Tanner v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Companies

589 So. 2d 507, 1991 WL 226421
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 18, 1991
DocketCA 90 0134
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 589 So. 2d 507 (Tanner v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Companies) 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
Tanner v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Companies, 589 So. 2d 507, 1991 WL 226421 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

589 So.2d 507 (1991)

Daniel Carl TANNER, as Curator of Betty C. Tanner
v.
FIREMAN'S FUND INSURANCE COMPANIES, et al.

No. CA 90 0134.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 18, 1991.
Writ Denied January 10, 1992.

*508 Charles Wm. Roberts, Richard J. Dodson, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff.

Clifton Bingham, Jr., Dept. Risk Litigation, Baton Rouge, Jack Pierce Brook, Daniel E. Zelenka, II, William V. Redmann, New Orleans, La., for defendants.

Before WATKINS, SHORTESS, SAVOIE, CRAIN and FOIL, JJ.

CRAIN, Judge.

Plaintiff, Betty C. Tanner, seeks to recover damages for the severe injuries she sustained in a vehicular collision on the night of December 19, 1986.[1] The plaintiff was a passenger in a pickup truck driven by her husband, Donald Tanner, when it collided with a tractor trailer rig straddling the highway, completely blocking both lanes, outside of Valdosta, Georgia. Prior to and at the time of the accident, Mr. Tanner suffered from a degenerative eye disease.

The plaintiff originally named several parties as defendants, but she dismissed them prior to trial against the remaining defendant, the State of Louisiana through the Department of Public Safety and Corrections (DPS).[2] Following a bench trial, the judge issued written reasons for judgment wherein he found that DPS was liable *509 to the plaintiff for its failure to administer eye examinations to Mr. Tanner when he renewed his driver's license after 1970, although Mr. Tanner had failed the eye examination in 1970 and was only issued a driver's license with restrictions after further testing by an optometrist. The trial judge found that DPS' failure to administer the eye examinations was a breach of its statutory duty under LSA-R.S. 32:408;[3] that this breach was a cause of the accident, because Mr. Tanner would not have been given a driver's license had he been tested, nor would he have been driving if he had known that his visual acuity posed any threat to safe driving; that "a driver who would have had the requisite visual ability required statutorily in Louisiana for license[d] drivers could have easily brought his vehicle under control and slowed the vehicle in which plaintiff was riding to a stop before the collision ... ever took place"; and that the plaintiff and her husband were not at fault because while they were aware of the eye disease they had a good faith belief that his eyesight was sufficient to enable him to be a properly licensed driver. The trial judge also stated that he was not required to determine the fault of the previously dismissed parties, but that in his opinion DPS was 65% at fault and the truck in the roadway was 35% at fault. The trial judge awarded the plaintiff damages as follows: past medical bills, $44,150.24; past attendant care, $123,012.00; future attendant care, $3,000,000.00; impairment of future earning capacity, $125,000.00; and past future physical and mental pain and suffering, $500,000.00 (in accordance with LSA-R.S. 13:5106).

From this judgment, DPS appeals, urging the following assignments of error:

1. The trial judge erred in finding that Mr. Tanner's poor vision was a cause of the accident.
2. The trial judge erred in failing to find the plaintiff comparatively negligent.
3. The trial judge erred in stating that he was not required to determine the fault of Mr. Tanner and the truck, and in failing to reduce the state's solidary liability accordingly.
4. The trial judge erred in awarding $123,012.00 for past attendant care.

TRIAL TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE[4]

Mr. Tanner's ophthalmologist, Dr. Thomas Hebert, testified that Mr. Tanner first *510 consulted him on January 22, 1977 because he had been discharged from the Navy in 1966 due to poor vision. Dr. Hebert found that Mr. Tanner suffered from macular degeneration, an untreatable disease where the central part of the retina slowly degenerates for an unknown reason; macular degeneration affects three to five degrees of a person's vision; this affected area is where a person gets his most acute vision; the peripheral vision, which is naturally blurry, is not affected. Dr. Hebert found that Mr. Tanner's vision was 20/100 in his right eye and 20/80 in his left eye. Louisiana requires at least 20/40 vision in one eye for driving.

Dr. Hebert saw Mr. Tanner again on May 11, 1979 and on February 11, 1985. In February, 1985, Mr. Tanner's vision was 20/300 in each eye. A person is legally blind if his vision is 20/200.

Dr. Hebert did not think he had advised Mr. Tanner not to drive. Dr. Hebert was also of the opinion that Mr. Tanner would not necessarily know that his vision was deteriorating so that he should not drive since the disease's progress was so slow. According to Dr. Hebert, many people with vision as bad as Mr. Tanner's drive, although they should not, and "do amazingly well." Dr. Hebert explained that these people have good driving records because they adapt as their vision fails, "because they have learned their limitations and they make the absolute maximum use of their peripheral vision. They watch themselves. They know they are dealing with less vision, so they are more—They concentrate maybe more than the rest of us do."

Mr. Tanner testified that he received his first driver's license in 1963; in 1964, he entered the Navy and was discharged in 1966 due to poor vision. He was color blind and his vision was 20/50 or 20/60 in 1966. Mr. Tanner learned he had macular degeneration in the early 1970's. Mr. Tanner failed an eye examination while renewing a driver's license in 1970 and he was given a form to be filled out by an "eye doctor verifying how my vision was." Mr. Tanner took the form to a Gonzales optometrist who filled it out; he returned the form and was given a license. Restrictions 3 and 4 were placed on the license; these restrictions meant that his eyes could not be corrected and he needed to use a left outside rearview mirror. His last eye examination was in 1985 with Dr. Hebert and he was told his vision was 20/300. Mr. Tanner stated that Dr. Hebert did not tell him he should not drive and Mr. Tanner did not ask Dr. Hebert if he should drive. In 1986, Mr. Tanner renewed his driver's license at the DPS office in Gonzales. He was not given an eye examination. Mr. Tanner was unaware that an eye examination was required when a driver's license was renewed.

Mr. Tanner said that he believed he was a safe driver and that he had been driving for 22 or 23 years with only one minor "fender bender" occurring. He testified that no one told him he should not drive and that he had no reason to believe he should not drive. According to Mr. Tanner, even after the accident, no one from the state told him he should not drive; a week before trial Mr. Tanner was called in by DPS to take a vision test, which he failed. The DPS employee gave him a form to take to a doctor similar to what he received in 1972.

On December 19, 1986, the Tanners left French Settlement between 10:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. to travel to Baxley, Georgia, a 650 mile trip. Mr. Tanner and the plaintiff took turns driving. Mr. Tanner described the accident as follows: He was traveling 50-55 mph on a straight road at night in a light drizzle when the plaintiff (who Mr. Tanner said is legally blind in one eye but has normal vision when corrected in the other) saw the truck and called it to Mr. Tanner's attention. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
589 So. 2d 507, 1991 WL 226421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanner-v-firemans-fund-ins-companies-lactapp-1991.