Swaggart v. Haney
This text of 363 So. 2d 251 (Swaggart v. Haney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Gilbert SWAGGART and Amoco Oil Company
v.
Richard E. HANEY.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*252 Shell, Buford, Bufkin, Callicutt & Perry, Richard S. Bush, Cary E. Bufkin, Jackson, for appellants.
Mulhearn & Mulhearn, Wells & Blalock, Tim D. Blalock, Natchez, for appellee.
Before PATTERSON, C.J., and BROOM, and LEE, JJ.
BROOM, Justice, for the Court:
Tort action (personal injury) is the nature of the suit of Richard E. Haney (plaintiff, appellee) against Gilbert Swaggart and Amoco Oil Company (defendants, appellants). Trial in the Circuit Court of Adams County resulted in a verdict of $100,000 in favor of Haney. Amoco and its driver, Swaggart, seek reversal of the judgment against them on the grounds that (1) the evidence was insufficient, (2) the verdict was excessive, and (3) inadmissible testimony was accepted. We reverse.
Amoco's truck (weighing 34,800 pounds, cargo included), driven by Swaggart and *253 hauling 1,615 gallons of propane gas, was traveling west toward Natchez on Liberty Road in Adams County on December 18, 1975, after 7:00 p.m. (dark), when it collided with a pickup truck driven by plaintiff, Haney. The pickup, traveling east on Liberty Road, had just entered a gradual curve at which the road turned in a southeasterly direction. The Amoco truck, coming from the opposite direction, had almost completely gotten past or through the curve at the place where the accident occurred. Amoco's driver, Swaggart, testified that he observed a pickup approaching him on the wrong side of the road, causing him to respond by driving Amoco's truck off the road to the right and onto the north shoulder in an attempt to avoid the collision. Then, according to Swaggart, Haney's pickup struck the Amoco truck just behind its cab at a time when the Amoco truck was almost off the north margin of the road. Haney's version is to the contrary: He was driving his pickup in his proper right-hand lane, the south portion of the road (eastbound traffic lane), and almost off the south margin; Swaggart, in the Amoco truck, had crossed the "center line" and struck the pickup on Haney's side of the road.
No damage to the Amoco truck occurred in the forward portion or grill, but both sides of the top were damaged. Haney's pickup received damages to the left fender and center portion of the door. Although just how the collision occurred is not clear, it was not "head-on." Other facts will be stated where appropriate as to the different aspects of the accident which, so far as appears in the record, was witnessed only by plaintiff Haney (appellee) and the individual defendant Swaggart (one of the appellants).
WAS THE EVIDENCE INSUFFICIENT AS A MATTER OF LAW TO MAKE A JURY ISSUE? Amoco and Swaggart argue that Haney's case was based upon a "factual and physical impossibility" and lacked proper proof to support the jury verdict. They further contend that Haney's testimony is so incredible and inherently and physically impossible that it is totally unreliable and unacceptable. Amoco and Swaggart cite numerous cases which hold, in the main, that verdicts and judgments must be based upon the probabilities of the case, and not on possibilities.
The case must be decided largely upon the diametrically opposed testimony of the two drivers along with the physical facts and testimony of witnesses who arrived at the scene sometime later. It is unfortunate that investigating officers did not promptly arrive after the accident occurred. Before they arrived, considerable vehicular traffic traveled over the accident scene. Plaintiff Haney stated: "I met these headlights and I could see at the time that I met them that he was hogging my side of the road ..." His testimony indicated that the curve was bearing to his right and, according to him, he did not get into the westbound traffic lane occupied by the Amoco truck, driven by Swaggart. Although the plaintiff's version is difficult to reconcile with physical facts in some of the particulars, there are physical facts which substantially support his version. After the collision his truck was overturned in the eastbound lane of Liberty Road and facing east, partially off the pavement. Extending about twenty yards behind Haney's truck, and in about the center of the eastbound traffic lane (his lane), was a trail of broken glass and metal parts.
Scuff marks and gouge marks inside the north portion or westbound traffic lane of Liberty Road, it is argued by appellants, are conclusive evidence that the collision occurred in that lane rather than in the eastbound traffic lane where the plaintiff says the accident or collision occurred. After the collision, Amoco's truck was lying upside down in the ditch on the north side of the road approximately sixty-five yards from where Haney's pickup came to rest upside down. Appellants argue that tire marks left by the Amoco truck when Swaggart drove off the road in an effort to avoid the collision negates completely the plaintiff's version.
*254 Conflicting evidence presented by the parties (without any expert witnesses) makes it almost impossible to determine precisely how the accident occurred. Having considered all the evidence, the jury found for the plaintiff and we cannot say that the verdict was not supported by sufficient evidence. It cannot be said that any laws of physics or sound logic clearly negate either negligence on the part of Swaggart, or Haney's version of the facts. Particularly supportive of the jury's verdict is the fact that so much broken glass and debris were found to the rear of Haney's vehicle, in his proper lane of traffic. Moreover, certain of the photographic evidence indicates that the collision occurred on Haney's (plaintiff's) side of the road.
WAS THE JURY AWARD ($100,000) SO EXCESSIVE AS TO WARRANT A NEW TRIAL OR REMITTITUR?
According to the evidence, Haney received the following injuries: chemical burns over a large portion of his body caused by raw gasoline running from his truck onto him after the accident; fracture of his pelvis bone; rupture or puncture of his bladder; all over bruises; and a cut just under his left eye and another cut on his right eyeball. He was hospitalized at least seventeen days and incurred medical expenses of $4,422.07. That he experienced considerable pain and suffering is beyond question. During 1975 before his injury he earned $11,448 in wages, and from 1976 after the injury he earned only $600. In addition to the above evidence pertaining to Haney's injuries, Dr. Ball, an orthopedic surgeon, testified that Haney would have a fifteen to twenty percent permanent disability due to the hip injury. This expert medical witness further testified that Haney would have difficulty doing the work of a welder and that arthritis may later develop as a result of the injury. Although the $100,000 jury verdict might possibly be higher than another jury would render, we cannot say that it was so high as to evince bias or prejudice, or that it was completely against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.
DID THE COURT COMMIT REVERSIBLE ERROR BY ALLOWING INTO EVIDENCE INFLAMMATORY AND PREJUDICIAL PHOTOGRAPHS SHOWING HANEY'S BURNS? Reversal is urged here based on our holding in Butler v. Chrestman, 264 So.2d 812 (Miss. 1972). There we held that the admission into evidence of motion pictures "depicting excruciating pain and suffering rather than attempting to reveal the actual state of the injuries" was erroneous. In Chrestman
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363 So. 2d 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swaggart-v-haney-miss-1978.