Kramer v. Continental Cas. Co.

641 So. 2d 557, 1994 WL 274998
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 2, 1994
Docket92-1131
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 641 So. 2d 557 (Kramer v. Continental Cas. 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
Kramer v. Continental Cas. Co., 641 So. 2d 557, 1994 WL 274998 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

641 So.2d 557 (1994)

Mr. and Mrs. T.G. KRAMER, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CONTINENTAL CASUALTY COMPANY, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 92-1131.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

June 22, 1994.
Order Denying Rehearing in Part, Granting Rehearing in Part, and Rendering Judgment September 2, 1994.

*559 J.B. Jones Jr., Cameron, for Mr. and Mrs. T.G. Kramer, etc.

Allen L. Smith Jr., Lake Charles, for Cyprien, Inc.

David Ramsey Lestage, DeRidder, for Walter Carrico.

Michael Steven Beverung, Donald Coleman Brown, Lake Charles, for Sheriff Wayne McElveen.

Henry Eugene Yoes, III, Lake Charles, for Robert Allen.

Thomas Walter Sanders, Lake Charles, for Independent Fire.

James Kirk Piccione, Lafayette, for Ry-Ron, Inc.

Before DOUCET, KNOLL, COOKS, SAUNDERS and DECUIR, JJ.

KNOLL, Judge.

This appeal concerns the liability of a motel for allowing minors to become intoxicated, then forcing the minors to leave and drive in an intoxicated condition, which resulted in one of the minors receiving serious injuries from an automobile accident that occurred within minutes after leaving the motel. For reasons which follow, we reverse the jury verdict and find liability against the motel.

The automobile accident at issue occurred on New Year's Eve of 1987 in Lake Charles, Louisiana after a group of teenagers were told to leave the Downtowner Motel where they had gathered for a party in a private room. Shortly after leaving the Downtowner, 16 year old Shannon Kramer was severely injured while riding as a passenger in an *560 automobile driven by 17 year old John Carrico.

Shannon, John, and two other passengers had been to a party at the Downtowner where alcoholic beverages were consumed. Deputies Eugene Victor and Russell T. Fry, two uniformed, off-duty Calcasieu Parish Sheriff's officers who were moonlighting as security guards for the Downtowner, instructed them to leave the motel. A few minutes later, John lost control of his car on a wet street and struck a tree. Shannon sustained serious injuries, including a serious closed head injury which left her permanently impaired.

Mr. and Mrs. T.G. Kramer, individually and on behalf of their minor daughter, Shannon, sued for damages. After all pleadings had been filed, the defendants included Cyprien, Inc., d/b/a Downtowner Motel (Downtowner), its insurer, Transportation Insurance Company (Transportation Insurance); John Carrico, his father, Walter Carrico, and their insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (State Farm); Deputy Victor, Deputy Fry, and Sheriff Wayne McElveen and their insurers, Anglo American Insurance Company (Anglo American), Walbrook Insurance Company (Walbrook), LUI Syndicate, Inc. (Syndicate), and Calfed Syndicate, Inc. (Calfed).

Ry-Ron, Inc. (Ry-Ron), the Kramers' health care insurer, intervened, seeking reimbursement of medical expenses paid for the treatment of Shannon's injuries. The Downtowner filed a third-party demand against Sheriff McElveen and his insurers.

The trial of this case was bifurcated. The trial judge tried the Kramers' claims against Sheriff McElveen, as well as the Downtowner's third-party demand against him. However, near the close of the trial, the Kramers dismissed their claims against Sheriff McElveen without prejudice and ultimately the Downtowner's third-party demand against the Sheriff was likewise dismissed.

A jury tried the various remaining claims and returned a verdict on September 20, 1991, assigning 80% of the fault for the accident to John Carrico, 15% to Shannon, and 5% to Shannon's mother, Mrs. T.G. Kramer. The jury found the Downtowner and the off-duty deputies free from fault. The jury awarded damages for Shannon's injuries in the amounts of $197,254.91 for past medical expenses, $200,000 for future medical expenses, $150,000 in general damages, and $250,000 for impairment of future earning capacity, or a total of $797,254.91. The jury awarded Mr. and Mrs. Kramer each $50,000 for their loss of consortium. After the jury returned its verdict, there is a minute entry which indicates that the Kramers and Ry-Ron dismissed their claims against the Carricos and State Farm.

The Kramers and Ry-Ron then moved for JNOV on the issues of liability and damages, or alternatively, a new trial or an additur. The trial court denied the motion insofar as liability, but granted it with respect to quantum. It raised the award for future medical expenses to $750,000, impairment of future earning capacity to $563,570, and general damages to $1,000,000. Because the jury verdict absolved the Downtowner and the deputies, and because the trial court denied the Kramers' motion for JNOV with regard to liability, the JNOV was rendered only against John and Walter Carrico.

The Kramers and Ry-Ron appeal, arguing that the jury's rejection of their negligence action against the Downtowner, the deputies and their insurers, and its apportionment of fault are manifestly erroneous. The defendants answered the appeal, arguing that the jury's damage award was excessive, that the trial court erred in increasing the damages and in granting a JNOV when the Carricos, the only defendants found at fault by the jury, had been dismissed from the lawsuit.

FACTS

On New Years Eve of 1987, the Downtowner rented two rooms to two high school under age boys. It was common knowledge among the underage teenagers that they could easily rent rooms at the Downtowner to party and drink alcoholic beverages. Helen George, the desk clerk on duty at the time in question, testified that 16 year old Cary Sole presented false identification which indicated that he was 23 years of age; Sole denies this. He was rented room 229. At a *561 different time, Greg Cavenah, 17 years of age, was rented room 225; there was no testimony that he was asked to produce any identification. Cavenah testified that he rented the room for Shannon and her friends who had pooled their money.

At approximately 8:00 p.m., a number of high school students began to congregate in the rooms. Shannon and several of her fellow cheerleaders at Barbe High School were among the students. Earlier in the evening, when Shannon's friend, 16 year old Adrienne Davenport, picked her up, Shannon and Adrienne told an untruth to Mrs. Kramer about their plans for the evening.

The exact number of teenagers who attended the party was disputed. The Kramers presented evidence that there were between 15 and 50 students; the defendants contended that there were approximately 100. The record shows that the teenagers brought in and consumed a variety of alcoholic beverages, including at least one 16 gallon keg of beer which Sole and his friends paraded past the front desk clerk and owner of the motel, through the motel lobby to their room.

The Downtowner regularly hired off-duty, uniformed Calcasieu Parish Sheriff's deputies as security guards, and on this New Year's Eve Deputies Victor and Fry were hired in this capacity. While responding to several complaints about the teenage partygoers at the Downtowner, the deputies observed the teenagers holding alcoholic beverages. The beverages consisted of beer, wine coolers, and hard liquor, such as vodka and rum. After receiving several complaints, the management of the Downtowner instructed the deputies to evict the teenagers.

The deputies, accompanied by the manager of the motel lounge, Wayne Sensat, went up to the second floor balcony to disperse the crowd of teenagers which had congregated there and in the two rooms rented to Cavenah and Sole.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
641 So. 2d 557, 1994 WL 274998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-continental-cas-co-lactapp-1994.