Oubre v. Eslaih

840 So. 2d 54, 2003 WL 896194
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 2003
DocketNos. 2002-CA-1386, 2002-CA-1387, 2002-CA-1388
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 840 So. 2d 54 (Oubre v. Eslaih) 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
Oubre v. Eslaih, 840 So. 2d 54, 2003 WL 896194 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinions

|, MAX N. TOBIAS JR, Judge.

This case arises from injuries sustained by the plaintiff, Azmi Eslaih, when, while standing on the shoulder of the interstate highway where his taxicab had stalled late one night, he was pinned between his taxicab and a second family owned vehicle when his cab was struck by a vehicle driven by defendant, Marc Williams. Mr. Es-laih alleges that at least two New Orleans police cruisers passed him and his stalled vehicle on the night in question, but did not stop to offer assistance. He and his wife, Melanie Eslaih, sued the City of New Orleans in negligence, asserting that a police officer has an affirmative duty to protect the public from a known dangerous traffic situation and that the police officers’ failure to do so was the proximate cause of his injuries.

FACTS

On 3 November 1995, around midnight, the plaintiff, Azmi Eslaih, a cab driver for Nighthawk Cab Company, was traveling on Interstate 10 West in New Orleans, approaching or at the Westbank Expressway/South Claiborne Avenue exit, when his vehicle stalled and could not be restarted. Mr. Eslaih was forced to Lpull his vehicle to the only emergency lane along that stretch of raised interstate, which is located along the left-hand lane of the interstate, by pushing the cab across several lanes of travel and stopping the car with its front facing the westbound traffic. Mr. Eslaih testified that he put on the hazard fights and tried repeatedly to start the engine, but that he was unsuccessful. As he had no cell phone or radio by which he could contact anyone for assistance, he waited with his cab for someone to stop and offer him assistance. After approximately forty-five or fifty minutes he was picked up by another cab driver and driven home. While at home, Mr. Eslaih called AAA (an automobile club) of which he was a member, and ate a snack before deciding to return to his taxicab to remove some personal items and meet the tow truck dispatched by AAA. He reportedly arrived at the scene at approximately 2:00 a.m. to wait for the tow truck. He parked the van just beyond the stalled vehicle in the emergency lane, with the van facing in the opposite direction, so that the trunk of the cab and the back of the van were adjacent. Mr. Eslaih stood between the cab and the van, transferring various personal items from the cab to the van.

At approximately 3:00 a.m, Mr. Eslaih was still waiting for the tow truck when an automobile driven by defendant, Marc D. Williams, was proceeding in a westerly direction on Interstate 10, approaching the stalled taxicab. Mr. Williams struck the stalled taxicab, pinning Mr. Eslaih between it and the van. Mr. Eslaih suffered two broken legs and underwent reconstructive surgeries. He was | ¡¡hospitalized repeatedly over several months and required a number of medical procedures to repair his injured legs.

Mr. Eslaih testified that he witnessed one New Orleans Police Department marked cruiser pass him and his cab sometime between the time he moved his cab to the emergency lane and the time he was picked up by another cab. He further testified that he later saw another marked cruiser pass his cab after he revisited the scene while he was moving personal items from his cab to the van. Neither patrol car stopped to offer him assistance, and it is this alleged failure on the part of the police department that gives rise to the cause of action of the plaintiffs in negligence against the City of New Orleans.

[58]*58At the trial on the merits, the only live witnesses presented were Mr. Eslaih, Officer James Edward Seaberry, Jr., and Sergeant Orman J. Walters, Jr. of the New Orleans Police Department. Officer Sea-berry was one of the officers who reported to the accident scene after Mr. Eslaih and his vehicle were hit. He confirmed that both of Mr. Eslaih’s vehicles were fully in the emergency lane and not encroaching on any lane of travel. He further testified that he was unaware of what the police department’s policy regarding assisting stranded motorists was in 1995, but testified that if an officer had offered Mr. Eslaih assistance, policy would have dictated that he park his cruiser behind the stranded vehicle with all of his lights on, and that procedure would have been to secure the scene and warn oncoming motorists of the stalled vehicle. He testified that the New Orleans Police Department had patrolling jurisdiction for the area surrounding that stretch of | interstate, but indicated that it was unlikely that a patrol car would have been traveling that stretch of interstate at that time of night.

Sergeant Orman J. Walters, Jr. was called by the City to testify regarding the rules and regulations of the police department as of the time of the subject accident. Sergeant Walters testified that, upon passing Mr. Eslaih and his stalled vehicle prior to the accident, a prudent police officer, unless he had been dispatched on an emergency mission, would have stopped and made an investigation, given that the car was parked facing the wrong direction. He testified that Code 2 calls, which indicate life-threatening situations, do not necessitate initiation of the blue light or siren on a police cruiser. Further, he testified that, even if a passing police officer was en route to a life-threatening emergency, he or she could have radioed another patrol car to investigate the stalled vehicle.

Deposition testimony of Chief Michael A. Helmstetter of the Crescent City Connection Police Department was introduced into evidence. His testimony established that the site of the accident was beyond the patrolling jurisdiction of his department. He further confirmed that no entry in the dispatch logs of the Crescent City Connection Police Department existed that indicated that any member of his force either responded to or had notice of the plaintiffs accident. To the best of his knowledge, the site of the accident was within the patrolling jurisdiction of the New Orleans Police Department.

IfiCaptain Brian Etland of the Louisiana State Police testified in his deposition that similarly, Louisiana State Troopers do not patrol the area immediately surrounding the site of the accident and that, to the best of his knowledge, that area is under the patrolling jurisdiction of the New Orleans Police Department.

Prior to the trial on the merits, Marc D. Williams and his insurance carrier, Allstate Insurance Company, settled with the plaintiffs; AAA, who was also named as a defendant, was dismissed on summary judgment. The plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed the State of Louisiana prior to trial. The only remaining defendant at trial was the City of New Orleans. The trial court, after conducting a bench trial on all issues, found the City of New Orleans liable for 30% of Mr. Eslaih’s damages, which were determined as follows: $250,000.00 in general damages; $70,768.33 in medical special damages; and $36,000.00 in past lost wages. The judgment rendered by the Court further ordered that “all other defendants be held hable for the remaining 70% of fault.”

Both the plaintiff and the City of New Orleans appeal the judgment of the trial court. In the first assignment of error, Mr. Eslaih asserts that the trial court [59]*59erred in assigning any fault to “all other defendants” on the grounds that the City of New Orleans failed to raise an affirmative defense of comparative fault in its Answer or subsequent pleadings. Second, he asserts that the Court erred in awarding only $250,000.00 in general damages given the seriousness of the injuries sustained. Third, Mr.

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Related

Scarbrough v. OK Guard Dogs
879 So. 2d 239 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2004)
Oubre v. Eslaih
869 So. 2d 71 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
840 So. 2d 54, 2003 WL 896194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oubre-v-eslaih-lactapp-2003.