Robert Paul Jackson v. Pamela S. Brown, Administratrix, etc.

801 S.E.2d 194, 239 W. Va. 316, 2017 WL 2415331, 2017 W. Va. LEXIS 416
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 2017
Docket16-0724
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 801 S.E.2d 194 (Robert Paul Jackson v. Pamela S. Brown, Administratrix, etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Paul Jackson v. Pamela S. Brown, Administratrix, etc., 801 S.E.2d 194, 239 W. Va. 316, 2017 WL 2415331, 2017 W. Va. LEXIS 416 (W. Va. 2017).

Opinion

Justice Ketchum:

The defendants below, Robert Paul Jackson (“Defendant Jackson”) and the Joelynn Family Preservation Trust (“the Trust”), appeal from" the July 6, 2016, order of the Circuit Court of Ritchie County denying their motion for a new trial following a jury verdict of $543,202.17 -in favor of Plaintiff Pamela S. Brown (“plaintiff’) in a wrongful death action arising from an automobile accident. On appeal, Defendant Jackson asserts that the circuit court erred by: 1) granting summary judgment to the plaintiff on the issue of Defendant Jackson’s liability for -causing the automobile- accident; 2) denying his post-trial motion for judgment as a-matter of law 1 on'theissue of whether the Trust *318 was liable for Defendant Jackson’s tort; and 3) incorrectly awarding prejudgment interest on an award for lost wages.

After review, we affirm the circuit court’s summary judgment ruling on the issue of Defendant Jackson’s liability. However, we reverse the circuit court’s denial of Defendant Jackson’s post-trial motion for judgment as a matter of law on the issue of the Trust’s liability. Our review reveals that Defendant Jackson was not “in the course of administering” the Trust when the automobile accident occurred. Therefore, under W.Va. Code § 44D-10-1010(c) [2011], contained in the West Virginia Uniform Trust Code, the Trust is not liable for Defendant Jackson’s tort. Finally, we affirm the circuit court’s award of prejudgment interest on the plaintiffs lost wages damage award.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On the morning of June 7, 2014, Defendant Jackson drove a 1999 Ford F-350 flat-bed truck 2 to a restaurant in Ritchie County, West Virginia, where he ate breakfast. Following breakfast, Defendant Jackson went to an Ace Hardware Store in Ritchie County where he purchased “six or seven joints of plastic pipe” that he was planning to install “in the ground as a French drain to get water away (from the residence that he lived in).” After loading the plastic pipes into his truck, Defendant Jackson drove a short distance before coming to a stop at the intersection of Ritchie Industrial Park Road and U.S. Route 50.

U.S. Route 50 is a four-lane divided highway. Defendant Jackson’s truck was perpendicular to Route 50 as he was stopped at the intersection. His plan was to drive straight across the two eastbound lanes and make a left turn to merge into the westbound lanes of Route 50. Defendant Jackson testified that before attempting to drive his truck across the eastbound lanes of Route 50, he looked to his left and noticed a semi-truck coming toward him. Believing that he had enough time to clear the two eastbound lanes in front of the semi-truck, Defendant Jackson proceeded into the eastbound lanes of the highway. However, Defendant Jackson did not see a motorcycle that was also traveling eastbound on Route 60 that was being driven by the decedent, Harry Myer, Jr. (“Decedent Myer”). 3

Decedent Myer was traveling in the right or slow eastbound lane of Route 50 when Defendant Jackson’s track entered the highway. Though Decedent Myer applied his brakes, as evidenced by skid marks in the slow lane of Route 50, he crashed his motorcycle into the left rear quarter panel of Defendant Jackson’s track. The collision occurred in the right or slow eastbound lane. Decedent Myer was injured and later died at the scene of the accident as a result of the injuries he suffered in the crash.

Following the crash, the West Virginia State Police conducted an investigation. A West Virginia State Policeman, Corporal J.L. *319 Brewer, completed a “Uniform Traffic Crash Report” in which he determined that Defendant Jackson “failed to yield the right of way” at the intersection in violation of W.Va. Code § 17C-9-1. Corporal Brewer’s report provided that the crash occurred in the right eastbound lane of Route 50 near the hash marks that divide the slow and fast lanes. Further, the report concluded that Decedent Myer did not commit any traffic violations. The complete narrative description contained in the report describing the accident is as follows:

[Decedent Myer’s motorcycle] was traveling east bound on U.S. Route 50. [Defendant Jackson’s truck] was coming from Ace Hardware and sitting at the intersection of Ritchie County Industrial Park Road and U.S. Route 50. As [Decedent Myer’s motorcycle] was approaching the Ritchie County Industrial Park Road intersection, [Defendant Jackson] pulled [his truck] onto U.S. Route 50 causing [Decedent Myer’s motorcycle] to collide into the left rear quarter panel of [Defendant Jackson’s truck]. [Decedent Myer’s] motorcycle collided with [Defendant Jackson’s truck] in the east bound driving lane of U.S. Route 50 near the passing hash marks.
[Decedent Myer] applied [the motorcycle’s] brakes approximately 89 feet before colliding with [Defendant Jackson’s truck].

The plaintiff, Pamela Brown, as Adminis-tratrix of Decedent Myer’s estate, filed a wrongful death action against Defendant Jackson in September of 2014. During Defendant Jackson’s deposition, the plaintiff-learned about the existence of the Joelynn Family Preservation Trust. 4 Defendant Jackson testified that he created this Trust, that he was a trustee, and that the three Trust beneficiaries are his sister, Judith Basile, and his two adult children, Jessica Jackson and Joseph Jackson. Additionally, Defendant Jackson testified that the house that he resides in is owned by the Trust.

After Defendant Jackson’s deposition, the plaintiff amended her complaint and named the-Joelynn Family Preservation Trust as an additional defendant. The plaintiffs amended complaint alleged that Defendant Jackson was acting “as a Trustee and agent for ... the Joelynn Family Preservation Trust” when he purchased the plastic pipe at the hardware store for the “sole purpose of bener fitting [the Trust] by improving real estate owned by, and titled to the Trust.”

On February 1, 2016, the plaintiff filed a motion for partial summary judgment “on the issue of liability.” Specifically, the plaintiff argued that she was entitled to summary judgment on the issue of Defendant Jackson’s liability based on the following: 1) Defendant Jackson pulled into the path of Decedent Myer in the right lañe of Route 50; 2) Decedent Myer had the right-of-way while traveling in the right lane and Defendant Jackson failed to yield to oncoming traffic; 3) Corporal Brewer’s report concluded that Decedent Myer had not committed any traffic violations, and cited Defendant Jackson for failing to yield the right-of-way at the intersection; 4) an expert witness, testifying on behalf of the plaintiff, testified that Defendant Jackson caused the accident by pulling onto Route 50 and failing to yield to Decedent Myer’s motorcycle; that Decedent Myer reacted within 2.8 seconds when Defendant Jackson pulled onto the highway; and that Decedent Myer “was alert and attentive and that he did -...

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801 S.E.2d 194, 239 W. Va. 316, 2017 WL 2415331, 2017 W. Va. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-paul-jackson-v-pamela-s-brown-administratrix-etc-wva-2017.