McDonald v. Book
This text of 215 So. 2d 394 (McDonald v. Book) 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
Allen Paul McDONALD, Plaintiff-Appellant (Defendant in Reconvention),
v.
Carroll C. BOOK et al., Defendants-Appellees (Plaintiffs in Reconvention).
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*395 Johnson & LeBlanc, by Robert Johnson, New Iberia, Davidson, Meaux, Onebane & Donohoe, by J. J. Davidson, Jr., Lafayette, for plaintiff-appellant.
McBride & Brewster, by Norman P. Foret, Lafayette, for defendants-appellees.
Before TATE, FRUGE, and CULPEPPER, JJ.
TATE, Judge.
This is a tort suit arising from an intersectional collision. A Chevrolet driven by the plaintiff McDonald was struck by a Lincoln driven by Larry Book, a minor. McDonald sues Book's father and his liability insurer (State Farm) for damages sustained. Book and State Farm reconvene for property damage sustained by the Book car.
The District Court held that McDonald's negligence was the sole proximate cause of the accident. The defendants received judgment awarding them damages against the plaintiff on their reconventional demand against him. The plaintiff's principal demand was dismissed. Plaintiff appeals.
The sole merits-issue on appeal is factual: Which driver had the green light?
1.
However, at the threshold a serious procedural issue is raised by the circumstance that the plaintiff's principal demand for judgment against the defendants was only partially tried.
After the 1964 trial of the entire suit, the record was left open for the introduction of medical testimony to prove the extent of the plaintiff's personal injuries. Apparently by stipulation (no formal minute entry or pleading to this effect is found), the parties later submitted the principal demand to the trial court for decision on the issue of negligence alone.
Ordinarily, we could not consider an appeal from a trial court ruling on the issue of negligence alone. Louisiana's traditional procedural policy has disfavored the piecemeal trial of cases except where expressly permitted by statute. Loew's, Inc. v. Don George, 227 La. 127, 78 So.2d 534; Bielkiewicz v. Rudisill, La.App. 3 Cir., 201 So.2d 136, 143. This policy was retained by the new Code of Civil Procedure. LSA-CCP Art. 1915, Comment (b); LSA-CCP Art. 2083, Note, 13 Loyola Law Review 177 (1967).
Consequently, when the issue of negligence alone has been tried, the judgment determining the issue has been held to be a nonappealable interlocutory judgment. Bettencourtt v. Boyd, La.App. 1 Cir., 209 So.2d 339; Jeansonne v. Willie, La.App. 4 Cir., 188 So.2d 170. See also Beckham v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., La.App. 3 Cir., 137 So.2d 99. If an appeal is taken, the merit-determination is not reviewed, but the judgment is set aside and the proceedings remanded for determination of all issues of the suit by a final judgment. The rationale is that by this means the courts wil enforce the policy inhibiting piecemeal trial and multiple appeal, the unwanted progeny of fragmentary adjudication.
One exception to this policy against fragmentary adjudication of law suits is expressly provided by LSA-CCP Art. 1038.[1]*396 This provision authorizes separate trial of principal and incidental actions, which latter of course include a reconventional demand, LSA-CCP Art. 1031. (However, the Official Comment to the article indicates that this procedure should not ordinarily be followed unless there is no connexity between the two actions separately tried, since otherwise the separate trials may lead to undesirable piecemeal appeals.)
In the present instance, in effect the reconventional demand of the defendants (as plaintiffs in reconvention) was fully tried, with all evidence as to both negligence and quantum produced or stipulated.[2] The reconventional demand was disposed of by final judgment duly signed. Thus, our review of the appeal from this final judgment disposing of this incidental action does not technically offend the procedural policy inhibiting piecemeal trial and review, in view of the exception exempting incidental actions provided by Article 1038.
Therefore, we will not apply the general policy against piecemeal appeal so as to remand the present action. To do so would force further delay and multiple appeal upon the successful plaintiffs in the incidental action, as to whom the untried issue is completely irrelevant to the claim asserted by their reconventional demand.
2.
The trial court awarded the defendants Book and State Farm, as plaintiffs in reconvention, the damages caused the Book car by the collision with the plaintiff's car.[3] The court thus held McDonald alone negligent and young Book to be free of contributory negligence.
Under the traffic-signal mechanism in effect at the intersection, either McDonald or else young Book had the green light; both could not have been so favored. The court held that McDonald had negligently crossed the intersection in the face of an unfavorable traffic signal.
The trial court's holding that young Book had the green light is supported by this driver's testimony and that of a disinterested bystander.
The appellant makes an extremely strong argument that this construction of the testimony is contrary to the preponderance of the evidence. He points out inconsistencies between these witnesses' trial testimony and prior statements by them, and he relies upon his own unvarying version and strong testimony and its corroboration by three occupants of another car to the effect that he himself had a green light and young Book a red light at the time of his entry.
Ultimately, however, we are unable to find manifest error in the trial court's factual determination, without which a reviewing court should not disturb a trial finding.
Evaluation of credibility is primarily within the province of the trial court. In the absence of clear improbability or other convincing demonstration of error, the appellate court should not, on review, overturn the trier of fact's acceptance of one sworn version of an accident over a contrary one, nor its evaluation of the truthfulness and reasonableness of testimony; nor is the trial court's evaluation *397 to be ignored because a greater number of witnesses testify contrary to its conclusion. Paquin v. Stockman, La.App. 3 Cir., 203 So.2d 419; Satterwhite v. Zurich Insurance Co., La.App. 1 Cir., 199 So.2d 429; Savage v. Haynes, La.App. 3 Cir., 146 So.2d 285. Further, and considering its opportunity for demeanor evaluation, the trial court may properly accept a witness' sworn trial version over seemingly inconsistent prior statements. Fontenot v. Fidelity General Insurance Co., La.App. 3 Cir., 185 So.2d 896.
Applying these principles, we are unable to say that the trial court committed manifest error in accepting as more accurate the testimony of young Book and of the disinterested witness, including in its acceptance as reasonable the explanation of any inconsistency with earlier versions. We will therefore affirm the factual conclusion that young Book entered the right of way on a favorable traffic signal and the plaintiff McDonald on an unfavorable one.
McDonald alternatively alleges that, even if young Book had the green light, that driver's own testimony shows him to have been contributorily negligent. He relies upon the principle that a right-of-way driver may be negligent if he has a reasonable opportunity to evade an accident after he should reasonably realize the other driver is going to violate his right of way. Sims v. Miller, La.App.
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215 So. 2d 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-book-lactapp-1968.