Smeby v. Williams
This text of 961 So. 2d 597 (Smeby v. Williams) 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
Cynthia SMEBY, Plaintiff-Appellee
v.
John B. WILLIAMS, Jr., State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, and Rodney C. Griffin, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*598 The Aubert Law Firm, by Christopher Joseph Aubert, James Philip Meyer, Covington, for Appellants, John B. Williams, Jr., E.L. Burns Co., Inc. and Paccar Leasing Corporation.
Robert Stephen Tew, Monroe, for Appellee, Cynthia Smeby.
Cotton, Bolton, Hoychick & Doughty, by David Paul Doughty, Rayville, for Appellee, Louisiana Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company.
Philip Thomas Deal, for Appellees, Rodney C. Griffin & State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.
Before STEWART, DREW and LOLLEY, JJ.
DREW, J.
John Williams, E.L. Burns Co., Inc., and Paccar Leasing appeal a judgment in which Williams was found solely at fault for an automobile accident between a phantom truck and a sports car carrying Cynthia Smeby and Rodney Griffin. We amend the judgment to allocate 40% of fault to the phantom truck driver, and affirm the amended judgment.
FACTS
John Williams was employed as a truck driver for E.L. Burns Co., Inc. ("Burns"). Late in the evening of February 6, 1998, Williams began a journey driving a tractor hauling a flatbed trailer from Shreveport to the East Coast.[1] As Williams drove through Ouachita Parish eastbound on I-20 shortly after midnight, he lost control of his truck when he looked down to see what he had dropped onto the floor of the tractor.[2] The truck went off the right side of the road and jackknifed, leaving the tractor blocking the outside lane and part of the inside lane, and the trailer stuck in the mud alongside the interstate. The point along I-20 where the truck stopped was described by Williams as being on the incline of a hill.[3] Two Ouachita Parish Sheriff's deputies arrived in their patrol cars and parked behind the truck, with their lights flashing. Williams estimated that these deputies arrived within five minutes of his accident.
Louisiana State Trooper Christopher Towell received a call about Williams's stranded truck. Towell, who was east of Williams's truck, drove westbound on I-20, exited I-20 at Cheniere Road, entered eastbound I-20, and then proceeded to the scene of the jackknifed truck. Towell estimated that Williams's truck was located approximately 1.2 miles east of the Cheniere entrance ramp. Towell parked his patrol vehicle behind the deputies' cars. Williams thought Towell arrived five minutes after the deputies. Williams was ticketed for careless operation.
Cynthia Smeby and Rodney Griffin were on a date the evening of February 6. After attending a Monster Truck show at the Monroe Civic Center, where they consumed alcoholic beverages, the couple went to Smeby's home.[4] According to *599 Griffin, the couple then left Smeby's house in West Monroe to go to Griffin's house in Monroe. Smeby recalled that they left her house to go to another bar. As Griffin drove Smeby's recently-purchased Trans Am on the Cheniere Road overpass crossing I-20, he saw an emergency vehicle with lights flashing heading eastbound on I-20 and decided to follow it.
Griffin entered eastbound I-20 and accelerated to the speed limit of 70 mph. He steered the Trans Am to the inside lane in order to pass an 18-wheeler in the outside lane. After the Trans Am had passed about half of the 18-wheeler, the truck began moving into the inside lane without activating his turn signals. Griffin took his foot off the accelerator and steered the Trans Am as far to the left as he could go without going onto the grass. Griffin and Smeby had slightly different recollections of what happened next. Griffin recalled that after the truck had moved halfway into the inside lane, it stopped moving to the left momentarily, but then suddenly came completely into the inside lane and made contact with the Trans Am. Smeby recalled that the truck came into the inside lane, went back into the outside lane, and then came back completely into the inside lane and knocked the Trans Am off the road. In any event, the Trans Am entered the median and collided with a tree, resulting in moderate injuries to Griffin and Smeby. The driver of the phantom 18-wheeler never stopped his vehicle.[5]
When Towell learned of the Griffin crash, he went to that site to assist. He performed a nystagmus gaze test on Griffin and did not think Griffin was impaired. Towell estimated that there was a distance of 300 to 400 yards from where the Trans Am left the roadway to the location of Williams's truck.
Smeby filed suit against Griffin, his liability insurer State Farm, and Williams. Griffin filed a cross-claim against Williams. Smeby amended her petition to add Burns and its insurer, Reliance National Insurance Company.[6]
Smeby's insurer, Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company, filed a petition for intervention against Williams, Burns, and Reliance. Farm Bureau alleged that it had paid approximately $57,890 to Smeby and Griffin in medical payments, collision payments, and UM coverage payments under its policy.
Griffin, State Farm, and Farm Bureau filed a motion for summary judgment against Smeby on the ground that Griffin was not at fault in causing the accident. Smeby did not oppose the motion as she had settled with Griffin and Farm Bureau. However, Williams, Burns and Reliance/LIGA opposed the motion for summary judgment. The trial court granted the motion and dismissed Griffin, State Farm, and Farm Bureau as parties, with Farm Bureau reserving its rights to a subrogation claim and Griffin reserving his demands as plaintiff. This court affirmed the judgment in Smeby v. Williams, 37,845 (La.App. 2d Cir.12/10/03), 862 So.2d 381.
Following a bench trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in favor of Smeby and Griffin and against Williams, Burns, *600 and Paccar Leasing.[7] The trial court concluded that when Williams fell asleep at the wheel of his truck, that set in motion a chain of events which created a sudden emergency for the phantom truck that caused the accident involving Smeby's vehicle. Accordingly, Williams was found 100% at fault for the accident. Smeby was awarded $50,000 plus medical damages, and Griffin was awarded $40,000 plus medical damages. The court also found that Farm Bureau was entitled to $50,000 for its subrogation claims against Williams, Burns, and Paccar Leasing, consisting of $25,742.38 in property damages, $10,000 in medical payments, and $14,257.62 in UM payments. Williams, Burns, and Paccar Leasing appeal.
DISCUSSION
Appellants' only contention is that the trial court erred in assigning all of the fault for the Trans Am accident to Williams and none of the fault to the phantom truck driver.[8] In its reasons for the judgment, the trial court noted that the phantom truck driver encountered a sudden emergency as a result of Williams's truck blocking part of eastbound I-20.
In Clark v. Natt, 32,548, pp. 2-3 (La. App. 2d Cir.12/8/99), 748 So.2d 584, 586, writ denied, XXXX-XXXX (La.3/17/00), 756 So.2d 1142, this court discussed the sudden emergency doctrine:
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961 So. 2d 597, 2007 WL 1828377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smeby-v-williams-lactapp-2007.