Polk v. Blanque

633 So. 2d 1382, 1994 WL 80032
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1994
Docket93-CA-1740
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 633 So. 2d 1382 (Polk v. Blanque) 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
Polk v. Blanque, 633 So. 2d 1382, 1994 WL 80032 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

633 So.2d 1382 (1994)

Wanda Ann Songy POLK, Wife of/and John Polk, Jr., Individually and as Natural Tutors of Their Minor Child, Jai Garrett Polk
v.
Dianne BLANQUE and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.

No. 93-CA-1740.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

March 15, 1994.
Writ Denied May 20, 1994.

*1383 Leopold Weill, III, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Philip D. Lorio, III, Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Before BYRNES, JONES and WALTZER, JJ.

WALTZER, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

This is an appeal from a judgment of the trial court granting the motions of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Foundation (Foundation) and Fair Grounds Corporation (Fair Grounds) for summary judgment dismissing the original and four supplemental and amending petitions of plaintiffs Wanda Ann Songy Polk, wife of/and John Polk, Jr., individually and as legal co-tutors of their minor child, Jai Garrett Polk.

Plaintiffs filed suit in October, 1988, against the driver, Dianne Blanque (Blanque), and insurer of a car that struck from behind the automobile in which Wanda Polk was a passenger on Interstate Highway 610 (I-610) approximately ½ mile from its St. Bernard Avenue exit ramp. In April, 1989, plaintiffs filed a first amended and supplemental petition for damages adding fourteen defendants, including, inter alia, the Foundation, Fair Grounds and City of New Orleans (City), the manufacturer of the automobile in which Polk was riding, Blanque's parents, and insurers. All added defendants have settled or been dismissed, with the exception of the Foundation, Fair Grounds and City.

In support of its judgment, the trial court stated on the record:

"I just don't see a duty.... Nothing you said has changed my mind. I just don't think they have a duty."

Judgment was read, rendered and signed on June 4, 1993, dismissing plaintiffs' petitions against the Fair Grounds and the Foundation. From this judgment, plaintiffs appeal.

We affirm because, as a matter of law, defendants did not owe a duty to these plaintiffs, and plaintiffs failed to offer proof to establish genuine issues of material fact as to the issues of causation in fact, duty and scope of duty.

*1384 SUMMARY OF THE PLAINTIFFS' CLAIMS

Plaintiffs seek to hold the dismissed defendants, the Fair Grounds and the Foundation, liable for having in fact caused Mrs. Polk's injury.

On April 23, 1988, Mrs. Polk was an automobile passenger traveling to the Jazz and Heritage Festival (Jazz Fest) being held at the New Orleans Fair Grounds. Between 11:30 and 11:45 a.m., plaintiffs claim that the car in which Mrs. Polk was riding came to a stop at the end of a line of stopped vehicles in the right hand travel lane of I-610, approximately ½ mile from the St. Bernard Avenue exit ramp. The car was struck from behind by a car driven by Blanque, causing the Polk vehicle to strike the car in front of it and to crash into a concrete abutment to the right of the highway. Plaintiffs allege that Mrs. Polk suffered brain damage as a result of the accident. Plaintiffs compromised their claim against Blanque, who was dismissed from the suit.

The Foundation staged the Jazz Fest on property owned by the Fair Grounds, under a bilateral contract which provides in pertinent part:

The Fair Grounds requires the Foundation to use only one public entrance to the Fair Grounds parking lot;

Keys to Fair Grounds locks on entrance gates used by Foundation and Fair personnel are made available to Foundation as well as to Fair Grounds security personnel for use in case of emergency, but the Fair Director, a Foundation employee, will exercise control over the opening and closing of these gates;

Fair Grounds shall employ a NOPD motorcycle policeman to patrol the outside fence during the hours of the event;

Fair Grounds will employ and furnish free of cost to Foundation but subject to the administration and unrestricted control of Foundation, the Fair Grounds parking crew to insure that cars are properly parked;

All vehicles of Fair patrons will be directed to enter through the Gentilly gate and exit through designated Fortin Street gates;

Other logistic particulars of this agreement may be modified, in writing, by mutual agreement of Fair Grounds and Foundation as necessitated by changes that may occur from year to year in the scope of the Fair and its events and in the physical layout of the Race Track, such as gates of entry;

Fair Grounds and/or Louis Roussel, III, personally, its or his heirs or assigns or its or his successors in business or through other businesses belonging to Louis Roussel, III agrees to contribute $50,000 per year[1] to the Foundation for as long as the Foundation continues the use of the infield premises as its exclusive site for the presentation of the Spring Jazz Fest, in return for which Fair Grounds or other Roussel designee shall be recognized as a sponsor of Jazz Fest.

Plaintiffs contend that through the actions of the Fair Grounds and Foundation employees who planned the event, and the members of the paid police details they engaged to handle traffic and security, and through the actions of taxpayer-paid police officers, a foreseeable traffic stoppage occurred which backed up through the St. Bernard Avenue exit ramp from the I-610, beyond the exit and onto the interstate highway for approximately one-half mile to the point where the vehicle in which Mrs. Polk was riding had stopped. Plaintiffs contend further that defendants knew or should have known through their experiences of past Jazz Fest traffic problems that such traffic stoppages would occur, and owed and breached a duty to Mrs. Polk, who was in the traffic jam, albeit ½ mile BEYOND the highway exit nearest to the Fair Grounds property, and approximately one and one-half miles from the Fair Grounds site itself.[2]

*1385 Plaintiff submitted the affidavit testimony of Celeste Ford, a fellow passenger with Mrs. Polk in the car driven by Don Boudreaux. Ford testified that each time she came to the Jazz Fest in 1985, 1986 and 1987, the traffic was backed up onto I-610 East, in the right hand lane of travel.

Stephen Henriques' affidavit shows that he was riding on I-610 East in the middle lane as he approached the Wisner Boulevard overpass on the day of the accident. A pickup truck ahead of him, traveling at about 55-60 miles per hour, suddenly swerved into the middle lane to keep from striking cars that had come to a stop in the right hand lane of travel. The next car swerved too late and ran into the Boudreaux car.

Clarence Barrow, who lives at 3170 St. Bernard Avenue, about 1 block south of the I-610 in the direction of Gentilly Boulevard signed an affidavit that from 1978, when he moved to that address, and through 1988, he observed that on weekend days of the Jazz Fest, heavy traffic congestion occurred in the right hand lanes of St. Bernard Avenue from the corner of St. Bernard Avenue and Gentilly Boulevard from about 10 AM to 1 PM each day.

Plaintiff and defendants submitted extracts of the depositions of Elbert Ray Holman, Felix Lociano, Everett Coffman, Wayne Jusselin, Diane Blanque and Joseph Vallelungo.

Holman was assistant chief of field operations for the NOPD from May, 1986 until his retirement in November, 1989. In 1980, he was contacted by Frank Heyward, Jazz Fest's security consultant, to take over the Jazz Fest police detail.

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Bluebook (online)
633 So. 2d 1382, 1994 WL 80032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-v-blanque-lactapp-1994.