Talamo v. Shad

619 So. 2d 699, 1993 WL 165357
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1993
Docket92-CA-1085, 92-CA-1086
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 619 So. 2d 699 (Talamo v. Shad) 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
Talamo v. Shad, 619 So. 2d 699, 1993 WL 165357 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

619 So.2d 699 (1993)

Lisa A. TALAMO
v.
Farhad A. SHAD, Dean Boats, Inc., Elevating Boats, Inc., and Government Employees Insurance Company.
consolidated with
Agnes LETULLE
v.
DEAN BOATS, INC., Elevating Boats, Inc., and Farhad A. Shad.

Nos. 92-CA-1085, 92-CA-1086.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

May 19, 1993.

*700 John M. Gallagher, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiff/appellee, Lisa A. Talamo.

David W. Oestreicher, II, Oestreicher & Hackett, New Orleans, for plaintiff/appellee, Agnes Letulle.

Charles Hooker, Halverson & Hooker, Metairie, for defendants/appellants, Farhad A. Shad, Dean Boats, Inc., and Elevating Boats, Inc.

John W. Norwood, III, New Orleans, for defendant/appellant, GEICO.

W. Paul Wilkins, Leake & Andersson, New Orleans, for Third-Party defendants/appellees, Agnes Letulle and Government Employees Ins. Co.

Before BARRY, WARD and ARMSTRONG, JJ.

ARMSTRONG, Judge.

In this consolidated appeal, defendants, Farhad A. Shad, Dean Boats, Inc. and Elevating Boats, Inc., appeal a judgment notwithstanding the verdict ("JNOV") entered in favor of plaintiffs, Agnes Letulle and Lisa A. Talamo. Original defendant, Government Employees Insurance Company ("GEICO"), appeals the dismissal of its cross-claim against the other defendants.

This action arises out of an automobile accident involving a vehicle driven by plaintiff Agnes Letulle, and a vehicle driven by defendant Farhad A. Shad. The accident occurred on Thursday, April 23, 1987. Letulle and her guest passenger, plaintiff Lisa A. Talamo, filed separate suits against Shad and his employer, Elevating Boats, Inc., and the owner of the vehicle Shad was operating, Dean Boats, Inc. Also named as a defendant in Talamo's suit was Letulle's uninsured motorist ("UM") insurer, GEICO. Shad, Dean Boats and Elevating Boats filed a third-party demand against GEICO for damages and contribution. GEICO filed a cross-claim against defendants Shad and Elevating Boats, who self-insured the vehicle Shad was operating, and Dean Boats, for the $2,500.00 it tendered to Letulle under the UM provisions of its policy.

Shad, Dean and Elevating dismissed their claim against GEICO. Talamo also dismissed her claim against GEICO. Trial *701 was held and the jury returned a verdict finding that Shad was not negligent, that Letulle was negligent, and that Talamo suffered no damages. The trial court subsequently granted a JNOV in favor of plaintiffs Letulle and Talamo, finding Shad, Dean and Elevating 100% at fault. The trial court further found Letulle and Talamo suffered damages and awarded them in the amounts of $6,900.00 and $15,880.30, respectively.

Defendants Shad, Dean and Elevating raise six assignments of error. GEICO complains of the trial court's dismissal of its cross-claim against defendants. We first address the assignments of error raised by defendants.

POLICE REPORT

Defendants claim the trial court erred in allowing the deputy sheriff who investigated the accident to "read" from his accident report. Wayne Babin was a deputy sheriff with the St. Bernard Parish Sheriff's Office at the time of the accident. Babin was qualified by the trial court as a "specialist in accident investigation."

Counsel for one plaintiff went through the accident report with Babin item by item. Defense counsel objected but the trial court ruled that Babin could use his report to refresh his memory. La. C.E. art. 612 allows a witness to use any writing to refresh his memory while testifying. However, Authors' Note (1) to C.E. art. 612 states:

When the witness has been permitted to consult the source, a writing, for example, and it has not refreshed his memory to the extent that he now has an independent recollection of the event in question, [C.E. art. 612] does not authorize the witness to read the writing into evidence, nor does it authorize the introduction of the writing, itself.... The purpose of [C.E. art. 612] is to give a witness an opportunity to jog his memory so that he may testify from memory.

Under La. C.E. arts. 803(8)(b)(i) and 803(6), investigative reports by police and other law enforcement personnel are not admissible as exceptions to the hearsay rule, and are not otherwise admissible under the Code of Evidence.

The issue before us is whether Babin effectively read his report into evidence, thus circumventing the prohibition against the admissibility of police investigative reports. The record indicates that Babin read portions of the report into evidence. The following portion of the transcript is illustrative:

BY MR. OESTREICHER:
Q Officer, under the box marked violations insofar as vehicle one, do you have a check mark by a particular box, please?
A Yes, I do.
Q What is that check mark by?
A It says other hazards or unknown violations.
Q Now, insofar as vehicle two, do you have any violations noted?
A No, sir.
Q No violations?
A No violations.
Q Is there a box, in fact, to check it off?
A Yes.
Q The box below that is called reason for movement, and what do you have checked for that?
A For vehicle one, I have due to driver's violation; and vehicle two; normal movement.

The record indicates that Babin was answering counsel's questions by reading directly from the investigative report. Babin should not have been allowed to do so.

It is possible the investigative report could have been admissible under La. C.E. art. 803(5), which provides that a record concerning a matter about which a witness once had knowledge but now has insufficient recollection to enable him to testify fully and accurately, which is known to have been made or adopted by the witness when the matter was fresh in his memory and to reflect that knowledge correctly, is admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule. For a record to come in under this exception it must be shown, among other things, that the witness had firsthand *702 knowledge of the matter described in the memorandum and that the memory of the witness with respect to the matter described in the memorandum is now impaired. However, there is no indication that counsel for plaintiffs offered the investigative report into evidence C.E. art. 803(5). Nor is there any evidence that counsel laid a proper predicate for such introduction.

The trial court erred in allowing Babin to answer questions on direct examination by reading from his investigative report. The report itself was not shown to be admissible. We will exclude the testimony of Babin referring directly to the police report when considering the evidence.

HYPOTHETICAL QUESTIONS

Defendants claim the trial court erred in allowing plaintiff Letulle's counsel to ask plaintiff Talamo's physician, Dr. Parnell, a hypothetical question. Dr. Parnell, qualified by the trial court as an expert in the field of orthopedics, was called as a witness by counsel for Talamo. After counsel for Talamo finished his direct examination of Dr. Parnell, counsel for Letulle was allowed, over the objection of defense counsel, to pose a hypothetical question to Dr. Parnell about a patient who, although discharged from a physician's care, continues to experience symptoms and problems.

Defendants cite no authority which bars the posing of a hypothetical to an expert witness presented by a co-party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
619 So. 2d 699, 1993 WL 165357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talamo-v-shad-lactapp-1993.