Tommy Dubois, Et Ux. v. Gordon Armstrong

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 2016
DocketCA-0015-0345
StatusUnknown

This text of Tommy Dubois, Et Ux. v. Gordon Armstrong (Tommy Dubois, Et Ux. v. Gordon Armstrong) 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
Tommy Dubois, Et Ux. v. Gordon Armstrong, (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

15-345

TOMMY DUBOIS, ET UX

VERSUS

GORDON ARMSTRONG, ET AL.

Consolidated With 15-346

TAMMY DUBOIS, ET UX

**********

APPEAL FROM THE THIRTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF VERNON, NOS. 74,089 & 74,090, DIVISION C HONORABLE JAMES RICHARD MITCHELL, DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Shannon J. Gremillion, and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Robert A. Mahtook, Jr. Mahtook & LaFleur, L.L.C. P. O. Box 3605 Lafayette, LA 70502-3605 Telephone: (337) 266-2189 COUNSEL FOR: Defendants/Appellees - Scottsdale Insurance Company and SMI Group, Inc. D. Patrick Daniel, Jr. The Daniel Law Firm P. O. Box 37369 Houston, TX 77237 Telephone: (337) 232-7516 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiffs/Appellants - Tommy Dubois and Tammy Dubois THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

The plaintiff, Tammy Dubois, appeals the trial court’s judgment

reducing one of her jury awards pursuant to the granting of a motion for judgment

notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) filed by the defendant, SMI Group, Inc.

(SMI). She also appeals the judgment on the basis that the trial court’s jury

interrogatories and verdict form were defective, causing another improper

reduction in her damage award. Finding no manifest error in the trial court’s

granting of the defendant’s JNOV, and finding no abuse of discretion in its

formulation of the jury interrogatories and verdict form, we affirm the judgment of

the trial court.

I.

ISSUES

We must decide:

(1) whether the trial court manifestly erred in granting SMI’s JNOV and reducing the jury’s award of special damages;

(2) whether the trial court abused its discretion in requiring the jury to allocate a percentage of causation to the subject accident and a percentage of causation to a prior accident occurring seven days before the subject accident;

(3) whether the trial court improperly influenced the jury’s deliberations warranting the admission of juror affidavits on the issue;

(4) whether the trial court erred in ordering that judicial interest attach in 2006 when SMI was made a defendant in the tort suit, rather than in 2004 when the plaintiff filed her workers’ compensation claim against Cubic; and

(5) whether the trial court abused its discretion in taxing costs equally to the plaintiff and the defendant. II.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The plaintiff, Tammy Dubois, was employed by Cubic Applications,

Inc. (Cubic) as a local civilian role-player for the training of military personnel at

Fort Polk. Cubic also hired the defendant subcontractor, SMI, to provide Arabic-

speaking role-players to assist in the military training exercises.

On March 25, 2004, during an exercise, Ms. Dubois sustained injuries

when SMI’s role-players tried to detain her, and she resisted. She sustained

injuries to her left elbow when she hit a wall, and injuries to her left shoulder when

an SMI role-player allegedly grabbed her and raised her left arm up over her head.

She also alleges to have been shoved into a chair, and she alleges cervical injuries.

Ms. Dubois filed a tort suit for this March 25, 2004 incident, which is the subject

of this appeal.1

Seven days earlier, on March 18, 2004, also while working for Cubic,

but not during an exercise involving SMI, Ms. Dubois was injured while unloading

a bookcase or locker from the back of a truck parked on an incline. The bookcase

weighing 175–200 pounds fell and struck Ms. Dubois, injuring her left shoulder

and her neck. Ms. Dubois left work after this accident and iced the injury. She

saw her physician on March 23, 2004, two days before the second accident above.

1 Ms. Dubois’s tort suit in the trial court bears docket number 74,090. Prior to Ms. Dubois’s filing of her suit, her husband, Tommy Dubois, filed a suit for loss of consortium arising from the March 25, 2004 accident, which bears trial court docket number 74,089. In 2008, the trial court granted Tommy Dubois’s motion to consolidate his suit with the suit of his injured wife, Tammy Dubois, and the motion was granted. Shortly before trial in May 2014, the plaintiffs filed a motion to dismiss the claims of Tommy Dubois, which was granted. However, the motion for this appeal was subsequently filed in both of the consolidated cases, and two records were lodged. Thus, we have consolidated appeals in this case, numbered 15-345 and 15- 346.

2 Ms. Dubois filed a workers’ compensation claim against her employer Cubic in

September 2004 for both the March 18 and the March 25 accidents.

The jury was presented with extensive medical records, many of

which contained brief histories of both accidents, and some of which referenced

only the accident with the bookcase. Some of the medical histories stated that Ms.

Dubois pulled a muscle in her neck in the bookcase incident; some stated that her

chief complaint in the role-playing incident was left shoulder pain. Thus, the

medical records showed neck and shoulder injuries in both accidents. Medical

testimony also stated that Ms. Dubois had a degenerative condition that was

aggravated on March 18, 2004. She underwent extensive procedures for cervical

injuries. The medical testimony could not resolve the issue of causation for her

injuries between the two accidents.

The jury also heard much testimony regarding the procedures of role-

playing––the written scenarios, rule books, and reporting; the organization of the

“villages” and the interaction of the local and multi-cultural actors with each other

and the army; the various controls exercised out in the field or the training area

referenced as “the box;” and the responsibilities of the subcontractor SMI for

hiring and training the multi-cultural actors, as well as the responsibilities of the

general contractor Cubic for prepping the actors. The jury heard testimony that

Ms. Dubois was a good role-player but was overzealous and had a history of going

“overboard” in her role-playing.2 She was written up for the incident on March 25

because she resisted when the Arabic-speaking actor, playing the role of a police

2 The field leader testified that he had to calm Ms. Dubois down and had to separate her from a Bosnian female actor on Ms. Dubois’s second day of work after Ms. Dubois threatened to “whip her ass.”

3 officer, was ordered to detain her. The rule-book specifically instructed the actors

that they were not to resist or try to escape when detained.

After deliberations, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Ms. Dubois

and against SMI in the amount of $983,553.71. It found no fault on the part of

Cubic for the actions of SMI’s actors during the role-playing exercise on March

25, 2004. The jury did find Ms. Dubois 50% at fault for her own injuries during

the exercise. The jury also found that 50% of Ms. Dubois’s injuries were caused

by her unrelated accident with the bookcase seven days earlier on March 18, 2004.

After the two reductions, SMI’s liability for its own fault was $245,888.43.

Following trial, Ms. Dubois moved for JNOV to increase the award

reduced by the 50% attribution to the first accident, and the trial court denied her

motion. On appeal, she contends that the trial court erred in asking the jury to

assess percentages of causation to both accidents on the jury verdict form and asks

this court to strike the resulting reduction in her award.

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