Leonard v. Lee

165 So. 3d 1083, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 841, 2015 WL 1948462
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 2015
DocketNo. 49,669-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 165 So. 3d 1083 (Leonard v. Lee) 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
Leonard v. Lee, 165 So. 3d 1083, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 841, 2015 WL 1948462 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

DREW, J.

pLaToya Leonard seeks damages from James Lee and his insurer, USAgencies Casualty Insurance Company, for injuries sustained when their vehicles collided at the intersection of Kings Highway (“Kings”) and Hearne Avenue (“Hearne”) in Shreveport. At issue is whether the trial court correctly assessed Leonard with 100% of the fault for failure to yield during her left turn. Based upon our review of this sparse record,1 we conclude that the negligence of both parties caused this minor accident.

FACTS AND TRIAL COURT’S RULING

On October 26, 2012, at approximately 8:00 p.m., plaintiff, LaToya Leonard, was driving a 2007 Nissan Altima west on Kings. She stopped at the traffic light at the intersection of Kings and Hearne. Other vehicles stopped behind her.

Driving east in a 1995 Ford truck on Kings, Lee approached the same intersection, but from the opposite direction. Leonard saw Lee’s truck several car lengths to the west as the truck began its approach towards her.

When the light changed,2 Leonard first delayed her turn. When drivers behind her began honking, however, she honked back, and turned left (south) onto Hearne. [1086]*1086The left portion of Lee’s front bumper collided with the back passenger side door of Leonard’s car, as each vehicle turned south onto Hearne.

|zAfter hearing the testimony at trial and reviewing the depositions, medical records, and insurance documentation, the trial court issued a written opinion in which Leonard’s claims were denied at her costs. The trial court correctly stated the law, but we disagree with its application of these unique facts to the law.3

TESTIMONY

I. OFFICER JUSTIN DEPEW

Shreveport Police Department (“SPD”) Officer Depew’s deposition was placed in evidence by agreement of counsel.4 He did not testify at trial.

His deposition revealed that:

• his report was based solely upon what he was told by the parties;
• he did not witness the accident and talked to no impartial witnesses;
• his vague recall of the crash was based upon the content of the report;
• he mistakenly reversed the drivers in his written narrative;5
• Lee told him that Leonard turned left and crossed into the westernmost southbound lane as both were beginning to proceed south on Hearne;
• based upon what the drivers reported, he placed the dot for the point of impact in the westernmost, outside lane;
[¾* he concluded Lee was not at fault in the accident;
• his drawing of the collision site was not drawn to scale;
• he did not know if the drawing was accurate;
• he-was not an accident reconstruction expert;
• he wasn’t sure the vehicular positions in his diagram were correct;
• he took no measurements at the scene;
• the vehicles had ■ been moved off the roadway by the time he arrived;
• he did not know if Leonard was “turned all the way or not”;
• Lee told him that he didn’t see the other vehicle6 before the crash;
• he was not sure if Leonard had completed her turn before the crash;
• both parties should have yielded;
• Leonard told him at the scene that she saw Lee’s vehicle and thought he was going to stop, so she turned left and they ran into each other;
• he saw no impact debris at the scene;
• he issued no citation and interviewed no one except the parties; and
• total damage was a crease down the passenger side of Leonard’s car. •

[1087]*1087II. LATOYA LEONARD

Ms. Leonard testified at trial. She had also been previously deposed.

Leonard was in her 30s and lived with her five children. She obtained her GED at Vo-Tech and worked as Certified Nursing Assistant (“CNA”) at the Glen. Retirement System, working as a CNA/housekeeper. Her rate of pay was $9.45 per hour. She missed three days’ work because of the accident, therefore sustaining a total of $150.40 in lost wages.

Her insurance company paid for the repair of her vehicle.

14At the intersection of Hearne (north and south) and Kings (east and west), Leonard was stopped at the red light in the inside westbound lane and about to turn left to head south on Hearne. Other drivers were behind her at the traffic signal. She saw Lee’s truck turn onto Kings Highway and drive east toward her. She estimated the truck was far enough away for her to make her turn safely.

Leonard observed, “We was like at a distance, so I went ahead and I started turning. So as I started turning, I turned into Hearne, I looked up and saw the truck there. It was right there. And then so as I’m turning-yeah, I completed my turn and then it like hit my passenger back door.”7

Leonard said she stopped and watched Lee’s truck approach. She then heard honking from the vehicles behind her. She honked back and turned.8

Leonard called the police and had no interaction with Lee. No witnesses stayed at the scene. The officer spoke with the two drivers separately. Leonard declined medical attention at the scene, even though her head and left shoulder struck the driver’s window at impact.

Leonard insisted that she had completed her left turn and was facing south on Hearne when her back passenger door was struck by Lee.

Both parties waited for the police in the Subway parking lot on the southwest corner of the intersection. At trial, Leonard first contended the | Rpolice diagram should have placed her car further south on Hearne. She admitted on cross-examination that she had stated in her deposition that the diagram correctly reflected the location of the vehicle at impact, as well as which portion of each vehicle struck the other.

Leonard described the damage to her vehicle as a “big slotted dent” on the back passenger door back to the wheel. She drove her car from the scene.

Leonard testified she was in good health, had no physical restrictions, and took no medication prior to the wreck. The next day, she awoke with back, neck and head pain. She went to the emergency room at Willis-Knighton Medical Center, where she was X-rayed and given prescriptions for pain. The $787.70 ER bill was placed into evidence.

The record contains a record of Leonard’s chiropractic treatment at Waltemate Wellness Center from November 6, 2012, through January 14, 2014. The bill totaled $2,387.00. Leonard explained that her injuries adversely affected her job performance, her leisure activities with her children, and her running.

[1088]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 So. 3d 1083, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 841, 2015 WL 1948462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-lee-lactapp-2015.