Jones v. Payton

548 So. 2d 1260
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 1989
Docket88-CA-0687, 88-CA-0688
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 548 So. 2d 1260 (Jones v. Payton) 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. Payton, 548 So. 2d 1260 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

548 So.2d 1260 (1989)

Dwayne Paul JONES, Sr., et al.
v.
Howard PAYTON, et al.

Nos. 88-CA-0687, 88-CA-0688.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

June 8, 1989.
On Rehearing August 24, 1989.
Writ Denied October 6, 1989.

*1261 Nat G. Kiefer, Jr., Joseph V. Di Rosa, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Edward P. Lobman, David I. Bordelon, Lobman, Carnahan & Batt, Metairie, Robert N. Ryan, P. Bruin Hays, II, Bienvenu, Foster, Ryan & O'Bannon, Timothy G. Schafer, Schafer & Schafer, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants.

Before GARRISON, BARRY and WILLIAMS, JJ.

GARRISON, Judge.

On December 12, 1984, at approximately 9:30 a.m., a truck carrying two steel cargo containers was being driven by defendant Howard Payton on St. Claude Avenue in New Orleans. As the truck sped through the intersection of Franklin Avenue and St. Claude Avenue, it hit a bump causing one of the containers weighing approximately three tons to slide off of the vehicle and into the street hitting Tianda Thomas and Frank Findlay. Thomas was pronounced dead at the scene and Findlay died three weeks later. Thomas' three year old son, Dwayne Paul Jones, Jr., was pushed out of the path of the container by his mother and received relatively minor injuries.

Dwayne Paul Jones, Sr., tutor of Dwayne Paul Jones, Jr., and Jo Ann Findlay, widow and executrix of the succession of Frank Findlay, brought survival and wrongful death actions against Payton; his employer, Waterfront Haulers, Inc.; and their liability insurers, the Security Insurance Group and United States Fire Insurance Company. Other insurance companies were originally named as defendants but were dismissed from this case pursuant to plaintiffs' motion. These two cases were consolidated for trial.

After trial on the merits, the trial judge rendered judgment on July 21, 1987 as follows:

"IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that there be judgment herein in favor of plaintiff, Dwayne Paul Jones, Sr. on behalf of his minor child, Dwayne Paul Jones, Jr. and against defendants, Howard Payton, Waterfront Haulers, Inc. in sum of three hundred thirty one thousand two hundred seventy-four dollars ($331,274.00) together with judicial interest from the date of judicial demand until paid and all costs of these proceedings.
IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that there be judgment herein in favor of plaintiff, Jo Ann Findlay, Individually and as Executrix of the Succession of Frank S. Findlay and against defendants, Howard Payton, and Waterfront Haulers, Inc., in solido, in sum of two hundred seventy nine thousand four hundred dollars ($279,400.00) together with judicial interest from the date of judicial demand until paid and all costs of these proceedings.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that policy of insurance issued by Security ReInsurance Company to Waterfront Haulers, Inc. and the policy of insurance issued by United States Fire Insurance Company to Waterfront Haulers, Inc. are both excess to the policy of insurance issued by Security Insurance Company of Hartford to Howard Peyton and each insurer is responsible in proportion to their respective limits of liability for all amounts due plaintiffs in excess of the amount of insurance afforded under the policy of insurance issued by Security Insurance Company of Hartford to Howard Payton."

*1262 The trial judge filed reasons for judgment as well as supplemental and amended reasons itemizing the various amounts awarded to the plaintiffs. The defendants now appeal this judgment. Furthermore, plaintiff Jones also appeals this judgment requesting an increase in damages.

As for the judgment as it pertains to Jo Ann Findlay, the defendants Howard Payton, Waterfront Haulers, Inc. and Security Reinsurance Company only appeal the award of $100,000.00 given to Mrs. Findlay for her late husband's pre-death pain and suffering. These defendants argue that the trial court's award of $100,000.00 to Mrs. Findlay for her survival action was outrageously excessive and an abuse of discretion. Defendants suggest that the trial court failed to apply the proper standard for assessing damages in a survival action, i.e. the actual damages suffered by the deceased before his death. The defendants also suggest that the trial judge did not properly distinguish between the plaintiff's survival action and wrongful death action.

Mr. Findlay, a seventy-five year old man at the time of the accident, was treated at Charity Hospital for twenty-one days following the accident. He died on the day after his release from the hospital.

In assessing damages in this survival action, the award must be limited to damages for the actual pain and suffering endured by Mr. Findlay in the twenty-two days between the accident and his date of death. Although one of the appellants described Mr. Findlay's injuries as "moderate" and his death on the day after his release from the hospital as "completely unexpected," the record indicates otherwise.

Medical records from Charity Hospital show that Mr. Findlay was admitted to the hospital on the date of the accident with "multiple traumatic injuries." His admitting diagnosis indicated that he suffered a left frontal skull fracture, fractures of three ribs, edema and ecchymoses of the left eyelid, left ear laceration with avulsion of cartilege, chest trauma, abdominal trauma with intra-abdominal hemorrhage, an open globe wound to the right eye, and numerous abrasions. Mr. Findlay underwent surgery for the open globe wound to the right eye. These records also indicate that Mr. Findlay deteriorated mentally in the first few days of his hospitalization and that he suffered periods of disorientation and hallucinations during his hospital stay.

The trial judge noted that Mr. Findlay had been self-sufficient before the accident and had cared for his ailing wife. He lost an estimated fifteen to twenty pounds during his hospitalization. Mr. Findlay died on the day after his discharge and his cause of death was listed as intercranial injuries caused by trauma.

In view of the evidence presented, we find that although the award of $100,000.00 for Mrs. Findlay's survival action is high, it is neither outrageously excessive nor an abuse of the trial judge's discretion. Therefore, we find this claim to have no merit.

In the brief filed on behalf of Mrs. Findlay, counsel argues that the amount awarded to Mrs. Findlay for loss of services, love and affection and for mental anguish and grief is inadequate. However, because this appellee neither answered the appellants' appeal nor appealed independently, this assignment of error will not be considered by this court.

In the case of Dwayne Jones, Sr., et al, the defendants first argue that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding $225,000.00 to the plaintiff for the wrongful death of Tianda Thomas. The basis of defendants' argument is that Dwayne Jones, Jr.'s loss of his mother in this tragic incident is somehow minimized by the fact that he has a close relationship with his father and stepmother with whom he now lives. The defendants also stress the fact that Dwayne Jones' parents never married; therefore, he never had the benefit of a traditional nuclear family.

We reject the defendants' suggestion that the immediate substitution of a stepmother minimizes the trauma suffered by this little boy who lost his mother at the age of three. The testimony revealed that

*1263 Dwayne Jones, Jr.

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