McGowan v. Sewerage and Water Bd.

555 So. 2d 472, 1989 WL 112071
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1989
Docket88-CA-0596
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 555 So. 2d 472 (McGowan v. Sewerage and Water Bd.) 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
McGowan v. Sewerage and Water Bd., 555 So. 2d 472, 1989 WL 112071 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

555 So.2d 472 (1989)

Fred McGOWAN
v.
The SEWERAGE AND WATER BOARD OF NEW ORLEANS, New Orleans Public Service, Inc., and the City of New Orleans.

No. 88-CA-0596.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

September 28, 1989.
On Rehearing November 15, 1989.

*473 Timothy G. Schafer, Schafer & Schafer, New Orleans, for Lexington Ins. Co.

A. Remy Fransen, Jr., P. Chris Christofferson, Wiedmann & Fransen, New Orleans (Louis H. Schultz, Metairie, of counsel), for Fred McGowan.

Before BARRY, WARD and WILLIAMS, JJ.

WARD, Judge.

Lexington Insurance Company, as the excess insurance carrier for the Sewerage and Water Board, appeals a $2,000,000 personal injury award in favor of Fred McGowan. McGowan answers the appeal, seeking an increase in special damages and also appeals a declaratory judgment relieving Lexington Insurance Company of liability for payment of interest on the Board's primary self-insurance limits. We affirm the judgment of the lower court.

On November 11, 1981, at approximately 9:30 p.m., en route to his aunt's house from Red's Bar about a block away, McGowan, a 34 year old "mildly" retarded man, suffered facial injuries, contusions, and a compression injury to his cervical spine in an unwitnessed bicycle accident when he fell into an uncovered drainage catch basin in the curbing of Tennessee Street in New Orleans.

In addition to Lexington and the Board, McGowan sued the City of New Orleans as the owner of the catch basin and the New Orleans Public Service, Inc. (NOPSI) as the entity responsible for maintaining street lighting. The defendants third-partied and cross-claimed one another for indemnification and contribution.

Prior to trial the Sewerage and Water Board paid McGowan $500,000, its primary self-insurance limit. McGowan released the Board reserving his rights against Lexington to the extent of collectible insurance and agreed to allow Lexington a credit for the $500,000, less and except interest due thereon which McGowan claims Lexington now owes. During trial, the Board, NOPSI and the City stipulated that the Board was *474 responsible for maintenance of the City-owned basin under R.S. 33:4071 and that NOPSI was contractually bound to maintain street lighting.

After trial, the jury unanimously concluded that the catch basin was defective, that the defect caused McGowan's injuries, that McGowan was negligent in operating his bicycle and that the Board was negligent in failing to maintain the basin. The jury apportioned 82% of the fault for the accident to the Board and 18% to McGowan. NOPSI was exonerated.

McGowan received an award of $1,500,000 in general damages and $500,000 for special damages, subject to reductions for his negligence and the $500,000 pre-trial settlement. The Court entered judgment based on the verdict holding the Board, Lexington Insurance Company and the City of New Orleans solidarily liable for McGowan's injuries and ordered the Board to indemnify "the City for all sums for which the City is cast under the doctrine of strict liability."

In oral argument, Lexington concedes negligence by the Board[1]; however, appealing the lower court judgment, Lexington urges that the jury erred in finding that McGowan proved causation by a preponderance of the evidence.

At trial McGowan testified that after rounding the corner of Florida Avenue, he rode his bike on the sidewalk in a southerly direction toward his aunt's residence. A car parked in his aunt's driveway blocked his path, so McGowan changed his course, turned left to go out into the street and in doing so rode into the open basin. McGowan's mother, aunt and uncle testified that when they first came upon the accident scene, they found McGowan lying with his head, upper torso and bike on the ground on the sidewalk side of the basin with his lower body down in the basin.

Lexington Insurance Company introduced the testimony of an accident reconstruction expert, John Rigol. Mr. Rigol reconstructed the accident, relying on the testimony of McGowan's mother, aunt, and uncle. His analysis was based on the belief that McGowan's relatives were first on the scene, and that McGowan was in the position they found him which he believed to be immediately after the accident. Rigol testified that in his opinion, McGowan, contrary to his testimony, must have travelled from the street to the sidewalk and rode his bicycle from the street into the raised grill of the catch basin, causing him to fall into the open catch basin. Relying on principles of physics, Rigol explained that if the accident occurred as McGowan claimed, his head and upper body would have fallen onto the street side, not the sidewalk side, of the basin.

Lexington contends its expert's opinion proves McGowan hit the grill of the basin which faced the street and which stood 6.6 inches above the curb causing McGowan to fall from his bike. As more support for this assignment, Lexington notes that neither its expert neurosurgeon, Dr. Bert Bratton, nor Dr. William A. Martin, McGowan's expert neurologist, could unequivacally state how the injuries occurred. Both physicians testified McGowan's quadriparesis, weakness of all four extremities, resulted from a flexion-extension or "whiplash" motion, which conceivably could have occurred as a result of either version of the accident. If McGowan rode his bicycle into the grill, as Lexington argues, then the uncovered catch basin did not cause McGowan's injuries; rather, the injuries would have been caused solely by McGowan's negligence. Citing Townsend v. State Department of Highways, 322 So.2d 139 (La.1975), Lexington contends at the very least, the uncertainty in the evidence shows that McGowan failed to prove that the uncovered basin caused his injuries. We do not agree.

The testimony of various Board employees established that the catch basin measured approximately four feet in length, by *475 two feet in width and depth. In addition to McGowan's testimony, the jury heard the deposition testimony of John Washington, who said he was the first person on the scene of the accident. Washington said when he found McGowan clinging to his bike, the bike's front wheel and McGowan's head and shoulders were down in the basin. The back wheel was in the air with McGowan's legs still wrapped around the seat. Washington stated he removed McGowan from the hole, placed him on the side of the basin and then summoned help.

Not only does Washington's testimony corrobarate McGowan's version of the facts, it also casts doubt on Rigol's expert opinion because it was based upon an erroneous assumption that McGowan's family, not Washington, were first on the scene, and Rigol acknowledged the necessity of relying on "the testimony of those that found him." Because Rigol relied upon the family's testimony rather than Washington's, the jury may well have ignored his expert opinion.

At any rate, we cannot say the jury's finding is not supported by the record, or that it is manifestly erroneous, or that the jury erred in concluding that McGowan carried his burden of proof. Arceneaux v. Domingue, 365 So.2d 1330 (La.1978).

Lexington argues alternatively that the jury's assessment of McGowan's negligence at 18% is erroneous and should be increased to 50%.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
555 So. 2d 472, 1989 WL 112071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-sewerage-and-water-bd-lactapp-1989.