Patel v. Dubois

509 So. 2d 182, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 9701
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 1987
DocketNos. 18574-CA, 18575-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 509 So. 2d 182 (Patel v. Dubois) 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
Patel v. Dubois, 509 So. 2d 182, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 9701 (La. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinions

SEXTON, Judge.

The defendants-appellants appeal the trial court judgment in favor of B.G. Patel, granting $9,900.00 to each of B.G. Patel’s two daughters and assessing the defendant-driver, Mr. Charles Dubois, with eighty-five (85%) percent liability and Mayuri Patel, the driver of the Patel vehicle, with fifteen (15%) percent liability. For the reasons expressed herein, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.

Plaintiff-appellee brought separate suits for injuries to his two minor daughters against the driver, insurer, and owner of a truck which allegedly blocked the view of his daughter whose vehicle was struck by a pickup truck as she drove from a restaurant parking lot onto Louisiana Highway 71. This accident occurred in Coushatta, Louisiana, on May 23, 1985, at approximately 7:45 p.m. Mayuri Patel was the driver of a vehicle owned by her father, B.G. Patel, in which her sister, Sapna Patel, was a passenger. The other vehicle in the accident was a 1984 Ford pickup being driven by Paula E. Herring. The two suits were consolidated for trial. The defendants-appellants are Charles Dubois, P & O Falco, Inc., and Travelers Insurance Company.1

Shortly prior to the accident, Mr. Charles Dubois, a truck driver for P & O Falco, Inc., was traveling south on Louisiana Highway 71. When he reached Starks Restaurant, he turned left into the restaurant and parked his 18-wheel tractor trailer parallel to the highway. Meanwhile, Mayuri and Sapna Patel were at the drive-in window at the Starks Restaurant where they each purchased a coke.

Mayuri Patel intended to exit the Starks Restaurant and turn left so as to travel in a southerly direction on Highway 71. However, as Mayuri Patel pulled onto Highway 71, she was struck by the Herring vehicle which was traveling in a northerly direction on Highway 71.

The following witnesses testified at trial: Mayuri Patel, driver of the Oldsmobile involved in the accident; Sapna Patel, a passenger in the Oldsmobile and the sister of Mayuri; Herman Jackson, the patrolman who investigated the accident; Charles Du-[184]*184bois, truck driver for P & O Falco, Inc.; Willis Cox, III and Brad Cloud, witnesses to the accident who were parked in the Starks Restaurant parking lot; B.G. Patel, father of the two minor children injured in the accident; Charles 0. Webb, II, an enforcement patrolman who took pictures of the accident; Paula Herring, driver of the pickup truck involved in the accident; and Ray Herd, an expert in the field of accident reconstruction.

Herman Jackson, a patrolman, testified that he arrived at the scene of the accident at 7:56 p.m. He stated that Trooper Charlie Webb assisted him in his accident investigation. Jackson testified that upon arrival, the Herring pickup truck was located right off the shoulder of the northbound lane and the Patel Oldsmobile was about 70 yards in the bushes off the road. He noted further that Dubois’ 18-wheel truck was parked in a no parking zone in front of Starks and had not been moved since the accident. Jackson issued a citation to Du-bois for parking in a no parking zone.

Jackson further testified that he saw broken glass out in the highway and that is how he determined the Patel vehicle exited Starks and entered Highway 71 from behind the 18-wheeler truck. He testified that he walked about three feet behind the Dubois truck in an attempt to determine what view Ms. Patel would have had. From Jackson’s perspective three feet behind the Dubois truck, Jackson determined “There wasn’t no way the Patel girl could see the northbound lane.”

Charles Dubois, truck driver for P & 0 Falco, Inc., testified that his 18-wheel truck had been parked about 15 minutes in the Starks parking lot prior to the accident. He testified that his 35-foot long tanker trailer was parked on the concrete Starks parking lot, rather than the paved shoulder of the road. He noted that the front of his truck was parked closer to the road than the rear end. Also, he testified that his truck was not parked in a no parking zone, but he paid the $25 citation because he felt it was cheaper than hiring an attorney to contest it. Finally, Dubois testified that he had walked around to the back of his truck and found that his view of the highway was not obstructed.

Mayuri Patel, driver of the Oldsmobile, testified that she was attempting to turn south onto Highway 71 which was a left turn out of Starks Restaurant. She stated that she came to a complete stop when she reached the intersection of Starks Restaurant exit and U.S. 71 North. She testified that she looked both ways but the Dubois truck blocked her view of the south. She stated that there were cars piling up behind her and she felt “pressured.” She testified that she eased up to the white line and stopped again, but she claimed her view was still obstructed by the Dubois truck. Then she pulled out onto Highway 71 and was struck by the northbound pickup truck driven by Herring.

Mayuri’s testimony was contradicted by her deposition taken before trial. In her deposition she stated that she did not know whether there was a white line or not. Moreover, she stated that she stopped, looked once, could not see and then pulled out onto the street.

Willis Cox and Brad Cloud were parked in the Starks Restaurant parking lot at the time of the accident. Cox testified that his car was parked at an angle slightly behind the yellow line of the parking stall in the Starks Restaurant parking lot. He stated that there was only one other parking spot to his left and another car was parked there. The 18-wheel truck was located to the left of where Cox was parked. Cox testified that he did not know whether Mayuri came to a stop before entering the highway because he witnessed only the actual collision itself. Moreover, Cox did not get in his car or any other vehicle and try to see what view Mayuri Patel had before entering onto the highway. Brad Cloud also testified that he wasn’t located where Mayuri Patel was and thus he did not know what Mayuri Patel could or could not see.

Charles 0. Webb, II was the state trooper who took pictures of the accident shortly after it occurred. Webb testified that he did not drive out of the exit in the manner and location Mayuri Patel described. He further testified that the width of the [185]*185shoulder was about eight feet wide. Webb testified that the Dubois truck was parked at a slight angle with the back wheels on the concrete surface and the front tandem wheels slightly on the shoulder. Webb testified that the truck was about two feet onto the shoulder past the concrete parking lot.

Sapna Patel, Mayuri’s twelve year old sister and passenger in the Oldsmobile, testified that she could not see anything at the intersection because the Dubois truck obstructed her view. However, in her deposition she had stated that she did not look to the side to see if any traffic was coming.

Paula Herring, driver of the other vehicle involved in the accident, testified that the Dubois truck blocked her view of May-uri Patel’s vehicle. She stated that she did not see the Patel vehicle stop prior to pulling out onto the highway. Also, she stated that Mayuri Patel pulled out of the Starks Restaurant exit quickly, rather than inching out.

Ray Herd, an expert in the field of accident reconstruction, was the last witness to testify. Mr. Herd is the director of the North Louisiana Criminalistics Laboratory, and he has been self-employed in the field of accident investigation for 33 years. He has helped work over 20,000 accidents.

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Bluebook (online)
509 So. 2d 182, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 9701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patel-v-dubois-lactapp-1987.