Jones v. Northbrook Ins. Co.

544 So. 2d 742, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 1102, 1989 WL 54994
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 24, 1989
Docket88-107
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 544 So. 2d 742 (Jones v. Northbrook Ins. Co.) 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
Jones v. Northbrook Ins. Co., 544 So. 2d 742, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 1102, 1989 WL 54994 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

544 So.2d 742 (1989)

Peggy C. JONES, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
NORTHBROOK INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 88-107.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

May 24, 1989.

*743 Brittain, Williams, McGlathery & Passman, Joe Payne Williams & Peggy Jones, Natchitoches, for plaintiff-appellee.

Gold, Weems, Bruser, Sharp, Sues & Rundell, Robert G. Nida/Raymond L. Brown, Jr., Alexandria, for defendant-appellant.

Before GUIDRY, DOUCET and LABORDE, JJ.

DOUCET, Judge.

Plaintiff, Peggy C. Jones, brought suit against defendant, Northbrook Insurance Company, for damages resulting from an automobile collision with defendant's insured. After a trial by jury, defendant appeals a judgment notwithstanding the verdict that assessed all fault to the defendant's insured, awarded plaintiff $85,000.00 for general damages, and awarded plaintiff $71,400.00 for loss of future earnings. Defendant now appeals from this adverse judgment.

FACTS

Neil Blanchard, defendant's insured, was employed as a bread delivery man. On the morning of May 3, 1985, Blanchard parked his bread truck in front of the Winn Dixie Grocery Store in the Cane River Shopping Center, so that he could make his bread delivery to the Winn Dixie. Blanchard's *744 truck was parked facing east parallel to the curb in the fire lane in front of the Winn Dixie. A soft drink truck driven by John Oweki was parked behind Blanchard's truck, also parallel to the curb in the fire lane in front of the Winn Dixie.

After Blanchard completed his bread delivery to the Winn Dixie, he entered his truck from the curb side of the vehicle, started the truck, checked his side mirror and saw no vehicles approaching, and began driving away from the Winn Dixie. Blanchard never applied his brakes or activated his turn signal before he began moving. At the same time, plaintiff was driving her two-door Subaru automobile eastward past the Winn Dixie in the normal travel lane of the shopping center parking lot, on her way to use a pay phone at the east end of the shopping center. Myra Perry, plaintiff's housekeeper, was riding in the front passenger seat of plaintiff's automobile.

As plaintiff was driving past Blanchard's truck, Blanchard began driving away from the Winn Dixie on his way to his next delivery and the two vehicles collided. The left front bumper of Blanchard's truck struck the passenger side of plaintiff's car just past the middle of the car and scraped and dented the car back along the length of the car for a distance of approximately three feet. The only damage to Blanchard's truck was that the left end of the front bumper, which wrapped around the left front corner of the truck, was pulled straight out in front of the truck.

Haywood Wallace, who was a manager at the Winn Dixie at the time of the accident, testified that he was standing in the front of the store, heard the collision and immediately turned around and looked at the vehicles through the front windows of the store, then went outside. He stated that when he got outside the vehicles had not moved from where they stopped after the collision. He stated that Blanchard's truck had been moved from where it had been parked while Blanchard was making his delivery. He stated that the truck was angled out away from the curb as if it had been making a left turn at the time of the collision.

Blanchard claimed that prior to the collision he was only moving forward and did not turn left. However, he admitted that after the collision his truck stopped in such a position that the front of the truck was angled out farther away from the curb than the back of the truck.

Corporal Randy Weaver, the police officer who investigated the accident, testified that after the accident Blanchard told him that he (Blanchard) was already moving forward and was turning left when the collision occurred. The accident report indicates, in the section titled "Movement Prior to Accident," that Blanchard was making a left turn. The accident report indicated that the estimated speed of plaintiff's vehicle was 15 miles per hour and that of Blanchard's truck was five miles per hour. The accident report also indicates that the location of the vehicles at the time the accident was investigated was the "point of impact." The sketch of the accident scene in the report shows the bread truck angled out away from the curb.

Plaintiff testified that she was driving past Blanchard's truck in a straight line at about 15 to 20 miles per hour when the truck just turned into her. She stated that there was no turn signal or tail lights on the truck or any other indication that the bread truck was anything other than just parked there. Plaintiff stated that on impact she banged her left knee on the dashboard or the driver's door and that for several minutes her leg felt numb or "asleep" and felt like it was "going to fall out from under" her. That evening, plaintiff received treatment for her left knee at the Natchitoches Parish Hospital emergency room. Her injury was diagnosed that evening as a strained left knee.

Myra Perry, plaintiff's housekeeper, testified that plaintiff was proceeding forward in the normal traffic lane of the parking lot and was not in a hurry and not driving fast. She stated that as plaintiff drove past the bread truck, the truck hit the plaintiff's car. She stated that prior to the collision there was no sign of movement *745 from the truck. She stated that plaintiff passed "pretty close" to the bread truck.

John Oweki, the driver of the soft drink truck that was parked behind Blanchard's truck, testified that he had climbed up over the tire on the parking lot side of his truck in order to remove a case of soft drinks when he heard plaintiff's tires squeal as she turned right into the parking lot of the shopping center. He stated that he looked up and saw plaintiff's car leaning toward the driver's side as it pulled into the parking lot, and then he looked back into his truck. He stated that as plaintiff's car passed his truck it was going fast and passed close to his truck. However, Oweki admitted that he was concentrating on his work at the time and that his estimate of the car's speed and distance from him as it passed him was based only on the sound the car made as it passed him, since he did not actually see the car pass him.

Plaintiff was involved in a second automobile accident on July 23, 1985. Plaintiff received injuries to her neck and back in that accident and received medical attention for those injuries the same day. Plaintiff testified that her left knee was not injured in the second accident. Hospital records of plaintiff's treatment on that day show that she had no complaints of pain in her left knee after the accident and that she received no treatment for her left knee on that day.

After trial of this matter the jury found plaintiff to be 80% at fault, and Blanchard to be 20% at fault in the accident. The jury awarded plaintiff $2,669.00 for loss of past wages, and $4,340.00 for medical expenses (sums which counsel had stipulated to be correct for those elements of damages). The jury also awarded plaintiff $741.08 for car rental and $250.00 for her collision damage deductible. Despite being given interrogatories in which the elements of damages were listed, the jury made no award for: physical pain and suffering, past and future; mental pain and suffering, past and future; permanent disability and loss of enjoyment of life; and loss of future earnings and earning capacity.

A judgment consistent with this jury verdict was signed on July 27, 1987.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
544 So. 2d 742, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 1102, 1989 WL 54994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-northbrook-ins-co-lactapp-1989.