Sutton v. Duplessis
This text of 584 So. 2d 362 (Sutton v. Duplessis) 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
Stephanie SUTTON, individually and as the Natural Tutrix of Her Minor Son, Peter Sutton
v.
Wilfred DUPLESSIS and the Orleans Parish School Board.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*363 Law Office of Ronnie G. Penton, Kathy Conn Alford, Bogalusa, for plaintiff-appellant Stephanie Sutton.
Trevor G. Bryan, Bryan, Jupiter, Lewis & Blanson, New Orleans, for defendantsappellees Wilfred Duplessis and Orleans Parish School Bd.
Miles Trapolin, Trapolin & Coleman, New Orleans, for intervenor-appellant the Louisiana Dept. of Health and Hospitals, in behalf of Charity Hosp. of Louisiana at New Orleans.
Before KLEES, CIACCIO and BECKER, JJ.
KLEES, Judge.
Plaintiff Stephanie Sutton filed this suit against Wilfred Duplessis and the Orleans Parish School Board on behalf of her minor son, Peter Sutton, who was injured in an automobile accident after he left school on November 14, 1986. On that date, school was dismissed at 11:00 a.m. so that the student's parents could pick up their children's report cards that afternoon, as was school policy. Peter's mother, who usually walked six-year-old Peter and his five-year-old *364 brother home from school, did not show up that day to get them. Peter's teacher then sent Peter and his brother to the principal's office to wait for their mother. The two children sat in the waiting area of the office with the principal's secretary, who sat behind a counter and did her work. The children were told not to leave the office. However, Peter saw his friend Henry Adams and Henry's mom walking by and got up to follow them, unnoticed by the secretary. Peter followed them to Henry's home, which was across the street and down the block from school.
When Mrs. Adams realized Peter was with them, she told Peter he had to return to school because she and Henry were going out, and Peter's mother would be waiting for him at school. As Mrs. Adams and Henry were getting into their parked car, Peter darted into the street and ran into the front left side of a car being driven by Mr. Duplessis. Mr. Duplessis is a physical education teacher employed by the Orleans Parish School Board who was going to Peter's school for a conference with some parents.
Peter suffered a broken leg and was treated at Charity Hospital. Mrs. Sutton filed suit individually and on behalf of Peter against the Orleans Parish School Board and Mr. Duplessis. Charity Hospital intervened to recover its medical bills.
The case was tried on November 27-28, 1989. The trial judge attributed 60% of the negligence which caused Peter's injury to Mrs. Sutton and 40% to the Orleans Parish School Board.[1] Accordingly, the trial court issued judgment: (1) In favor of Wildred Duplessis against plaintiff; (2) In favor of plaintiff against the Orleans Parish School Board in the amount of $10,000.00 in general damages, to be reduced by 60% reflecting the negligence of Mrs. Sutton; (3) In favor of Stephanie Sutton individually against the Orleans Parish School Board in the amount of $4,500.00 for medical expenses, also to be reduced by the degree of negligence attributable to Mrs. Sutton; and (4) In favor of Charity Hospital of New Orleans against the Orleans Parish School Board and Stephanie Sutton, recognizing the statutory lien held by Charity for $4,127.31, and awarding Charity reimbursement up to this amount from the medical expenses awarded to Stephanie Sutton.
Plaintiff has appealed claiming that the trial court erred: (1) in reducing Peter's general damage award by the percentage of his mother's negligence; (2) in failing to find any negligence on the part of Mr. Duplessis; and (3) in assigning 60% negligence to Mrs. Sutton. Defendants have responded by contending that the judgment should be affirmed, but the 60% fault attributed to Mrs. Sutton should instead be attributed to Peter himself. Charity Hospital has filed a separate appeal contending that the trial judge erred in reducing the award for medical expenses by 60% and in ruling that Charity's lien must be satisfied out of that award, exclusive of Peter's general damage award.
For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court's finding of 60% liability on the part of Mrs. Sutton, and instead find the negligence of the Orleans Parish School Board to be the sole cause of Peter's injury. We affirm the judgment of the trial court in all other respects.
Considering the facts, the trial judge's finding of liability on the part of Mrs. Sutton is clearly erroneous. Mrs. Sutton testified that she was unaware that school was to be dismissed early on November 14th. She was at home watching T.V. at 11:00 a.m. and was planning to pick up Peter and his brother at the usual dismissal time, 2:30 p.m. There was testimony from school personnel that a notice had been sent home on *365 Monday on the weekly homework assignment informing the parents of the early dismissal on Friday and the fact that parents would be required to pick up their children's report cards Friday afternoon. Mrs. Sutton stated that she never received such a notice. Peter himself could not remember whether he had brought home the homework assignment, but he thought his little brother had told his mother about the early dismissal.
In his Reasons for Judgment, the trial judge noted that he assigned 60% negligence to Mrs. Sutton because he did not believe her testimony that she had not received notice of the school's early dismissal. He indicated that Mrs. Sutton should have inquired as to why Peter did not come home with a weekly homework assignment that Monday. He went on to state:
Moreover, the Court finds it incredible that Mrs. Sutton is more interested in sitting home looking at her soap operas than in showing an interest in her children and their school by participating in their school activities and by trying to set a proper role model by reading instead of spending her time glued to the soap operas. Perhaps one of the problems with the public school system is that there are too many parents like Mrs. Sutton who exhibit poor parenting techniques, behavior that is poor role modeling and generally showing a lack of interest in their children's school activities.
For these reasons the Court assigns a comparative negligence percentage of 60% to Mrs. Sutton....
The trial judge's reasons for assigning 60% negligence to Mrs. Sutton are seriously flawed. Whether or not Mrs. Sutton took an interest in her child's schooling is not relevant to a determination of what caused Peter's accident. Moreover, we find that Mrs. Sutton's failure to show up, for whatever reason, is not a legal cause of this accident.
Negligence is actionable only where it is both a cause in fact and a legal cause of the injury. Legal cause requires a proximate relation between the actions of a defendant and the harm which occurs, and such relation must be substantial in character. Sinitiere v. Lavergne, 391 So.2d 821 (La.1980) (Citations omitted; emphasis added). In the instant case, Mrs. Sutton's failure to pick up her sons does not bear a proximate relation to the harm that befell Peter; in fact, her omission, especially when compared with the negligence of the school board is too attenuated from the accident to be considered a proximate cause of Peter's injury.
A proximate cause is generally defined as any cause which, in natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient, intervening cause, produces the result complained of and without which the result would not have occurred. Sumrall v.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
584 So. 2d 362, 1991 WL 138538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutton-v-duplessis-lactapp-1991.