Smith v. City of Monroe

267 So. 3d 1218
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 2019
DocketNo. 52,605-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 267 So. 3d 1218 (Smith v. City of Monroe) 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
Smith v. City of Monroe, 267 So. 3d 1218 (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

Kenneth Smith appeals a judgment that rejected his claim for personal injuries arising from an incident in which Smith, as a pedestrian, had his right hand struck by a passing motorist. We affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Shortly before 3:00 AM on May 29, 2016, Smith was walking south on La. Hwy. 594 (also called Millhaven Road), a two-lane asphalt highway east of the city limits of Monroe, Louisiana. The road has no paved shoulder, only a few inches of asphalt beyond the fog line. Smith was walking on the left side of the road, by his admission, sometimes in the lane of traffic, sometimes straddling the fog line, and sometimes stepping into the grass. He had drunk, by his account, four 12-oz. beers earlier that evening. Although it was the middle of the night, he was dressed entirely in black - hat, shirt, pants and shoes - and was shown in cellphone video as a dark-complected African American. There was little artificial lighting in the area, only a ground-mounted floodlight beaming onto the sign for La. State Police Troop F, located on the east side of La. 594 and somewhat north of where the accident occurred.

Terrance Ervin, an off-duty corporal in the Monroe Police Dept., was driving an unmarked Ford Explorer north on La. 594, returning home from a security detail at the Monroe Civic Center that evening. He testified that he was not tired, was going 40-45 mph, and was using his low beams. When he neared Troop F, however, he suddenly saw a "blur" on the east side of his lane. He testified that the "pavement just came alive" some 15-20 feet ahead of him, and he heard an impact about ½ to 1 second later. He testified that he thought he might have struck a deer, so he drove up to Troop F, turned around, came back and pulled alongside Smith, who was still standing off the side of the road.

Ervin's passenger side mirror had struck Smith's right hand. The glass in the mirror was broken but the mount was still intact. Smith testified that he was not sure exactly where he was standing when his hand was hit, but the right side of his body was "on the side of the northbound lane." Ervin testified that the "blur" he saw was "in the road, inside the fog line," and he steered left to avoid hitting it, but could not. Ervin called State Police and, while he was waiting, took a cellphone video of Smith, transferred to a CD and admitted *1220at trial as Exhibit P-3 (a still from the video was also admitted, as Ex. P-5). According to Ervin, Smith had "slurrness" in his speech and difficulty punching numbers on his own cellphone.

State Trooper Matthew Meek arrived at the scene at 3:05 AM. He described Smith as "almost incoherent," "very intoxicated" and "with a strong odor of alcohol." He wrote Smith a ticket for "pedestrian violation," La. R.S. 32:316. In the accident report, he diagrammed Smith standing directly on the fog line and Ervin swerving slightly to the left before contact. He ascribed the accident to (1) pedestrian actions and (2) pedestrian condition, and wrote that Ervin was neither distracted nor impaired. Aside from the broken glass in the mirror, Trooper Meek found no physical evidence of the accident. He testified that he spoke to Smith in the ambulance, but Smith testified that the trooper never interviewed him, and just gave him a ticket.

Smith was taken to the St. Francis Medical Center ER in Monroe, where he was treated for an arm contusion, pain and minor bleeding; he received 4 mg of morphine. The date of the accident, May 29, was the Sunday before Memorial Day, so Smith did not have to work on Sunday or Monday. The following day, Tuesday, he returned to his job as a contract laborer for the City of Monroe, Department of Public Works; he never missed a day of work. Nearly two months post-accident, he went to Dr. J.D. Patterson for physical therapy that lasted about three months. His medical expenses totaled $ 6,058.32.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND TRIAL

Smith filed this suit against Ervin and his employer, the City of Monroe, in May 2017. The City conceded that Ervin was in the course and scope of his employment when the accident occurred.

The case went to trial in April 2018. The three witnesses (Smith, Ervin and Trooper Meek) testified as outlined above. The following details are also salient to the appeal.

Smith related that, in May 2016, he was living with his brother on Eisenhower Street, half a mile or so northeast of the site of the accident; he had spent Saturday afternoon sitting on the front porch, drinking four 12-oz. beers; later that night he needed some cigarettes, so he set out on foot for the EZ-Mart, some three miles down La. 594. He testified that he did not go to the much closer Tiger Mart, because it closed at 10 PM; also, because he did not own a car, he thought nothing of taking this three-mile walk. He admitted he was walking sometimes on and sometimes off the highway, but he "got over" when he saw the Explorer coming. He insisted that he was not drunk when this happened, and that the trooper did not interview him at the scene. On direct examination, he said he had cut his left hand with a chainsaw at work sometime before this accident; on cross, however, he admitted that the chainsaw accident did not happen until August 6, over two months after .

The St. Francis medical records, admitted as Ex. P-1, include a neurological assessment by a Nurse Anderson, taken at 3:57 AM (about one hour post-accident), which lists the patient's speech as "clear, coherent," his orientation as "oriented × 4" and his affect as "calm, cooperative."

Trooper Meek testified that despite being nearly incoherent, Smith told him he was walking to EZ-Mart when the accident happened. Trooper Meek also opined that under R.S. 32:216, a pedestrian must walk on the side of the road, not in the opposing lane , and if there is no sidewalk, he must walk in the grass.

*1221Ervin testified that he was not distracted in any way, and never went off the paved roadway. He admitted that in his initial statement to the trooper, and in a handwritten account, he did not mention that he might have "hit a deer." He said, on cross-examination, that low beams shine about 200 feet ahead, but plaintiff's counsel corrected him (in fact, they shine only 150 feet); still, Ervin did not agree with counsel's suggestion that had he been using high beams (which shine 500 feet, as counsel stated), he would have seen Smith much sooner and had time to avoid the impact. Finally, he pointed out that in the cellphone video, Ex. P-3, he aimed the camera down at Smith's black leather shoes, clearly showing that they were clean, and not damp and dewy, as might be expected had he been walking in the grass.

ACTION OF THE DISTRICT COURT

The court took the matter under advisement and rendered oral reasons for judgment in September 2018. The court found that the preponderance of the evidence was that Smith "was not walking on the grassy narrow shoulder of the road," but, instead, "just inside the fog line in the edge of the lane of travel" when he encountered the Explorer. Further, Smith admitted seeing the approaching vehicle but took no evasive action, and this was likely because he was intoxicated, even though the evidence of his level of intoxication was conflicting.

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Bluebook (online)
267 So. 3d 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-city-of-monroe-lactapp-2019.