Madison v. Thurman
This text of 743 So. 2d 857 (Madison v. Thurman) 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.
Opinion
Janice Bone MADISON and James R. Madison, Plaintiffs-Appellants.
v.
Cheryl E. THURMAN, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*858 Francis C. Broussard, Monroe, Counsel for Appellant, Janice Bone Madison.
Robert A. Lee, Monroe, Counsel for Appellant, James R. Madison.
Phillip T. Deal, Monroe, Counsel for Appellees.
Before BROWN, GASKINS and CARAWAY, JJ.
GASKINS, Judge.
The plaintiffs, Janice and James Madison, appeal from a judgment dismissing their claims for personal injuries against the defendants, Cheryl Thurman and her insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, arising out of an auto *859 accident. For the following reasons, we affirm.
FACTS
This accident occurred on March 28, 1995, at about 9:00 p.m., in Monroe on Breard Street, just north of its intersection with Louisville Avenue. The pavement was wet from an earlier rain. At the intersection, Breard Street is a multi-lane road which runs north and south; at the time of the accident, it was unstriped. Louisville is a five-lane road, with two lanes each way east and west and a center turning lane.
Plaintiffs Janice and James Madison were proceeding south on Breard; Mrs. Madison was driving. The two were discussing where to eat; they decided upon a restaurant that required them to turn around and go north on Breard. Mrs. Madison elected to turn around in the parking lot of a business, "Tribal Spirits," on the northeast side of the intersection; the entrance to the business is roughly 90 feet north of the intersection of Breard and Louisville.
At the same time, Cheryl Thurman was driving east on Louisville. She pulled into the turn lane and made a left turn onto Breard, heading north. Just after Ms. Thurman completed this turn, the right front of her car collided with the right rear of the Madison car. Mrs. Madison said that her car was about six feet into the business entrance when the accident occurred and that she did not see Ms. Thurman's vehicle. Mr. Madison did see the headlights of Ms. Thurman's car and yelled a warning to his wife, but said that the warning came too late to avoid the collision. According to Ms. Thurman, she saw the Madison vehicle turn in front of her after she had completed her turn onto Breard. She applied her brakes, but it was too late and the accident was unavoidable.
Soon after the accident, Mrs. Madison suffered pain in her left knee, her arms and lower back, and Mr. Madison suffered back and neck pain. The Madisons sued Ms. Thurman and her insurer, State Farm, on November 13, 1995. The defendants answered the lawsuit and made a reconventional demand against the Madisons alleging that the accident was Mrs. Madison's fault and demanding that she pay any amounts that the court may award Mr. Madison. A subsequent reconventional demand against Mrs. Madison and her insurer, Allstate, sought damages for personal injuries to Ms. Thurman. Allstate responded with a demand against Ms. Thurman for reimbursement of the medical payments it had made to the Madisons as a result of the accident. Ms. Thurman and Allstate settled their reconventional demands leaving only the Madisons' claims against Ms. Thurman for trial.
At trial, each side relied upon an expert accident reconstructionist to explain the event. The plaintiffs' expert was Cameron Douglas, a public information officer with the Louisiana State Police (LSP). Prior to his 4 years of employment with the LSP, Douglas was a Monroe City Police officer for 13 years, where he daily completed traffic accident reports. Douglas explained that these reports required him to record the facts of the accident, but did not ordinarily call for his opinion about the causes of the accident. He said that he had previously completed perhaps two accident reconstructions in his work for the state police. Douglas' qualifications included classroom training at numerous accident reconstruction schools including at least 240 hours of instruction; this case was his first opportunity to testify as an expert.
Douglas indicated that his investigation included a visit to the scene with the Madisons for "a couple of hours" and the taking of measurements of the intersection and accident scene. Douglas concluded that the accident was caused by Ms. Thurman's inattentiveness. He said that when Mrs. Madison began her turn, it would have appeared to her that the Thurman vehicle *860 was still on Louisville Avenue. Douglas reported that it would have taken Mrs. Madison about 2.8 seconds to turn into the parking lot and estimated that Ms. Thurman's vehicle was traveling at least 25 miles per hour when it hit the Madisons' car. He said that if Ms. Thurman had been looking, she would likely have seen the Madison vehicle turning left and that Ms. Thurman "probably" could have either stopped or swerved to avoid the accident.
Defendants' accident reconstruction expert was Alfred Gonzales. Gonzales had been a professional reconstructionist for ten years. He retired from the Louisiana State Police in 1976 as commander of the State Police Training Academy; while there, he designed the curriculum for accident investigation and introduced accident reconstruction into the troopers' training. Gonzales said that he had investigated more than 2,000 traffic accidents during his tenure with the police. Gonzales testified that he had taken numerous courses in accident reconstruction since 1986 and that he had been consulted as an expert between 500 and 600 times. He said that he had been accepted at trial as an expert between 65 and 70 times in various state and federal courts.
Gonzales said that he visited the scene of the accident and had digitized a plat of the intersection for purposes of computer analysis. Using the estimated speeds given at the parties' depositions as a guide, Gonzales calculated that it took Ms. Thurman's car approximately 7.25 seconds to travel from the turn lane on Louisville to the point of collision. Gonzales said that Mrs. Madison ought to have been able to see Ms. Thurman's car the entire time. Of this period, 4.25 seconds elapsed while the car was making the turn, leaving 3 seconds when Ms. Thurman's car was traveling straight on Breard. Of this 3-second period, Gonzales estimated that it would have taken from 0.75 seconds to 1 second for Ms. Thurman to realize that Mrs. Madison was turning across her path, leaving at most 2.25 seconds for Ms. Thurman to react and take action. Gonzales testified that the American Association of State Highway Transportation Officials, A.A.S.H.T.O., uses 2.5 seconds as an average reaction time for all types of roads in all types of weather.
Based upon these figures, Gonzales opined that Ms. Thurman had essentially no opportunity to react to the presence of Mrs. Madison's vehicle in the road ahead of her. Even assuming a 1.5 second reaction time, Ms. Thurman would have had only .5 seconds to .75 seconds to take action based upon her perceptions. Gonzales said that if Ms. Thurman were going 25 miles per hour, it would have taken her 2.27 seconds to bring her car to a stop once she applied her brakes given that the road surface was wet. Gonzales also said that Ms. Thurman would not have been able to steer away from the accident in the available time.
In response to Gonzales' testimony, Douglas restated his opinion that Ms. Thurman was going "at least" 25 miles per hour at the time of the collision because the impact rotated the Madisons' car over a curb; Douglas also stated that Gonzales did not take this into account.
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743 So. 2d 857, 1999 WL 974455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-v-thurman-lactapp-1999.