Poche v. State Through DOTD
This text of 633 So. 2d 913 (Poche v. State Through DOTD) 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
James Marc POCHE
v.
STATE of Louisiana Through the DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Richard J. Dodson, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellee.
Lawrence A. Durant, John C. Young, Asst. Atty. Gen., Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellant.
Before LOTTINGER, C.J., and CRAIN and LeBLANC, JJ.
LOTTINGER, Chief Judge.
The State of Louisiana through the Department of Transportation and Development appeals the judgment rendered against it in this highway defect suit. The plaintiff has answered the appeal.
In appealing the State contends the trial court erred in:
1. relying upon plaintiff's survey because the same was obviously flawed;
2. finding that a shoulder which deviated in excess of 7% from the superelevated paved portion of a roadway was a hazardous defect at 40 miles per hour;
*914 3. giving any credence to the plaintiff's expert witnesses by virtue of their respective advocacy;
4. not finding that the sole proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of James Marc Poche;
5. failing to consider, adequately, the problems which would occur if it was necessary to maintain shoulders in a superelevated area of highway at a no greater deviation than 7%; and
6. not finding that the DOTD was reasonable in sloping the shoulder from the paved portion of the roadway to the ditch to provide adequate drainage for the road surface itself.
In answering the appeal, plaintiff contends the trial court erred in the apportionment of fault at 50% to each side, in only awarding $1,750,000.00 for future medical, and in holding La.R.S. 13:5112(C) constitutional.
The Louisiana Supreme Court in Chamberlain v. State, Through Department of Transportation and Development, 624 So.2d 874 (La.1993), put to rest the issue of the constitutionality of the $500,000.00 ceiling on general damages recoverable in a personal injury suit against the State of Louisiana, its agencies, or its subdivisions when it held unconstitutional La.R.S. 13:5106(B)(1). Thus, the issue of the general damages recoverable by this plaintiff is before this court.
Further, in Rick v. State, Department of Transportation and Development, 93 C 1776 c/w 93 C 1784, 630 So.2d 1271, 1277-78, (La.1994) the Louisiana Supreme Court held La.R.S. 13:5112(C) unconstitutional as it conflicts with La. Const. Art. XII, § 10(A).
Otherwise, after a thorough review and evaluation of the record we are convinced that the evidence supports the facts found and the reasons assigned by the trial judge, which we quote and herein adopt as our own. In oral reasons, the trial judge said:
IT'S A DIFFICULT CASE, IT'S BEEN ON MY MIND FOR THE LAST THREE OR FOUR WEEKS, AND I'VE HAD A GOOD CHANCE TO REFLECT AND STUDY, WHICH I'VE DONE. THERE'S NOT A WHOLE [SIC] OF DISPUTED FACTS ABOUT THE THING, REALLY, IT'S INFERENCES AND CAUSATION.
MR. POCHE WAS VERY FAMILIAR WITH THIS ROADWAY, ACCORDING TO THE EVIDENCE, HAD BEEN TRAVELING IT ABOUT TEN YEARS SINCE HE WORKED IN GONZALES AND HIS HOME WAS BETWEEN THAT CURVEON THE OTHER SIDE, NORTH OF THAT CURVE IN GONZALES, AND HE HAD A VERY UNFORTUNATE ACCIDENT ON THE NIGHT OF FEBRUARY 11TH OF '87. I DID GO TO THE SCENE FINALLY YESTERDAY AND JUST DROVE THROUGH THE CURVE. I'M SURE I DROVE THROUGH THE RIGHT ONE. IN FACT, I WENT ALL THE WAY DOWN TO HOPE VILLA AND THEN CAME BACK ACROSS THE BRIDGE. THERE'S A STRAIGHT-A-WAY, THIS IS PRETTY MUCH THE FIRST CURVE. I MEAN YOU'RE ON A GOOD STRAIGHT-A-WAY PAST HOO-SHOO-TOO AND THEN THERE'S A CURVE WITH THE POSTED ADVISORY SPEED AND THE CHEVRONS.
THE BURDEN IS ON THE PLAINTIFF TO ESTABLISH THAT THE SIGN WASN'T THERE, IN MY OPINION, I THINK THE SIGN WAS THERE. I THINK MORE PROBABLY THAN NOT IT WAS PROPERLY MARKED WITH THE ADVISORY SIGN WITH THE CHEVRONS, NO QUESTION ABOUT THAT. IT WOULDN'T MAKE A WHOLE LOT OF DIFFERENCE ANYWAY BECAUSE MR. POCHE WAS FAMILIARAND I'VE DRIVEN THAT ROAD IN THE PAST, A LONG TIME AGO. BUT JUST GOING YESTERDAY YOU WOULD REMEMBER PRETTY MUCH THAT SEQUENCE, THE STRETCH AND THEN THE CURVE WHETHER THE SIGN WAS OUT THERE OR NOT.
TROOPER FUTRELL HAS GOT A NAME FOR THE CURVE, I FORGET THE NAME, NICK DIXON CURVE, BECAUSE HE'S WORKED A LOT OF ACCIDENTS THERE. THAT'S NOT TOO HELPFUL TO THE ULTIMATE *915 DECISION OF THIS COURT, EXCEPT THE CURVE ITSELF IS A PRETTY SHARP CURVE AND I WOULD IMAGINE IN MOST OF THOSE ACCIDENTS THE PERSON JUST DIDN'T MAKE THE CURVE, WENT STRAIGHT ON OUT AND HIT [SIC] FENCE, BUT WE DON'T KNOW ALL THOSE DETAILS.
MR. POCHE WAS FAMILIAR WITH THE ROAD, HIS TESTIMONY IS HE WAS GOING ABOUT THE SPEED LIMIT LIKE HE ALWAYSIN ASCENSION PARISH IT'S 55 ON HIGHWAY 73 AND THEN AT THAT POINT IN TIME, IN FEBRUARY OF '87, I THINK THE RECORD IS CLEAR THAT THE SPEED LIMIT WAS 45, AND HE SAID HE NORMALLY REDUCED HIS SPEED TO 45 AND THOUGHT HE WAS GOING ABOUT 45 WHEN HE ENTERED THE CURVE, WHICH WAS FIVE MILES OVER THE ADVISORY SPEED IF THAT'S ACCURATE, NOBODY KNOWS PRECISELY. THE WAY IT ALL ADDS UP I THINK HE WAS PROBABLY GOING A LITTLE MORE THAN 45 WHEN HE ENTERED THE CURVE. HIS TESTIMONY, AND IT'S ONLY HIS TESTIMONY THAT WE HAVE, ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED AND IT HAPPENED SO FAST, I DON'T GUESS YOU'D EVER FORGET THAT UNLESS YOU HAD AMNESIA OR SOMETHING AND FORGOT THE WHOLE THING. BUT HIS TESTIMONY WAS PRETTY VIVID ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED. I DON'T THINK HE'D HAVE MADE UP THE BUSINESS ABOUT THE LIGHTS BEHIND HIM. HE WAS DISTRACTED BY LIGHTS BEHIND HIM AND HE WENT OFF ON THE SHOULDER.
MR. DURANT ARGUES THAT SOMEBODY SAID NOT MORE THAN A FOOT AND A-HALF, BUT THAT'S NOT PRECISE. THE TROOPER, ON HIS REPORT, SAID HE WAS OFF ON THE SHOULDER TWO TO FOUR FEET. I CAN'T TELL BY LOOKING AT THOSE PICTURES HOW FAR, IT LOOKS LIKE MORE THAN A FOOT AND A-HALF TO ME. BUT HE WENT OFF ON THE SHOULDER AND HIS TESTIMONY IS THAT THE RIGHT REAR WAS PULLING TO THE RIGHT. THE FACTS ARE CLEAR THAT HE MAINTAINED CONTROL WHILE TRAVERSING THE CURVE ON THE SHOULDER AND PARTLY IN THE ROADWAY, BUT AS HE REENTERED HE LOST CONTROL, ENDED UP ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE ROAD IN THE DITCH AND CRASHED INTO THAT CULVERT EMBANKMENT, CAUSING HIM CATASTROPHIC INJURIES, THERE'S NO QUESTION.
THAT'S KIND OF THE HISTORY OF THE ACCIDENT, NOT MUCH MORE IN THERE, QUITE FRANKLY. I DON'T THINK THE MATTER WAS DOCUMENTED EXCEPT THE OFFICER'S REPORT.
THE COURT: IS THERE A DATE OF CLARY'S SURVEY IN THE THE [SIC]
MR. DURANT: YES, YOUR HONOR, THE WHOLE SURVEY IS IN THE RECORD, I BELIEVE IT'S DATED FEBRUARY-11, '87, YOUR HONOR, WHICH IS NOVEMBER OF '87.
THE COURT: SAY THAT AGAIN, YOU SAID FEBRUARY OF '87.
MR. DURANT: I DIDN'T MEAN THAT, I MEANT 11 OF '87, I'M SORRY.
THE COURT: OH, OKAY.
BY THE COURT:
WHICH WAS PRETTY CONTEMPORANEOUS AND THERE'S BEEN NO OPPOSITION TO THE SURVEY AS SUCH AS BEING ON GROUND DIFFERENT THAN WHAT WAS ON THE GROUND IN FEBRUARY OF '87, NOVEMBER TO FEBRUARY. THERE'S BEEN NO EVIDENCE THAT HIS SURVEY HAS AN APPRECIABLE DIFFERENCE ONE WAY OR THE OTHER AS TO THE ON-GROUND, THE SITE, AT THE TIME OF THE ACCIDENT. THE ON-GROUND SURVEY INDICATES THAT THERE IS A REVERSE SUPERELEVATION ON THE SHOULDER AT DIFFERENT LEVELS *916
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633 So. 2d 913, 1994 WL 86202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poche-v-state-through-dotd-lactapp-1994.