Terry v. Simmons

215 So. 3d 410, 2017 WL 603976, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 216
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 2017
DocketNo. 51,200-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 215 So. 3d 410 (Terry v. Simmons) 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
Terry v. Simmons, 215 So. 3d 410, 2017 WL 603976, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 216 (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

hln this tort action, the trial court granted judgment notwithstanding the verdict (“JNOV”) in favor of the plaintiff and increased the total award of damages from $46,500 to $96,291.57. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS

This matter arises out of a tragic automobile accident that occurred in Ouachita Parish on June 26, 2013. Da’Veion Bailey, who was 11 years old, was a passenger in a vehicle being driven by his godmother, Lakita Lavender. Lavender’s son, DaSh-awn Wilson, was also a passenger.

Lavender, DaShawn and Da’Veion left Lavender’s home at approximately 7:00 a.m., and traveled south on Louisiana Hwy. 594. The defendant, Alice Simmons, was also traveling south on Highway 594, directly behind Lavender. Simmons unsuccessfully attempted to pass Lavender’s ve-hide. As Simmons was returning to her lane of travel, she “clipped” the bumper of Lavender’s vehicle, forcing Lavender off the road. Lavender’s SUV struck a culvert and rolled over multiple times before coming to a stop. Lavender, who was not wearing a seatbelt, was ejected from the vehicle; the vehicle came to a rest on top of her. Lavender was pronounced dead at the scene. Da’Veion and DaShawn were transported to St. Francis Medical Center via ambulance. Da’Veion suffered soft tissue physical injuries and extensive mental injuries. DaShawn suffered serious physical injuries, including a broken arm.1

|aOn April 14, 2014, Da’Veion’s mother, Sommer Terry, filed a lawsuit, individually and on behalf of Da’Veion. Terry sought damages for past and future. medical expenses, physical pain and suffering, emotional distress, mental anguish and loss of enjoyment of life sustained by Da’Veion as a result of the accident. The plaintiff named Simmons, her husband, Zachary Simmons,2 and their automobile insurer, ANPAC Louisiana Insurance Company, as defendants.

A jury trial was held on March 24-27, 2015. During the trial, multiple witnesses testified, including Simmons, Da’Veion, his mother, a Louisiana state trooper,3 and an eyewitness to the accident. Da’Veion’s treating clinicians—Addie Morris, a family nurse practitioner, Dr. Dan Holt, a chiropractor, Dr. Rita Agarwal, a psychiatrist, and Dr. Beatrice Tatem, a licensed professional counselor—also testified. Additional[415]*415ly, Da’Veion’s medical records, bills and expenses were introduced into evidence at trial.

Andrea Wright testified as follows: she was driving behind Simmons at the time of the accident; she and Simmons had been neighbors for “some years”; she did not know Lavender or the plaintiff; she saw Simmons attempt to pass Lavender’s vehicle and she saw Simmons “clip” Lavender’s vehicle as she attempted “to get back over into the proper lane”; she saw Lavender’s vehicle roll over “maybe three” times before it landed “into somebody’s yard”; she called 9-1-1 from her cellphone before she exited her | ¡¡vehicle; she observed Lavender lying on the ground and she heard Da’Veion and DaShawn “screaming for help”; she was on her way to assist Da’Veion and DaShawn, but other bystanders assisted them out of the rolled over vehicle before she could get to them; she checked on Da’Veion and DaShawn and they were “really scared”; she remained on the scene for approximately two hours; and she did not remember if the investigating officer approached Da’Veion.

The defendant, Alice Simmons, first testified on cross-examination. She testified as follows: she attempted to pass Lavender in a no-passing zone because Lavender was “going slow”; she increased her speed in an attempt to pass Lavender, but she does not know how fast she was traveling; after the vehicles collided, she witnessed Lavender’s vehicle hit the culvert and “flip over” and land on .its side; she only saw the vehicle flip once; she called her husband, but she did not call 9-1-1; she was “frantic and crying”; she did not hear Da’Veion and DaShawn screaming or crying; she did not see Wright attempting to console the boys; and she relives the accident every time she passes the area.

On direct examination, Simmons testified that she was in a passing zone when she initiated the attempt to pass Lavender, but “before I knew it, [I] was in a no passing zone when the accident happened.” Simmons also testified that Lavender seemed to “speed up” as she was attempting to pass her.

Da’Veion testified as follows: he was 11 years old at the time of the accident and 13 at the time of trial; Lavender was his godmother and was like his “second mother”; he was a rear passenger in Lavender’s vehicle; a black truck attempted to pass them; Lavender’s vehicle “flipped over at least | ¿three to four times”; Lavender “had flipped out” of one of the windows of the vehicle and the vehicle “landed on her head”; a man helped him and DaShawn out of the vehicle; his eyeglasses were broken during the accident; he was upset at the scene; he, DaShawn and his stepfather went to the emergency room at St. Francis; his mother stayed at the scene with Lavender; he was crying and upset in the ambulance on the way to the hospital; the doctors at the hospital attempted to examine him, but he was “upset and crying”; the day after the accident, his mother took him to the All Kids R Us clinic because he was experiencing pain in his back, neck and ribs; he was sent to Glenwood Regional Medical Center for X-rays; he was eventually evaluated and treated by Dr. Holt; he treated with Dr. Holt for approximately three months; the chiropractic treatment “helped”; he was not having back, neck or shoulder pain before the collision; he started having pain “the very next day” after the accident; when he went to All Kids R Us the day after the accident, he told the nurse practitioner that he had a headache; he does not remember what treatment the nurse provided for his headache; after the accident, he stopped participating in activities with his family and started “staying to [himself]” in his room; he tried “to put the [416]*416accident out of his mind”; after the accident, he began having “gruesome” nightmares which required his mother to come to his room to comfort him; at the time of trial, he was still taking “sleep medication” to help with nightmares he suffers because of the accident; he began “zoning out or spacing out” because the accident was the only thing he could think about; he takes medication every night; he began attending therapy sessions with Dr. Beatrice Ta-tem; he believes the therapy was beneficial; and the accident does not bother him “quite as much” anymore.

|sOn cross-examination, Da’Veion testified that the accident happened during the summer, and he participated in football when he returned to school in August. He also testified that he talks to his counselor, Dr. Tatem, “mainly about the wreck.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 So. 3d 410, 2017 WL 603976, 2017 La. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-v-simmons-lactapp-2017.