Labat v. Rayner

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 28, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-00447
StatusUnknown

This text of Labat v. Rayner (Labat v. Rayner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Labat v. Rayner, (E.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

DENIRA LABAT, et al. CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO. 20-447

SYDNEY M. RAYNER, et al. SECTION M (5)

ORDER & REASONS Before the Court is the motion of plaintiffs Denira Labat and Sean Espirit (together, “Plaintiffs”) for partial summary judgment.1 Defendants Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company (“Metropolitan”), Sydney M. Rayner, and Michael Bell (collectively, “Defendants”) respond in opposition.2 Plaintiffs reply in further support of their motion.3 Having considered the parties’ memoranda, the record, and the applicable law, the Court grants the motion for partial summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND This case arises from a car accident involving an attempted left turn. On October 27, 2018, Labat was driving her brother, Espirit, home from his grandmother’s funeral repast in a 2006 Acura TL.4 She was proceeding south (toward downtown) on St. Bernard Avenue, a divided street with a median (or, in New Orleans parlance, the neutral ground). Rayner, a resident of Georgia, was visiting New Orleans for the first time to attend a music festival.5 She was driving Bell’s Ford F-150 truck on A.P. Tureaud Avenue, which dead-ends into

1 R. Doc. 31 at 1. 2 R. Doc. 32 at 1. 3 R. Doc. 37 at 1. 4 R. Doc. 31-6 at 2. 5 R. Doc. 31-4 at 1. St. Bernard from the east. At the posted stop sign, Rayner stopped at the intersection of A.P. Tureaud and St. Bernard, intending to take a left.6 To do so, she had to cross the northbound (or, again, in New Orleans parlance, lake-bound) lane of St. Bernard, enter the crossing in the median, and then turn left onto St. Bernard into the southbound lane of travel. The crossing in the median is itself divided into two lanes: approaching the crossing from A.P. Tureaud, the left side consists

of a curved lane that turns into the protected left southbound lane of St. Bernard; and the right side of the crossing is a one-way lane (heading west, or the opposite direction from Rayner’s travel) designed to allow the eastbound traffic from the one-way street of North Prieur Street, across from A.P. Tureaud on the west side of St. Bernard, to cross over the median and to turn left into St. Bernard’s northbound lane. On the date of the accident, this crossing lane was marked with a one- way sign pointing opposite Rayner’s direction of travel, but it was not marked with a “Do Not Enter” sign. There was a “Do Not Enter” sign marking the entry to North Prieur at its intersection with St. Bernard. After Rayner stopped at the stop sign at the A.P. Tureaud-St. Bernard intersection, she

proceeded to cross the northbound lane of St. Bernard. Instead of entering the left turning lane in the crossing in the median, which was designed for motorists to ease into the left, southbound lane of St. Bernard, she entered the right lane in the crossing, that is, the one-way lane for drivers trying to cross from North Prieur from the opposite direction.7 Put simply, Rayner chose the wrong crossing lane in the median. At this point, Rayner failed to stop in the crossing or to yield to approaching southbound traffic on St. Bernard. Instead, in “one continuous motion,” having crossed the northbound lane of St. Bernard, she continued through the median, without stopping or yielding, turning left onto St. Bernard (into the southbound lane of traffic). Rayner did so,

6 R. Doc. 31-7 at 12-13. 7 Id. at 12-14. thinking she had the right of way.8 In accomplishing this maneuver, Rayner explains that she sped up to avoid a car traveling northbound on St. Bernard after a passenger warned her to watch out.9 She thought the car coming from the left was the only danger and, until the collision, failed to notice Labat’s car, which was coming from her right side in the southbound lane of St. Bernard on the other side of the median.10

Labat saw Rayner’s truck cross St. Bernard’s northbound lane and enter the crossing in the median, but Labat kept going because she had the right of way and “thought [Rayner] was going to stop but she didn’t[.]”11 As a consequence, as Rayner was attempting her left turn onto St. Bernard, the front of Rayner’s truck struck the rear driver’s side of Labat’s passing car, causing it to spin completely around counterclockwise before coming to a stop.12 An occupant of each car called 911.13 After waiting a few hours, no police had arrived at the scene.14 Rayner was anxious to get to the music festival.15 An onlooker, who had approached the parties after the accident to offer assistance,16 then suggested that Rayner write a statement taking responsibility for the accident so she could leave the scene to go to the festival.17 Rayner

8 Id. at 6 (testifying about the accident at her deposition, Rayner explained: “So we pull up to the stop sign before the turn, and I, of course, looked both ways. I thought I had the turn all the way across, like to go past the lane that was coming towards me and to turn. I think I had that all the way. So I start going, and then Zach in the back said, look out for that car. I thought he was talking about the car that was coming from the left. So I sped up a little bit to try to get out of his way, and I did not see the car I hit until I hit it. I don’t know where it came from. I don’t know. And I hit it. That was the car Zach was talking about was the one that I hit. I thought he was talking about the one coming from the left. I hit the car.”) (emphasis added). 9 Id. at 14. 10 Id. 11 R. Docs. 31-6 at 3-4; 32-3 at 2. 12 R. Doc. 31-7 at 6-7, 12-13. 13 R. Doc. 31-3 at 3. 14 R. Doc. 31-8 at 7. 15 R. Doc. 31-7 at 8. 16 Id. at 7. The onlooker did not leave his name or contact information for the police. R. Doc. 32 at 4. Both parties deny knowing the man. See R. Docs. 31-6 at 9-10; 31-7 at 7. 17 R. Docs. 31-6 at 8-9; 31-7 at 3; see R. Doc. 31-7 at 21. provided Labat with the statement and her contact and insurance information, then left.18 The statement reads in full: I, Sydney Rayner, was turning left across a median, was confused by the traffic signs, missed my lane to merge, and came across the median onto a one way street where Miss Denira Labat was traveling. I hit her car, it was my fault. She had 2 passengers, I had 4. It was not my car that I was driving, it was my passenger rider’s car.19

Labat waited another two-and-a-half hours for the police to arrive.20 In his report of the accident, the investigating officer noted that Rayner failed to yield, but he did not cite her because she was not present.21 The officer did not cite Labat for any traffic violation or find that she was distracted.22 On October 9, 2019, Plaintiffs filed suit against Rayner for negligence and Bell for negligent entrustment.23 Defendants raised multiple affirmative defenses including the alleged negligence of both Labat and the City of New Orleans.24 II. PENDING MOTION Plaintiffs argue that Rayner’s conduct was the sole and proximate cause of the accident because she breached her statutory duty to obey traffic laws and offers no evidence that any other party was at fault.25 They contend it is undisputed that Rayner (1) entered a one-way street against the designated direction; and (2) made a left turn without first establishing that it was safe to do so.26 Plaintiffs argue that Rayner is “burdened with a presumption of liability” that she cannot

18 R. Doc. 31-6 at 11. 19 R. Doc. 31-7 at 21. 20 R. Doc. 31-6 at 11. 21 R. Doc. 31-8 at 16. 22 Id. at 18. 23 R. Doc. 31-4 at 1-3. 24 R. Doc. 31-5 at 3, 9. 25 R. Doc. 31-3 at 6-12. 26 Id. at 6-8.

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Labat v. Rayner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/labat-v-rayner-laed-2021.