Johnson v. HORRY COUNTY WASTE AUTHORITY

698 S.E.2d 835, 389 S.C. 528
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 28, 2010
Docket4716
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 698 S.E.2d 835 (Johnson v. HORRY COUNTY WASTE AUTHORITY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. HORRY COUNTY WASTE AUTHORITY, 698 S.E.2d 835, 389 S.C. 528 (S.C. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

389 S.C. 528 (2010)
698 S.E.2d 835

Savannah K. JOHNSON, Personal Representative of the Estate of Susan Johnson, Respondent,
v.
HORRY COUNTY SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY, Appellant.

No. 4716.

Court of Appeals of South Carolina.

Heard May 19, 2010.
Decided July 28, 2010.
Rehearing Denied September 24, 2010.

*530 Douglas C. Baxter, of Myrtle Beach and Mason A. Summers, of Columbia, for Appellant.

Luke A. Rankin, of Conway, for Respondent.

KONDUROS, J.

Horry County Solid Waste Authority (the County) appeals the trial court's decision to suppress evidence regarding the decedent's blood alcohol level in this wrongful death action. The County also claims the trial court erred in referencing the South Carolina Commercial Driver's License Manual (the CDL Manual) in its charge to the jury warranting a new trial. We affirm.

*531 FACTS

Susan Johnson (Decedent) was involved in a one-car, roll-over accident around 4 a.m. on January 5, 2005. Decedent drove off the right side of the road and then over-corrected, causing the accident. Her vehicle, a black sports utility vehicle (SUV), came to rest facing oncoming traffic and inside the safe zone of the road.[1] Tommy Bell approached Decedent's vehicle driving a Horry County Solid Waste Authority Truck. Bell testified he saw Johnson's vehicle, then a blur, and then he felt a bump. He pulled over and saw Decedent's body lying on the side of the road and called 911. Decedent suffered catastrophic injuries having been crushed between the County's truck and her SUV. Her daughter, Savannah Johnson, brought a wrongful death action against the County as person representative of Decedent's estate.

At trial, Johnson made a motion in limine to exclude evidence of Decedent's blood alcohol level, which was .14, and evidence showing traces of marijuana and cocaine in Decedent's bloodstream. Johnson argued no independent evidence linked Decedent's intoxication to the second accident. At the trial court's request, the County attempted to establish such a connection. The County raised several pieces of evidence. First, Lieutenant Robert Lee, a South Carolina State Trooper and head of the Major Accident Investigation Team for the Pee Dee Region, had testified in his deposition that Decedent's single-car accident occurred because she was under the influence of alcohol or drugs and ran off the shoulder of the road. He stated fatigue may have also been a factor. The County also argued its expert, James Middleton, would testify Decedent was standing on the white line separating the safe zone and road at the time of impact and that her intoxication would have impaired her judgment. Finally, the County also indicated the cocaine and marijuana in Decedent's system had been ingested within hours of the accident.[2]

*532 Johnson maintained Lee's explanation for the first accident was not really independent but was colored by his knowledge of Decedent's toxicology report. Johnson also argued Middleton's deposition testimony was ambiguous and did not give a definite opinion as to where Decedent was standing when she was struck.

After hearing arguments, the trial court granted Johnson's request to exclude the evidence. The trial court concluded no evidence indicated Decedent's intoxication contributed to the second accident and the evidence was substantially more prejudicial than probative under Rule 403, SCRE. The trial court indicated the motion could be reconsidered upon presentation of sufficient evidence that Decedent's intoxication contributed to the accident.

Johnson called Lieutenant Lee at trial.[3] He testified his investigation and conclusions focused on a tire print found on the white line separating the road from the safe zone. He testified the tire print matched the print of the County's truck and such a print would only be made when a vehicle had an impact against another object sufficient to create a vibration, stamping the print onto the line. Lieutenant Lee further testified in his opinion, based on Decedent's injuries and the damage to the County's truck and the SUV, Decedent was not in the road at the time she was struck.

The redacted deposition testimony of pathologist Dr. Edward Proctor, Jr. was read into the record. He testified Decedent's injuries were consistent with her being hit on the right side of her body and being rotated around as the truck pinned her against her SUV. Dr. Proctor also stated Decedent would have been standing relatively close to her car for the injuries to have occurred the way they did. He opined this would likely mean she was either standing inside or no further than on the white line delineating the road from the safe zone.

*533 Another expert in accident reconstruction, Woodrow Poplin, testified next. Poplin stated in his expert opinion, the County's truck had drifted over into the safe zone and struck Decedent.[4] He opined Decedent was not across the white line separating the road and safe zone but was just inside it, right at its edge. Like Lee, Poplin believed the tire print on the white line was made by the County's truck. Poplin also testified he believed Decedent had moved her vehicle into the safe zone during the time between the first and second accidents.

At this time, the County again sought to have the drug and alcohol evidence admitted into the record, arguing Poplin's testimony that Decedent had moved her SUV should change the trial court's analysis. The County maintained Decedent's driving the vehicle into an unsafe position, not far enough off the road, made her driving under the influence a contributing factor in the second accident. The trial court again excluded the evidence concluding the link between Decedent's intoxication and the second accident was too tenuous.

Decedent's ex-husband testified he saw her at a local bar and grill earlier in the evening on the night of the accident. The two spoke briefly, but he did not observe Decedent's activities and did not see her consume any alcohol.

The defense called its accident reconstruction expert, James Middleton. Middleton disagreed with the other experts regarding the tire print. Based on his analysis, the tire print was not necessarily made by the County's truck. In his opinion, Decedent was standing in the road "straddling the white line" at the time she was struck.

Johnson had asked Bell about the amount of sleep he had gotten prior to the accident and attempted to establish through Middleton that Bell's fatigue could have been a factor in the second accident. In allowing such questioning, the trial court assured the County that it could likewise question witnesses about circumstantial evidence of Decedent's alcohol consumption. In response, the County indicated no witness could testify to seeing Decedent consume alcohol, but her *534 mere presence at the bar prior to the accident was at least circumstantial evidence of her intoxication.

When that discussion was concluded, the parties stipulated Middleton would have testified the level of alcohol in Decedent's bloodstream would have impaired her judgment and that her intoxication contributed to the second accident. The County did not raise the blood alcohol evidence again.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
698 S.E.2d 835, 389 S.C. 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-horry-county-waste-authority-scctapp-2010.