Johnson Ex Rel. Johnson v. Dumas

811 So. 2d 1085, 2002 WL 273819
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 2002
Docket01-CA-1153
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 811 So. 2d 1085 (Johnson Ex Rel. Johnson v. Dumas) 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
Johnson Ex Rel. Johnson v. Dumas, 811 So. 2d 1085, 2002 WL 273819 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

811 So.2d 1085 (2002)

Rhoda JOHNSON, on Behalf of Her Minor Daughter, Renata JOHNSON
v.
Melvin DUMAS, Sr., et al.

No. 01-CA-1153.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

February 26, 2002.

*1087 Richard P. Ieyoub, Attorney General, John H. Ayres, III, Assistant Attorney General, Baton Rouge, LA, for State of Louisiana, through the Department of Transportation and Development, Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Appellee.

Troy A. Broussard, Allen & Gooch, a Law Corporation, Lafayette, LA, for Melvin Dumas, Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

Robert M. Becnel, Laplace, LA, for Renata Johnson, Plaintiff-Appellee.

*1088 Panel composed of Judges JAMES L. CANNELLA, MARION F. EDWARDS and SUSAN M. CHEHARDY.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

This appeal concerns apportionment of liability between two defendants cast in judgment for damages arising from a school bus accident as well as the quantum awarded for general damages. We affirm.

On April 17, 1996, 16-year-old Renata Johnson was a passenger on a school bus that overturned on the shoulder of Louisiana Highway 20 in St. James Parish. Renata was injured in the accident. Her mother subsequently brought suit on her behalf against various defendants, including Melvin Dumas, Sr. (the bus driver) and the State of Louisiana through the Department of Transportation and Development, hereafter called "DOTD" (the state agency responsible for highway construction and maintenance).[1] Plaintiff alleged that Dumas was negligent in his driving and that DOTD was negligent in its design and/or maintenance of the road, because of a drop-off on the road shoulder where the bus overturned.

After a three-day trial, a jury found that the bus driver was negligent and his negligence was a cause of the accident; that the driver of an oncoming vehicle, which the bus driver claimed had forced him off the road, was not negligent; that the roadway on which the accident occurred presented an unreasonable risk of harm to others; that DOTD knew or should have known of the existence of the roadway condition; that DOTD had a reasonable opportunity to remedy the condition but failed to do so; and that the defective condition of the roadway was a cause of the accident in question.

The jury apportioned fault at 80% to DOTD and 20% to Dumas and awarded plaintiff damages in the amount of $319,330.00, of which $250,000.00 was general damages. The trial court rendered a judgment in accordance with the jury's verdict. Defendant Dumas filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which was denied. DOTD and Dumas both appeal.

FACTS

Melvin Dumas testified that on the day of the accident, he was driving the bus on Highway 20 heading north toward Vacherie. As he passed the intersection with Highway 644 a vehicle turned in front of him. He slowed and let the vehicle go, then he picked up speed. As he got approximately half a mile from the intersection, he noticed three vehicles coming toward him and another vehicle, a pickup truck, attempting to pass the cars. Dumas said that as the pickup truck attempted to overtake his lane, he moved over to try to give it room because he knew there wouldn't be enough time for it to pass every vehicle in line coming toward him. When Dumas moved the bus over, its wheels hit the edge of the road, which made the bus go in the ditch sideways, running two wheels along the ditch. He *1089 turned the wheels and the bus went up and over to the left lane, then started sliding. He corrected it, then it overbalanced or unbalanced, went on one side, and started sliding on its side.

At trial Dumas said he did not recall how fast he was driving the bus, although he had testified in his deposition that he was going 25 miles per hour. He testified the posted speed limit was 45 miles per hour and he disagreed with the state police investigator's estimate of his speed as being 52 miles per hour.

Dumas said he told the state trooper that he must have hit a soft spot in the road, but his trial testimony was contradicted by his deposition, in which he denied saying that to the trooper. At trial he also stated that he hit the brakes "probably two times" and that he told the state trooper someone tried to run him off the road, but said that the trooper did not include that in the accident report. He denied stepping on the accelerator and said he slowed down before going off the road. He did not blow his horn.

Three witnesses who were driving in cars behind the school bus denied seeing any oncoming cars trying to pass in front of the school bus. Two of them testified they saw the wheels on the back-end passenger side of the bus go off the edge of the road. After the back end of the bus on the passenger side went off, the driver tried to regain control, but the bus began swerving and fish-tailing until it flipped over on its side and skidded across both lanes into the ditch. Those two witnesses, Gail Louque and Ramona Kliebert, said that if there had been oncoming traffic any car in the path of the bus would have been wrecked.

Louque said she had been traveling behind the bus for a while and they were going approximately the same speed, because she was neither gaining on him nor being left behind. She estimated her speed at 40 to 45 miles per hour.

Trooper John Baltes of the Louisiana State Police, who investigated the accident, was accepted as an expert in accident reconstruction. He said that Dumas told him he hit a soft spot in the road, lost control, and went off into the ditch; to avoid hitting an adjacent telephone pole, he pulled back onto the highway, then lost control of the bus and it overturned. Baltes stated he put "soft spot" in quotes on his report to indicate it was a direct quote from the witness. Baltes said Dumas did not mention any other vehicle being involved in his losing control of the bus.

Baltes determined that Dumas was speeding, that he left the road due to carelessness, and that if there had been an improved shoulder of the road the accident probably would not have happened. He found that the primary cause of the accident, other than Dumas' carelessness, was Dumas' inability to control the vehicle or failure to properly re-enter the roadway after he encountered the drop-off on the side of the road. Baltes said the physical evidence indicated that the bus left the highway gradually, drifting off the roadway, not abruptly steering to avoid an oncoming vehicle or an obstruction in the roadway.

Baltes testified that the posted speed limit is 45 miles per hour. He estimated Dumas' minimum speed was 52 miles per hour. He said at the point where the bus left the roadway, the drop-off is approximately 12 inches; at the point where it reentered the roadway the drop-off is approximately seven inches.

I. Robert Ehrlich testified as an expert in the field of accident reconstruction. He *1090 had reviewed the witnesses' statements, affidavits and depositions, photographs of the accident scene, and a diagram of the roadway cross-section. He concluded that Dumas was negligent in letting his vehicle go off the road to the right and that he compounded that problem by turning hard to the right after he went off the road on the other side, which caused his vehicle to roll over. Ehrlich noted that a shoulder drop greater than five inches is considered unsafe. The shoulder drop here was between seven and 12 inches. Beyond the drop of the pavement, he said, there is a steep drop-off in the ditch.

Ehrlich estimated that the bus was going 55 miles per hour when it went off the road.

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Bluebook (online)
811 So. 2d 1085, 2002 WL 273819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-ex-rel-johnson-v-dumas-lactapp-2002.