Royal v. Cottles

705 So. 2d 1260, 97 La.App. 4 Cir. 1348, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 10, 1998 WL 4663
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1998
DocketNo. 97-CA-1348
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 705 So. 2d 1260 (Royal v. Cottles) 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
Royal v. Cottles, 705 So. 2d 1260, 97 La.App. 4 Cir. 1348, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 10, 1998 WL 4663 (La. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

11WALTZER, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Gregory Royal, a guest passenger in a U-Haul truck, sued his driver, Darryl N. Cot-tles, Jr., U-Haul of Colorado, Inc., owner of the truck, U-Haul of Louisiana, Inc. (originally named incorrectly as U-Haul of South Louisiana, Inc.), lessee of the truck, Marilyn Hayes, driver of a Hyundai automobile struck in the rear by the U-Haul truck, and Hayes’s insurer, Allstate Insurance Company. Royal claimed damages for injuries allegedly caused by the negligence of Cottles and of Hayes.

Allstate and Hayes answered, filed a cross-claim against Cottles and the U-Hául companies, and filed a request for trial by jury. On 26 February 1992, the trial judge granted a jury order and Allstate and Hayes paid the jury fee that same day.

U-Haul of Louisiana, Inc. answered the petition.

On 2 November 1992, Royal settled and dismissed his suit against the U-Haul companies and' settled and dismissed his suit against Cottles “up to the $10,000 policy limits of Republic Western Insurance Company.”

On 11 July 1995 the trial court granted Royal’s motion to set the Case for jury trial, and, following pre-trial, trial was set for 3 April 1996. On 6 March 1996, the trial court rendered a jury trial order pursuant to La. C.C.P. art. 1734, and Allstate posted additional bond that same day.

12Trial was continued at Royal’s request on 25 March 1996. On 19 September 1996, the trial was reset for 5 February 1997.

At trial, counsel for Royal and Allstate stipulated that “the value of the case is below the $20,000 jurisdictional amount for a jury trial.” Following trial before the trial judge, and notwithstanding Royal’s stipulation as to the value of his case, by judgment dated 19 February 1997 the trial court awarded Royal damages in the amount of $26,632.09 and cast Cottles with 75% of fault and Hayes with 25% of fault for the accident. From this judgment Hayes and Allstate appeal. Because we find there is no credible evidence of record to support a finding that Hayes was at fault in causing the accident, we reverse.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

On 26 January 1991, at about six o’clock in the late afternoon, on the Claiborne Avenue overpass ramp to Interstate 10, a U-Haul truck driven by Cottles, in which Royal was a passenger, was entering the ramp at a speed of about 45 miles per hour when it struck from behind a car being driven by Hayes into merging traffic.

[1262]*1262Royal testified that there was no traffic in front of Hayes’s ear blocking her passage. He based this testimony on what he noticed the traffic situation to be after he got out of the truck.

Louis Casimere, Jr., who was driving his automobile in the right lane about fifty feet behind the accident, testified that he was travelling at 50 miles per hour when he saw Hayes’s ear in the left lane of traffic and saw the U-Haul truck run into the back of the stopped car. Casimere was not named as a witness during discovery, and his name appears in the record for the first time in the pre-trial border, misspelled as “Louis Cashmere” without an address and without a statement that he allegedly witnessed the accident. His trial testimony was seriously questioned during cross-examination. He testified initially that the Hayes car was coming back toward him, indicating that Hayes essentially backed into the U-Haul truck. Later in his 'direct testimony, he retreated from that implausible scenario and testified that the car was stalled or stopped. On cross examination, he changed his testimony yet again and admitted that the Hayes car may not have been stopped or stalled, but was moving slowly. Casimere could not correctly state the number of people in each vehicle, the color of the Hayes vehicle, the driver of the car or the type of U-Haul truck, and he did not recognize Cottles as the truck driver. Also suspect was his testimony concerning his actions after he saw the accident. He testified that he exited from the Interstate at Orleans Avenue and parked his car on the side of a street near the Morris F.X. Jeff Municipal Auditorium and walked back to the scene of the accident where the Claiborne Avenue overpass meets Interstate 10. He testified that he asked the occupants of the truck if they were hurt — to which they responded negatively — and then called for the police on a cellular phone. He gave no explanation as to why he would undertake to leave his car at that distance and walk back through interstate traffic to the scene of what was apparently a minor “fender bender” type of automobile accident, with no apparent injury to the occupants of the truck and car or serious vehicular damage, particularly in light of the fact that the accident took place in a well-trafficked area and there was no testimony that any of the occupants of the ear were in imminent danger by reason of lateness of night, remote location or dangerous neighborhood.

| .[Casimere testified that he reviewed documents concerning the accident that were supplied by Royal’s attorney, and that he spoke to the attorney; on cross-examination, he backed away from that statement, admitting only to having reviewed the police report, Defendant’s Exhibit 2, to refresh'his memory. It is suspicious that in light of the many areas in which his recollection was erroneous or lacking he was so certain that there was no impeding traffic in front of the Hayes vehicle, which he was approaching at highway speed from the rear.

Marilyn Hayes, a Registered Nurse since 1980 employed by Home Health Agency, testified that at the time of the accident she was driving her 1987 Hyundai with her two children, 12 year old Corey and 9 year old Coretta, returning to her home on St. Roch Street from visiting her mother at 3218 Second Street. She testified that the accident occurred on the on-ramp, and that traffic was heavy, with a line of four or five cars in front of her. She heard a screeching noise and traffic slowed down and she slowed down as well. She was trying to enter the Interstate, but other traffic was coming from the Car-rollton exit impeding her progress. The ear in front of her stopped, she stopped between one-half and one foot behind that ear and, as traffic began to move again but before she had picked up speed, the U-Haul truck struck her from the rear. Her testimony that there was no problem with her car was corroborated by the police report. She said Royal did not get out of the car. She denied having seen Casimere at the scene of the accident, and testified that several people passed after the accident and said they would call the police, who arrived within one-half hour. She testified that the people who offered assistance came from a different direction from that described by Casimere.

At the outset, we note that our examination of the record, both the transcript of testimony and the documentary evidence, [1263]*1263convinces us that Royal’s testimony |5was internally inconsistent, contrary to the documentary evidence and not worthy of belief. We note further that the trial court referred to Royal’s testimony as having enough holes to constitute a Swiss cheese factory. Royal’s own attorney in his appellate brief states baldly, “Without mincing words, the plaintiff lied.” We agree.

Royal’s trial testimony was internally inconsistent concerning his current employment status. He denied having sued Cottles, although Cottles is the first named defendant in the case which was filed on Royal’s behalf, in which his deposition was taken, and which came on for trial.

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Bluebook (online)
705 So. 2d 1260, 97 La.App. 4 Cir. 1348, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 10, 1998 WL 4663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-v-cottles-lactapp-1998.