her only $10,000 in general damages, and denied her claim for special

damages.1 Isabella Criswell, the driver struck by Lt. Kelly, answers the

appeal, contesting her own 50% fault and contending the general damages

are excessive. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The accident occurred around 3:15 pm on November 20 (the Monday

before Thanksgiving), 2017. On fall break, the 17-year-old Ms. Criswell and

her friend, Kennedy Jacobs, had been out shopping and eating, and were

returning to Ms. Jacobs’s house. Ms. Jacobs was leading in her Jeep

Compass, and Ms. Criswell was following in her Kia Optima. They were

driving west on Stratmore Dr., both in the left lane, when they came to the

intersection with Youree Dr. The light was red, so they waited. When the

light turned green, Ms. Jacobs went through the intersection. Ms. Criswell

then started across, but before she could get through, she was struck in the

side by a Shreveport Police unit driven by Lt. Kelly.

Lt. Kelly had been assigned to the east side of town that day, but

shortly after 3:00 pm, she received an “active shooter” call to Werner Park

Elementary, so she took off at high speed, south on Youree Dr. She was

driving a marked Chevy Caprice equipped with interior flashing lights but

no top-mounted lights. A fellow SPD officer, Jaquerus Turner, was

following her in his own unit. The speed limit on that stretch of Youree Dr.

1 The lieutenant’s name is spelled “Collette Kelley” in the original petition but “Colette Kelly” everywhere else in the record. is 45 mph, but Lt. Kelly was doing, at one point, 76. Seeing that her light

was red, she slowed as she approached Stratmore and saw the Jeep cross

Youree. Thinking her way was clear, she drove into the intersection;

however, Ms. Criswell had entered and gone halfway through. Lt. Kelly

struck the front passenger side of the Kia at 37 mph.

Both officers’ units were equipped with dashcams that captured video

and audio of the collision. These recordings were introduced in evidence,

played multiple times at trial, and subjected to intense commentary by SPD

officers.

Lt. Kelly was carried by EMS to Willis-Knighton Pierremont, where

doctors described the force of impact as “moderate”; she was sent home with

prescriptions for Ibuprofen, Norco (a mild narcotic, which she said she did

not take because it would impair her work), and cyclobenzaprine (a mild

muscle relaxant, which also she did not take), and told to come to Work

Kare the next day. However, doctors also approved her to return to work the

next day. She made two trips to Work Kare – November 21 and 28 – where

doctors noted headache, concussion without loss of consciousness, and pain

and stiffness in the back and neck. Finding no serious problems, they told

her to keep taking the mild pain relievers and to return to work.

Ms. Criswell filed this suit against Lt. Kelly, the City of Shreveport

Police Department, and its insurer in February 2018; she soon dismissed the

insurer. Lt. Kelly filed this reconventional demand against Ms. Criswell and

her father in May 2018. On the first day of trial, in March 2020, counsel

announced that Ms. Criswell had settled with the City, so only Lt. Kelly’s

reconvention proceeded.

2 TRIAL EVIDENCE

The trial took three days, much of the time devoted to details of

internal SPD practices, who drafted and edited the original crash report, and

how various officers disagreed about interpreting the accident. The relevant

evidence is summarized below.

Lt. Kelly’s primary witness was SPD Sgt. Michael Carter, who felt

both drivers were at fault, but he dwelt mostly on how well Lt. Kelly

handled the situation. He testified that she acted reasonably in slowing her

vehicle from 76 to 36, in turning on her dash-mounted lights 26 seconds

before impact, and in starting her siren 7 seconds before. Also, he felt there

was nothing to obstruct Ms. Criswell’s view of two speeding cop cars, with

lights flashing and sirens blaring, coming down Youree.

Lt. Kelly also called Lashaun Aldridge, another driver who (like Ms.

Criswell) was headed west on Stratmore, but in the right lane, waiting at the

light before the collision occurred. She testified that she heard the sirens and

saw the flashing lights, so she stayed put when the light turned green. She

agreed that her car was between Ms. Criswell’s and the oncoming cop cars,

but she did not think this obstructed Ms. Criswell’s view up Youree.

Ofc. Turner, the SPD officer who was following Lt. Kelly, also felt

that there was nothing to obstruct Ms. Criswell’s view.

Lt. Kelly also called SPD Cpl. Dirk Morris, who earned his crash

investigation certification after this accident. He admitted making numerous

changes to the crash report (as noted, much time was given to the evolution

of the reports and diagrams as they wended their way through SPD). He

described the statutory authority for emergency vehicles to run red lights,

La. R.S. 32:24, and SPD’s internal rule governing this, Gen. Ord. § 606.04. 3 He concluded that Lt. Kelly did not make sure the way was clear before

running the red light, and was therefore at fault for ignoring traffic controls,

while Ms. Criswell committed no traffic violation. He agreed that there were

no light poles, buildings, or vegetation to obstruct Ms. Criswell’s view up

Youree, but the two vehicles in the right lane would have done so.

Lt. Kelly testified that as she neared Stratmore, she knew her light was

red but she thought “the cars on the side street would stay there.” Because of

this, she felt she had “cleared” the intersection, meaning it was okay for her

to run the red light. She considered this a major accident, as it left her

woozy, disoriented, and with lots of pain and a “blinding headache.” Even

though Willis-Knighton released her to work, she said there was “no way”

she could do so. She wound up staying off work for 29 or 30 days, using

vacation and comp time, and said she felt pain, stress, and anxiety for about

six months. She also testified that she had to miss a few special assignments

that would have paid $33-45 an hour; however, evidence of her pay rate was

excluded for being tendered long after the deadline specified in the pretrial

scheduling order.

Ms. Criswell’s lead witness was Cpl. Shane Prothro. He had watched

the dashcam video and overruled Sgt. Carter’s initial move to ticket Ms.

Criswell. Cpl.

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Isabella Criswell v. Collette Kelley, City of Shreveport d/b/a Shreveport Police Department, and American Alternative Insurance Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isabella-criswell-v-collette-kelley-city-of-shreveport-dba-shreveport-lactapp-2022.