Landry v. Doe

582 So. 2d 242, 1991 WL 96423
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 1991
DocketCA 89 0857
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 582 So. 2d 242 (Landry v. Doe) 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
Landry v. Doe, 582 So. 2d 242, 1991 WL 96423 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

582 So.2d 242 (1991)

Burris Jerome LANDRY
v.
John DOE, d/b/a Ramah Truck Stop and Millers Casualty Insurance Company of Texas.

No. CA 89 0857.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

April 4, 1991.
Rehearing Denied June 5, 1991.
Writs Granted October 4, 1991.

*243 Michael C. Palmintier, Baton Rouge, Larry Bossier, Grosse Tete, for plaintiff Burris J. Landry.

Raymond C. Jackson, III, Lafayette, James P. Dore, Plaquemine, for defendants John Doe, d/b/a Ramah Truck Stop and Millers Cas. Ins. Co. of Texas.

Before EDWARDS, WATKINS, CARTER, CRAIN and LeBLANC, JJ.

LEBLANC, Judge.

This appeal involves a three-wheel motorcycle accident in which plaintiff, Burris Jerome Landry, was injured in the parking lot of the Ramah Truck Stop located in Ramah, Louisiana. Plaintiff initially filed suit against "John Doe, D/B/A Ramah Truck Stop", Millers Casualty Insurance Company of Texas, which provided general liability insurance to Sam and Joseph J. Morrow (apparently the lessors of the truck stop), D/B/A Ramah Truck Stop and S & J's Wrecking Service. Plaintiff subsequently amended his petition by excluding "John Doe D/B/A Ramah Truck Stop" as a defendant. Thus, the insurance company is the only remaining defendant.

The following pertinent testimony was presented at trial: Plaintiff testified that on October 23, 1985, he and his friend, Aaron D. Weatherford each drove a three-wheel motorcycle from Mr. Weatherford's house to the Ramah Truck Stop, which was located between Frontage Road near Grosse Tete, Louisiana, and a levee. According to plaintiff's testimony, he and Mr. Weatherford were headed to the levee. Plaintiff testified that he and Mr. Weatherford travelled down Frontage Road. They travelled on the side of the road where there was a shoulder and travelled on the road where there was no shoulder. Plaintiff acknowledged that he was not wearing a helmet. Plaintiff also testified that there was drizzling rain at the time he and his friend reached the truck stop. Plaintiff explained that from the side of Frontage Road, he crossed over the road and entered the parking lot of the truck stop in order to purchase a coke at the truck stop restaurant. As he was riding across the parking lot, plaintiff contends that the front of his three-wheeler hit a hole causing the front end of the three-wheeler to come up and flip over. Plaintiff acknowledged that he did not know the size of the hole. Plaintiff described the parking lot to be composed in part by gravel and in part by cement. He contends that the accident occurred on the cemented portion of the parking lot. Plaintiff testified that he was not travelling fast when the accident happened; he estimates that he was travelling ten to fifteen miles per hour. Plaintiff further testified that he was driving in a straight line through the parking lot and that the three-wheeler was not sliding before it flipped. However, plaintiff indirectly acknowledged that his previous deposition testimony on this point had been different. His trial testimony was as follows:

Q "... again in your deposition, do you remember telling me that you don't know if you were sliding or going straight?
A I remember that I was going straight because that's—I knew where I was going.
Q Page 52, line 11, I'm going to read the question. (Reading from deposition) "Do you have a recollection? Can you describe the movement of the vehicle before you hit the hole? In other words was it proceeding ahead, straight ahead or was it sliding?" Line 16, answer, "I really don't know. I really don't know." *244 Did your memory come back to you after this deposition about whether you were sliding?
A Yes.
. . . . .
Q Do you know when you learned— when you remembered that you weren't sliding? When was that? How long before this court trial today?
A I don't remember just exactly when it was, you know. I can't pinpoint when I remembered.

Plaintiff also acknowledged on cross-examination that he knew how to rare up a three-wheeler motorcycle on its back two wheels and that he had performed this maneuver on dates previous to the October 23, 1985 accident. He denied performing this maneuver on the date of the accident in question.

Mr. Aaron Weatherford's account of the accident was similar to plaintiff's description. Weatherford testified that he and plaintiff planned to ride three-wheelers to the truck stop to get a cold drink and, then, were going to ride on the levee. Neither he nor plaintiff were wearing helmets. Weatherford described that there was misty rain at the time of the accident. Weatherford testified that when he and plaintiff entered the truck stop parking lot, they were travelling slowly. Weatherford also testified that when plaintiff entered the parking lot "he slid a little bit, but you know, I was trying, you know, to watch where I was going, too. The last I looked at him, he looked like he straightened out to me." Weatherford described the accident as follows: "The last time I looked at him, it looked like he straightened out and everything. And I looked back, and when I looked back, I seen the front end of the three-wheeler come up. And, that's when he started flipping." Weatherford testified that he did not see plaintiff hit a hole. He stated that he did not know whether plaintiff "hit a hole, hit a big chunk of the cement or what he hit". Weatherford stated that he did not see plaintiff rear up the three-wheeler on its back wheels and that as far as he could see, plaintiff was driving safely. Weatherford further testified that the approximate area of the accident was where the gravel ended and the cement started. Weatherford explained that plaintiff landed in a big hole that was full of water. He also noticed numerous other holes in this area of the parking lot that were filled with water.

During cross-examination of Mr. Weatherford, he acknowledged that he may have made a previous out-of-court statement that plaintiff had lost control of his vehicle while on the (Frontage) road. The questioning went as follows:

Q Do you recall telling them [Kenneth Muse and Toni Foret] that he [plaintiff] lost control on the road?
A I told them that he turned off the road.
Q Do you recall telling them that he lost control of his vehicle on the road?
A No, sir.
Q You deny that statement?
A No, I don't deny it. I might have told them that. You know, like I say, everytime I went over there, they always asked me something about it. Like I say, I might have been in the wrong mood. There's no telling whhat (sic) I may have told him.

Also during cross-examination, Weatherford was questioned regarding whether he saw plaintiff's three-wheeler slide before the accident occurred:

Q Mr. Weatherford, it's true that Mr. Landry had sled (sic) twenty or twenty-five feet on the three-wheeler before the accident, is that right?
A I don't know exactly how far he slid. Like I say, when he turned and normally when you turn a three-wheeler, it's going to slide a little bit.
Q But, that's your best estimate of how far he slid?
A I can't say exactly how far he slid.
Q I'm not asking for exactness. Isn't it true that you have given that estimate in the past?

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Bluebook (online)
582 So. 2d 242, 1991 WL 96423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landry-v-doe-lactapp-1991.