Jackie Tentoni v. Warren W. Slayden

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 2004
Docket2005-CT-00529-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Jackie Tentoni v. Warren W. Slayden (Jackie Tentoni v. Warren W. Slayden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackie Tentoni v. Warren W. Slayden, (Mich. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2005-CT-00529-SCT

JACKIE TENTONI, INDIVIDUALLY, AND AS NEXT F RIEN D ON B EHA LF OF HER MINOR CHILDREN, MELANIE TENTONI, JOHNATHAN TENTONI AND PHILLIP TENTONI

v.

WARREN W. SLAYDEN

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/30/2004 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. SAMAC S. RICHARDSON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: MADISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: JOSEPH S. GATLIN, III ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: SHELLY G. BURNS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF APPEALS IS REVERSED AND THE JUDGMENT OF THE MADISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT IS REINSTATED AND AFFIRMED - 11/08/2007 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Jackie Tentoni sued Warren W. Slayden in the Madison County Circuit Court,

alleging negligence and gross negligence due to bodily injuries and property damage

resulting from an automobile accident. The Madison County Circuit Court entered a final

judgment after a trial resulting in a jury verdict in favor of Slayden and against Tentoni. On

appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed and rendered as to liability and remanded the case to the Madison County Circuit Court for a new trial on damages. Inasmuch as we find that the

Court of Appeals erred, we reverse its judgment and reinstate and affirm the trial court

judgment entered in favor of Slayden and against Tentoni, consistent with the jury verdict.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶2. On January 1, 1999, Jackie Tentoni was driving her 1996 Suzuki Sidekick southbound

in the right lane on Interstate 55 in Carroll County. In the vehicle with Tentoni were her

three children, Melanie,1 Phillip, and Jonathan.2 Melanie was in the front seat next to Tentoni

and was wearing a seatbelt. Phillip was in the back seat, not wearing a seatbelt, and Jonathan

was lying down in the back area of the Suzuki, unrestrained. Following directly behind

Tentoni in a 1995 Buick was Warren W. Slayden, along with his wife, Brenda, and their

daughter, April.

¶3. Although it was raining, Slayden had been driving behind Tentoni in the southbound

right lane for miles, without incident.3 While traveling down I-55 in Carroll County, Tentoni

1 Melanie was referred to as “Melonie” throughout the record, but we will refer to her by the name as used by her mother in the pleadings and documents filed in the this cause. 2 Although there are multiple spellings throughout the record, “Jonathan” is used most consistently. 3 In fact, according to Slayden’s testimony, he had entered I-55 at “the Sardis exit and was going south and returning to Madison. It was raining, as I had mentioned; and, when it’s raining like that, I prefer to be behind a car. Because when you’ve got a car in front of you the spray tends to be sprayed out before you go through it. And so I had been behind Ms. Tentoni’s vehicle for quite a few miles. And we were coming up behind an 18-wheeler.” Thus, taking Slayden’s testimony literally, he traveled behind Tentoni’s vehicle without incident from Sardis, in northern Panola County, to the point of the accident, which according to Tentoni, was “196 mile marker around Duck Hill Exit on I-55.” This would be

2 pulled into the left lane to pass an eighteen-wheeler tractor-trailer rig. Slayden also moved

into the left lane behind Tentoni. By the time Tentoni had passed the eighteen-wheeler and

pulled back into the right lane in front of the eighteen-wheeler, all three vehicles had started

down a hill. Tentoni reduced her speed, and the incline caused the descending eighteen-

wheeler to increase its speed, thus creating insufficient space for Slayden to pull in behind

Tentoni and in front of the eighteen-wheeler. Slayden chose to maintain his speed in the left

lane and as he did, his vehicle hydroplaned and came in contact with Tentoni’s vehicle. Both

Tentoni and Slayden acknowledged that their vehicles collided twice, but according to

Tentoni, it was a mysterious third impact which caused Tentoni’s vehicle to travel down an

embankment and collide with a tree, resulting in most of the injuries and damages suffered

by Tentoni and her children.4

¶4. Slayden testified at trial that he was traveling in the left lane beside Tentoni at the

speed of sixty-eight miles per hour, within the posted seventy-mile-per-hour speed limit;

Tentoni testified at trial that she was traveling approximately fifty-five miles per hour.5

Slayden testified that he and Tentoni were traveling side-by-side; Tentoni testified that she

a distance of between fifty and sixty miles that Slayden had followed Tentoni, without incident. 4 Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to Tentoni, at least some physical injuries and property damage were suffered due to the second impact by Slayden. This will be discussed in more detail, infra. 5 On the other hand, the investigating officer, state trooper Billy McClurg, testified that Tentoni told him she was traveling at an estimated speed of 60 mph, as opposed to the 55 mph Tentoni testified to at trial.

3 noticed Slayden when he was “coming towards my side, more towards my door;” Slayden

testified that he hydroplaned in the left lane and moved between one foot to one-and-one-half

feet into the right lane, bumping Tentoni’s left front bumper. Slayden further testified that

his vehicle then spun and hit Tentoni’s right back bumper, sending Tentoni off to the right

and Slayden off to the left, where he came to a stop in the median. After Tentoni’s vehicle

went to the right, Slayden did not see where Tentoni’s vehicle came to rest. The eighteen-

wheeler passed between the two vehicles but returned to the scene; however, neither Slayden

nor Tentoni obtained the truck driver’s name and contact information.

¶5. Tentoni testified that after the first two impacts, she maintained control of her vehicle.

She described the first impact as a “light tap” and the second impact as being “much harder

than the first.” According to Tentoni, she came to a complete stop on the shoulder of I-55

and attempted to shift her vehicle into park. However, of significant import, Tentoni testified

that as she was attempting to place her vehicle into park, there was a third impact which sent

her vehicle completely off the road, where she traveled down an embankment over logs and

crashed into a tree. Tentoni described the third impact as being “something light” which “hit

me way behind, something just very, very light, I heard a loud ner-er-er-er-er-er-er.” Tentoni

further testified that the third impact caused her to lose control of her vehicle, causing her and

her children to suffer most of their injuries. Slayden testified that Tentoni did nothing wrong.

Officer Billy McClurg, who responded to the scene, issued no citations to Slayden due to the

rainy conditions.

4 ¶6. A passerby who identified himself as a doctor called an ambulance, which transported

Tentoni and her three children to the emergency room at Grenada Lake Medical Center. The

Slayden family also traveled to the hospital and stayed with the Tentonis until they received

a good prognosis for each family member.

¶7. Tentoni filed suit individually and on behalf of her three children in the Circuit Court

of Madison County on January 13, 2000. Slayden and “John Does 1-10” were named as

defendants.6 Even though the incident giving rise to this litigation occurred in Carroll

County, Tentoni and her three children, as well as Slayden, were all Madison County

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