Probst v. Wroten

433 So. 2d 734
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1983
Docket5-100, 5-101
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 433 So. 2d 734 (Probst v. Wroten) 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
Probst v. Wroten, 433 So. 2d 734 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

433 So.2d 734 (1982)

Francis Dargis, Wife of/and William F. PROBST
v.
Ronald J. WROTEN, Rebecca Wroten, and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.
Frances Dargis, Wife of/and William F. PROBST
v.
Ralph H. HALES and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Comp.

Nos. 5-100, 5-101.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

December 9, 1982.
On Rehearing June 6, 1983.

*735 Dalton, Gillen & Roniger, Gregory W. Roniger, Jefferson, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Bienvenue, Foster, Ryan & O'Bannon, David E. Walle, New Orleans, for State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., defendant-appellant.

Before SAMUEL, CURRAULT and DUFRESNE, JJ.

SAMUEL, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Mrs. Francis Probst and William P. Probst, husband and wife, filed suit (our Docket # 5-100) against Ronald J. Wroten, Rebecca Wroten, his mother, and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, the uninsured motorist carrier of the Probst automobile, for injuries sustained by plaintiff wife, and on behalf of the husband for medical expenses and property damage sustained by the community as the result of a collision which occurred on October 31, 1976.

Subsequently, plaintiffs filed another suit (our Docket # 5-101) against Ralph Hales and State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, again under State Farm's uninsured motorist coverage, for injuries sustained by the wife as a result of a second accident which occurred a year later, on October 28, 1977.

The cases were consolidated and, after a trial on the merits, a single judgment was rendered in favor of Mrs. Francis Probst against all four defendants in the sum of $330,899.32 and in favor of William Probst for medical expenses in the sum of $7,113.54.

State Farm has appealed. The awards to Mrs. Probst for her injuries and loss of wages are the only matters at issue in the appeal.[1] As the other defendants have not appealed, the judgment against them is not before us.

At the time of the first accident, October 31, 1976, plaintiffs were insured by State Farm under three separate policies, each *736 providing uninsured motorist coverage in the sum of $100,000. The trial court held that these policies could be "stacked" so that the total uninsured motorist coverage was $300,000. At the time of the second accident, October 28, 1977, plaintiffs were only insured by State Farm (in only one policy) for uninsured motorist coverage in the sum of $100,000. Plaintiffs' underlying theory in both actions is that because Mrs. Probst had not fully recovered from the injuries of her first accident when the second accident occurred, plaintiffs were covered by stacking for the total sum of $400,000 for both accidents. The trial court agreed and so held.

State Farm contends the trial judge committed error by "stacking" the three $100,000 uninsured motorist coverages for the first accident. It points out that Act 623 of 1977 amended R.S. 22:1406(D)(1) to eliminate stacking. Act 623 became effective September 9, 1977, subsequent to the first accident. Without citation of authority, defendant suggests that public policy dictates retroactive application of Act 623 of 1977. However, our consistent jurisprudence is that this amendment to the uninsured motorist statute is not to be given retroactive effect.[2] The trial judge did not commit error by allowing stacking of coverage for plaintiff's first accident.

The primary issue for this court's determination is whether the rendition of one judgment against all defendants, instead of considering the separate effects of each accident and rendering separate awards for each accident, was erroneous.

The trial judge held the evidence established that the wife's injuries were medically inseparable and the independent acts of the two uninsured motorists concurred to produce plaintiff's injuries and damages. In reaching this conclusion, and in rendering a single judgment against all defendants, the judge relied on the following quotation from Prosser, Law of Torts, (2d Ed) p. 26 (as quoted in his Reasons for Judgment):

"Once it is determined that the defendant's conduct has been a cause of some damage suffered by the plaintiff, a further question may arise as to the portion of the total damage sustained which may properly be assigned to the defendant, as distinguished from other causes. The question is primarily not one of the fact of causation, but of the feasibility and practical convenience of splitting up the total harm into separate parts which may be attributed to each of two or more causes. Where a logical basis can be found for some rough practical apportionment, which limits a defendant's liability to that part of the harm which he has in fact caused, it may be expected that the division will be made. Where no such basis can be found and any division must be purely arbitrary, there is not practical course except to hold the defendant for the entire loss, notwithstanding the fact that other causes have contributed to it.
The distinction is one between injuries which are reasonably capable of being divided, and injuries which are not."

He further relied on the following quotation from the testimony of Dr. Russell Levy, one of Mrs. Probst's treating physicians:

"But she was never totally well from the first accident so I don't think you can really separate the second accident totally, I think, from the first accident. If she had not been in the second accident, she may have had a chance for recovery to a level that would not have been say before the first accident but I don't think this woman would have been cleared totally. And I think in the future that she probably would have injured one of the discs maybe by just sneezing, maybe just bending over to pick something up, but I do think that the die was cast in her case with her arthritic change and her size. And I think that after the first accident, *737 she probably was set up for a problem with her neck off and on throughout life with a waxing and waning pattern."

Relying on the Prosser quotation and on the quotation from the deposition of Dr. Russell Levy, the trial judge concluded the injuries were medically inseparable and the entire $400,000 of stacked uninsured motorist coverage was available to plaintiffs.

We hold as a matter of law that the trial judge's conclusion was correct insofar as stacking for the first accident and injury are concerned, but incorrect insofar as the second is concerned. The effective date of the anti-stacking statute, Act 623 of 1977, was September 9, 1977, almost two months prior to plaintiff's second accident and injury of October 28, 1977. Therefore, plaintiff could not stack coverages for the second accident and injury. Moreover, a reading of Dr. Levy's testimony indicates the trial court was faced with a classic case of an aggravation by a second accident of a pre-existing injury. His testimony as a whole establishes that plaintiff had not totally recovered from the first accident, and that it, combined with plaintiff's pre-existing arthritic condition, made her "more subject to recurrent injury after the first accident, and probably a lesser injury would cause more severe pathology ...." However, immediately preceding this statement he emphatically stated that "the second accident was a die that really cast this into a surgical—definite surgical situation."

The quotation from Prosser relied on by the trial judge concludes with the statement that the distinction is between injuries which are reasonably capable of being divided and those which are not.

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Bluebook (online)
433 So. 2d 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/probst-v-wroten-lactapp-1983.