Moffitt v. Carroll

640 A.2d 169, 1994 Del. LEXIS 127, 1994 WL 143116
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedApril 18, 1994
Docket299, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 640 A.2d 169 (Moffitt v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moffitt v. Carroll, 640 A.2d 169, 1994 Del. LEXIS 127, 1994 WL 143116 (Del. 1994).

Opinion

HOLLAND, Justice:

This is an appeal from a decision of the Superior Court. The plaintiffs-appellants are Lloyd C. Carroll (“Carroll”), a minor, and Patricia A. Carroll, his next friend. The defendant-appellee is Frank E. Moffitt, Sr. (“Moffitt”).

Carroll filed a civil action against Moffitt on March 23, 1990. The complaint alleged that when Carroll attempted to cross the street near an intersection in Townsend, Delaware, he was struck by an automobile driven by Moffitt. According to Carroll, the accident resulted from Moffitt’s negligent operation of his automobile. In answering Carroll’s complaint, Moffitt alleged, inter aim, that Carroll had been contributorily negligent with regard to the accident.

The case was tried before the Superior Court without a jury on January 4-5, 1993. In a written decision on January 7,1993, the Superior Court judge concluded that Moffitt was in fact negligent in the operation of his automobile. The judge concluded that Carroll has sustained damages in the total amount of $80,000. The judge also found, however, that Carroll had been contributorily negligent in crossing the street in an improper manner.

Applying the Delaware comparative negligence statute, the judge determined that Moffitt was 80 percent at fault in the accident, and that Carroll was 20 percent at fault. 10 Del.C. § 8132. Accordingly, the Superior Court awarded Carroll $64,000 and costs. That amount represented 80 percent of the $80,000 in compensation to which Carroll would have been entitled had he not been contributorily negligent.

On January 19,1993, Moffitt filed a motion for a new trial pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rule 59. In this motion, Moffitt alleged that the trial court had misapplied Delaware law relating to child negligence, and also *172 asserted that the damages assessed by the trial court were excessive. On July 19,1998, by written order the Superior Court denied the motion for a new trial, but reduced the award of damages to Carroll to $56,000 based upon its finding that the appropriate compensation for Carroll’s injuries was $70,000, rather than $80,000. Additionally, the Superior Court awarded Carroll interest on the $56,-000 judgment commencing on January 5, 1993.

Moffitt filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment on August 2, 1993. Super.Ct.Civ.R. 59(d). Moffitt contended that interest on Carroll’s judgment should accrue only as of July 19,1993. The Superior Court judge agreed. On August 13,1993 the Superior Court amended the judgment so that the effective date for interest was July 19, 1993.

Moffitt appealed to this Court. Moffitt contends that the Superior Court erred, as a matter of law, in its apportionment of comparative negligence between the child-plaintiff and the adult-defendant. Carroll has cross-appealed. Carroll contends that the Superior Court erred, as a matter of law, by ordering that interest should accrue only as of the date of its July 19, 1993 amended judgment. Carroll also asserts that the Superior Court abused its discretion in its July 19,1993 order by reducing its award of damages from $64,000 to $56,000.

We have concluded that the Superior Court did not err, as a matter of law, in its apportionment of comparative negligence between Carroll and Moffitt. We have also concluded that the Superior Court did not abuse its discretion in reducing the award of damages. However, the Superior Court did err, as a matter of law, by ordering that interest on Carroll’s judgment should accrue beginning July 19,1993, rather than on January 7, 1993, the date of the Superior Court’s entry of judgment. Accordingly, the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and this matter is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

Facts

On March 26,1988, Carroll, then seven and a half years of age, was attending the opening of a store on the southeast comer of Main Street in Townsend, Delaware. The record reflects that a crowd of about 50 to 75 people was present for the festivities. Carroll was asked by an adult companion to perform an errand which would require him to cross Main Street. Carroll’s first trip across the street was uneventful.

However, when Carroll was crossing the street on his return trip, an automobile driven by Moffitt struck Carroll. The record reflects that Moffitt’s automobile traveled approximately 33 feet after the impact. There were no skid marks at the scene. Carroll sustained a compound fracture of his left leg.

At trial, Moffitt testified that he did not see Carroll until after the accident had occurred and he heard the sound of the impact. Three eyewitnesses testified that they observed Moffitt looking away from the street, in the direction of the festivities at the store, immediately prior to the accident. Based upon this testimony, the Superior Court judge found that the “unusual activity distracted [Moffitt] for a very short time so that he failed to see [Carroll] in the street,” and that Moffitt “was momentarily inattentive by failing in his common law duty and statutory duty to maintain a proper lookout for pedestrians, especially young ones.” See 21 Del.C. § 4176(b).

Carroll, on the other hand, testified that he looked for traffic in both directions before he crossed the street. He also testified that he did not see the automobile that struck him until the moment of impact. Accordingly, the Superior Court judge found that “if [Carroll] looked he did not do so as carefully as he should have because there was a car approaching and [it] should have been seen.” See 21 Del.G. § 4142(b).

Based upon these findings, the Superior Court concluded that both Moffitt and Carroll were “negligent each in a manner which was a proximate cause of the accident.” The judge then assigned 80 percent of the fault to Moffitt and 20 percent of the fault to Carroll, and adjusted the damages ultimately awarded to Carroll for his injuries accordingly.

*173 Child, Negligence in Delaware Common Law Standard of Care

The standard of care attributable to children for the proof of negligence is well-established in Delaware: “The maturity and capacity of the child, [his] ability to understand and appreciate the danger, [his] familiarity with the surroundings, together with the circumstances under which the accident occurred, must all be taken into consideration in determining whether or not [he] was guilty of contributory negligence.” Pokoyski v. McDermott, Del.Supr., 167 A.2d 742, 745 (1961). The Superior Court’s written decision specifically applied the Pokoyski standard of care in determining that Carroll was contributorily negligent, when Carroll crossed the street in front of Moffitt’s automobile.

The Superior Court’s written disposition then stated that “[t]he degree of [Carroll’s] negligence is reduced as a result of his being only seven and one-half years of age” (emphasis added). Moffitt contends that this statement was erroneous, as a matter of law, insofar as the language suggests that Carroll received the benefit of a “double reduction” in the trial judge’s analysis of Carroll’s comparative negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
640 A.2d 169, 1994 Del. LEXIS 127, 1994 WL 143116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moffitt-v-carroll-del-1994.