Miller v. Evangeline Parish Police Jury
This text of 663 So. 2d 398 (Miller v. Evangeline Parish Police Jury) 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
Sheila MILLER, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
EVANGELINE PARISH POLICE JURY, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*399 Donald Lynn Mayeux, Eunice, for Sheila Miller.
James L. Pate, Lafayette, for Evangeline Parish Police Jury.
Before KNOLL, THIBODEAUX and DECUIR, JJ.
KNOLL, Judge.
The Evangeline Parish Police Jury (Police Jury) appeals the district court's judgment awarding plaintiffs, Sheila Miller (Sheila) and Chasity Bolfa (Chasity), damages and costs arising out of a single vehicle automobile accident caused by a pothole.
Two suits were filed in the district court as a result of this accident and were consolidated for trial. In one action, Sheila Miller filed suit in her capacity as the guardian of her niece, Chasity, against her insurer, Liberty's *400 Lloyd Insurance Company, and the Evangeline Parish Police Jury. The case was settled with Liberty's Lloyd and trial proceeded only against the Police Jury. The other suit was filed by Sheila Miller, individually, against the Police Jury.
A jointly captioned judgment was rendered by the district court in the consolidated cases. The cases were consolidated for appellate review. Because we have chosen to treat all of the issues raised from both lawsuits in the above-captioned appeal, we will render a separate judgment in the companion appeal involving Sheila Miller's action on behalf of Chasity against the Police Jury.
FACTS
On the night of October 28, 1992, at approximately 6:15 p.m., Sheila and her thirteen year old niece, Chasity, were driving in the westbound lane of Evangeline Parish Road 10-14 when their 1980 Honda Civic struck a pothole. The vehicle flipped and landed on the driver's side door. As a result of the collision, Chasity was thrown from the vehicle's rear window and pinned underneath the Honda while Sheila remained trapped inside. Both Sheila and Chasity sustained significant injuries. Their medical costs were stipulated at trial by all parties. The pothole was located across from the driveway and the home of Michael Launey, who witnessed portions of the accident and also rescued the plaintiffs with the help of an individual from a passing vehicle.
At trial, Sheila testified that she remembered little about the accident other than applying her brakes to avoid a pothole that she perceived was as wide as the front of her car. However, she remembered that it was dark, that she was traveling 35 to 40 m.p.h., and that she did not see the pothole until it was between ten to fifteen feet ahead of her. She also admitted that she was not a good judge of distance. Although she was unsure whether her vehicle swerved to the right into a ditch adjacent to the narrow shoulder of the road before encountering the pothole, she was certain that she could not have avoided the pothole by going around it via the eastbound lane because of approaching traffic.
Chasity also appeared as a witness at trial and related a similar version of the accident. Chasity testified that just before the accident she was looking out of the passenger's side window and did not see the pothole until she heard Sheila cry out "Oh, oh." After seeing the pothole, Chasity braced herself for the collision. Chasity testified that she heard and felt the car impact with the pothole and then, as described in Chasity's own words:
Then we hit it and it made a loud noise and then it felt like we went into a spin and my seat broke. I could feel myself being tossed around the car. I could feel myself hitting things in the car. Then I closed my eyes and I felt like a pressure on my head and then I opened my eyes and I was laying on the road with the car on top of me.
At the time of the accident, Michael Launey testified that visibility was low and reduced to the realm of shadows because of the coming darkness of night. Although Mr. Launey admitted that he did not witness the entirety of the accident because it was dark, he testified that he heard the screech of Sheila's brakes and could see the piercing beams of light emanating from the headlights of a vehicle bouncing amidst the shadows. Mr. Launey also remarked that he was more than familiar with the pothole and its frequent repair history. He stated that it was a regular occurrence for him to hear the screech of brakes and the subsequent "bloop... bloop" sound of passing vehicles as their tires and suspension apparatus encountered and negotiated the pothole across from his driveway and in front of his home. Judging from the sound that Sheila's vehicle made and the bouncing of the headlight beams from her vehicle, Mr. Launey anticipated that there had been a severe accident. He immediately instructed his wife to summon the sheriff's office. Meanwhile, he retrieved a flashlight and left his home to investigate the accident scene.
Mr. Launey found the plaintiff's vehicle overturned and resting on its driver's side door on top of or very close to the pothole. He also discovered Chasity crying for help and pinned underneath the overturned vehicle. With the assistance of an occupant from *401 a vehicle that happened upon the accident scene, Mr. Launey raised the vehicle resting on Chasity, freed her from it, and lifted Sheila out of the overturned vehicle through its passenger side door. Mr. Launey also testified that he searched the accident scene the following day. He discovered 75 feet of skid marks on the road leading into the ditch before the pothole. He also estimated that the pothole was about two and a half feet wide at the time of the accident. He opined that Sheila's vehicle had made these marks.
At approximately 6:35 p.m., Sergeant Vernon Fontenot of the Evangeline Parish Sheriff's Department arrived on the accident scene. He found Sheila's vehicle resting on its side and on top of the pothole. He also saw evidence that her vehicle left the road and traveled 38 feet in the ditch to the right of the westbound lane before returning to the road and striking the pothole. Before Sheila left by ambulance, Sgt. Fontenot questioned her concerning the accident. According to Sgt. Fontenot, Sheila told him that she wrecked her car and that the pothole caused the accident. While questioning Sheila, Sgt. Fontenot thought that Sheila's breath smelled of alcohol, but he did not confirm his suspicion with a breathalyser or blood test. Sgt. Fontenot also remarked that the roads were dry and that it was a dark night.
The district court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and issued oral reasons for judgment. The district court found that the pothole was in the custody and control of the Police Jury, that the Police Jury knew or should have known about this defective condition in the roadway, and that the pothole was the cause-in-fact of the accident. The district court awarded Sheila a total of $25,800, which included $4,111.19 for medical bills, $800 for property damage to her vehicle, and $20,888.81 in general damages. The district court awarded Chasity a total of $60,000, which included $6,997.00 for medical bills and $53,003.00 in general damages. The district court also cast the defendant with all expert witness fees, court costs, and deposition costs. However, finding that Sheila's own conduct and careless operation of her vehicle contributed to the accident and her injuries, the district court assessed Sheila with 50% of the fault and reduced the plaintiffs' judgment accordingly.
LAW AND DISCUSSION
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663 So. 2d 398, 1995 WL 595791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-evangeline-parish-police-jury-lactapp-1995.