Tigart v. Thompson

774 P.2d 401, 237 Mont. 468, 46 State Rptr. 974, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 150
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1989
Docket88-501
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 774 P.2d 401 (Tigart v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tigart v. Thompson, 774 P.2d 401, 237 Mont. 468, 46 State Rptr. 974, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 150 (Mo. 1989).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court, Ninth Judicial District, granting plaintiffs Brookings and Tigart a new trial, granting them certain attorney fees and costs and ordering the production of an investigative file in the possession of defendant’s insurance carrier. Defendant in the action below, Richard J. Thompson, appeals.

The issues on appeal are whether the District Court erred

(1) by granting plaintiffs’ motions for a new trial based on irregularities in the proceedings which deprived plaintiffs of a fair trial;

(2) by awarding plaintiffs certain attorney fees and costs;

(3) by ordering defendant’s insurance carrier to produce its entire investigative file as it existed prior to the commencement of legal proceedings.

Additionally, under Rule 14, M.R.App.P., respondent Brookings raises the following issue: whether the District Court erred by denying Brookings’ request for a ruling that Thompson individually or Thompson and Tigart jointly were negligent as a matter of law.

We affirm in part and dismiss in part.

*470 This case stems from a single car accident which occurred on the afternoon of January 4, 1985, on U.S. Highway 91 near the City of Conrad, Montana. Plaintiff Tigart was driving his pickup south on Highway 91 with plaintiff Brookings as his passenger. While rounding an icy corner on that highway near the Branding Iron Restaurant and Bowling Alley, plaintiffs encountered defendant Thompson entering the highway in his pickup near the intersection of Highway 91 and Front Street.

To avoid collision, Tigart let off of the accelerator and began pumping his brakes. His vehicle fishtailed on the ice and soon he lost control of it. The pickup veered across the highway and rolled into a steep ditch on the other side, injuring both Tigart and Brookings.

Thompson apparently had not seen Tigart approaching, did not see him swerve and crash, and continued his route until he reached his home in Brady, Montana. Thompson was not aware of any accident or his possible part therein until several days later when he was contacted by Harris, the investigating highway patrol officer about his actions on January 4, 1985.

At trial, plaintiffs offered testimony that Thompson entered the highway negligently from the bowling alley parking lot that day by failing to keep a proper lookout, failing to stop and failing to yield the right-of-way such that he created an immediate hazard to Tigart in violation of § 61-8-341, MCA. Further, plaintiffs alleged that such negligence legally caused their injuries. After the trial commenced, Brookings was allowed to amend his pleading asserting a separate negligence suit directly against Tigart, his driver. Tigart likewise was joined by Thompson as a third-party defendant.

Thompson, during the entire course of discovery and pretrial proceedings, maintained that he knew nothing of the accident, had no knowledge of any actions or circumstances on the day in question and had no independent recollection of whether or not he was even in the vicinity that day. Thompson further denied in answers to interrogatories that he had given any statements to anyone, except for talking with Officer Harris who made no notes of the conversation.

In her opening statement Tigart’s attorney asserted that she could state “with confidence” that Thompson would not refute any of her evidence, and that actually what Thompson would say would be consistent with Tigart’s contentions of what transpired on the highway that day.

Much to the surprise of both plaintiffs, on the opening day of trial, *471 defense counsel stated that the evidence would show that his client had been bowling at the Branding Iron, left the parking lot there, drove to Front Street, and entered the highway from Front Street (not from the parking lot as plaintiffs contended) after stopping at the stop sign, looking both ways and proceeding cautiously. For a defense, Thompson additionally asserted that Tigart was driving too fast for the conditions.

Plaintiffs protested this new development. In chambers defense counsel explained that testimony would come in from Officer Harris who interviewed Thompson in connection with the accident. However, Harris took no notes from his conversation with Thompson and would be relying solely on his recollection of the conversation which occurred some three years earlier.

The trial judge ruled that Harris would not be allowed to testify as an expert witness at trial because he had not been identified by defense counsel as an expert in the pretrial order. Rather, he would only be able to testify as a fact witness as to what occurred at the accident scene when he arrived some twenty minutes after impact. This development and ruling severely limited the testimony that defense counsel could get in to prove the case asserted in opening statements.

However, on the Friday of the first week of trial, after the close of Brookings’ case, defense revealed for the first time that Thompson had actually given a statement to his insurance carrier, Safeco, which was tape-recorded just eleven days after the accident. This came to light during the course of trial when Tigart’s attorney subpoenaed the insurance adjuster and his records. Just before the adjuster was to testify, defense counsel notified the court and the plaintiffs that the statement existed.

The adjuster testified that all investigative files were kept in the Spokane, Washington, regional office. The tape was likewise in Spokane. It was agreed that the tape would be transcribed immediately. The tape was transcribed over the weekend and express-mailed to the Great Falls office where defense counsel turned it over to the plaintiffs for the first time.

Plaintiffs proceeded in trial on Monday and were allowed to read portions of the Thompson statement to the jury. The statement was to the effect that Thompson did not see the Tigart vehicle and had no knowledge of the accident. However, he was at that bowling alley on that day at that time; he remembered the road conditions as being “ripe for skating”; he was “slow getting on the highway”; and he *472 also placed himself at the Front Street intersection, rather than entering the highway from the bowling alley parking lot.

Plaintiffs moved for a new trial based on surprise and for personal sanctions against defense counsel for concealment of evidence. Sanctions were not imposed; however, when a defense verdict was returned by the jury, the trial judge granted plaintiffs’ motions for a new trial. The judge further ordered that defendant pay attorney fees and costs associated with the first trial and incurred from the close of discovery until the completion of the appeal. Finally, the court ordered the defendant to produce the entire Safeco investigative file as it existed prior to the lawsuit being filed, based on a possibility that there may be even more undisclosed witness statements in the file.

Defendant appeals.

I. New Trials

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
774 P.2d 401, 237 Mont. 468, 46 State Rptr. 974, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tigart-v-thompson-mont-1989.