Truhan v. Walston

762 S.E.2d 338, 235 N.C. App. 406, 2014 WL 3823721, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 836
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 5, 2014
DocketCOA14-43
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 762 S.E.2d 338 (Truhan v. Walston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Truhan v. Walston, 762 S.E.2d 338, 235 N.C. App. 406, 2014 WL 3823721, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 836 (N.C. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

McGEE, Judge.

We review an order from the trial court that (1) granted summary judgment in favor of Daniel Joseph Truhán (“Plaintiff’), Western Surety Company (“Western Surety”), North Carolina Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company (“Farm Bureau”), and United Services Automobile Association (“United Services”) (collectively, “Third-Party Defendants”); (2) dismissed all counterclaims, and third-party claims of Defendant Susan P. Walston (“Defendant”); and (3) denied the motion for summary judgment filed by Defendant, Defendant David M. Walston, and unnamed Defendant Argonaut Great Central Insurance Company (“Argonaut”). Therefore, the following recitation of the “facts” presents the evidence that was before the trial court in the light most favorable to Defendant and ignores evidence favorable to Plaintiff. Peter v. Vullo, _ N.C. App. _, _, 758 S.E.2d 431, 434 (2014) (for summary judgment “the evidence presented by the parties must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-movant”) (citations omitted).

The following is the evidence taken in the light most favorable to Defendant. The North Carolina Highway Patrol (“Highway Patrol”) received a call from Kaye Howell (“Ms. Howell”), a witness to a two-vehicle accident, at approximately 7:08 a.m. on 30 December 2009. Ms. Howell then called Wayne County Communications to report the accident, and to inform them that no emergency services were needed because there had been no injuries. The Highway Patrol also called Wayne County Communications to report the accident and also informed them that there were no injuries. However, the Highway Patrol did inform Wayne County Communications that the accident was on a curve in the road and a trooper could not get to the scene right away; therefore, traffic control was needed. Ms. Howell called Wayne County Communications again to inform them that a woman who was *408 involved in the accident was arguing with a man she apparently knew, who had arrived at the scene, and that the woman had pushed the man. Ms. Howell asked for the estimated time of arrival of the dispatched deputy, because the woman was “getting a little bit out of hand.” However, Joshua Carroll, who was also involved in the accident, stated: “At no time while I was present at the scene of the collision did I observe any physical violence by anyone.”

Plaintiff was a deputy for the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office. He was leaving a Kangaroo Express located at Highway 117 and Carolina Commerce Drive in Goldsboro on 30 December 2009. Plaintiff overheard the call from the Highway Patrol to Wayne County Communications requesting that a Wayne County deputy respond to the accident and provide traffic control. Plaintiff indicated to Wayne County Communications that he was free, closer to the accident, and could respond. Plaintiff received the okay to respond to the accident at approximately 7:19 a.m. About one minute later, Wayne County Communications began receiving calls of a second accident involving injuries at Highway 117 North and Woodview Drive, approximately one and one-half miles from the Kangaroo Express. This second accident involved Plaintiff and Defendant.

At the time of the accidents, Plaintiff had been working as a deputy for just under three years. Plaintiff was a warrant officer and spent his days serving warrants. Plaintiff only responded to calls when no patrol deputy was available, or there was some other circumstance that warranted departure from Plaintiffs usual duties. Before becoming a deputy, Plaintiff had worked briefly for the Goldsboro Police Department as a school resource officer. Plaintiff explained his “skill, ability, and training” for high speed driving as follows:

I know my limitations of driving. I know when I’m on the limits of traction or handling a vehicle. Everybody - you know if you’re going into a curve whether you’re going too fast. You can - it’s a perception thing. It’s not something I can quantify to you. At no time during that time did I feel that I had exceeded my ability to control that vehicle.

Plaintiff had received no training for emergency driving beyond the Basic Law Enforcement Training certification curriculum he had taken at Wayne Community College in 2004.

Wayne County Sheriff’s Office policy recognizes three kinds of police driving:

*409 Emergency Response Driving: is driving to the scene of a call where there may be a danger to life, or a threat to officer safety, or reported violence or threat of imminent violence.
Pursuit Driving: is the attempt to apprehend a person subject to arrest who is fleeing in a vehicle, and includes “catch up” driving for traffic enforcement purposes before a violator attempts to flee.
Routine driving: is all on-duty driving other than “emergency response driving” [or] “pursuit driving” and includes routine patrol, service of warrants, transportation of prisoners, going to location of non-emergency calls, or other driving in performance of duty.

POLICY TITLE: Emergency Response & Vehicle Pursuits, Wayne County Sheriffs Office General Order (Revised January 7, 2002).

According to the evidence most favorable to Defendant, in the approximately one to two minutes between the time Plaintiff received the call regarding the first accident and the time Plaintiff and Defendant were involved in the second accident, the following occurred. Plaintiff headed north on Highway 117, passed an exit that connected with Interstate 95, passed a school, and passed a fire station before.he reached the intersection of Highway 117 and Woodview Drive. The fire station was about three tenths of a mile south of Woodview Drive. At some point before his collision with Defendant, Plaintiff activated his blue fights, but he did not activate his siren. Trooper L. J. Brum (“Trooper Bunn”) of the Highway Patrol, who investigated the accident, believed the speed limit along part of that section of the road was thirty-five miles per hour (“mph”).

According to a collision analysis report produced by Collision Analyst William J. Kluge, Jr., along that mile-and-a-half section of road, Plaintiff reached speeds over one hundred mph, passed automobiles traveling both north and south, and had his accelerator fully depressed at times. The speed limit at the site of the accident was forty-five mph. Four and one-half to five seconds before the collision, Plaintiff was traveling eighty-six to eighty-seven mph, and was accelerating. Plaintiff was maintaining full throttle acceleration “for at least a couple of seconds when [Defendant’s truck] would have come into view[,]” and maintained full throttle acceleration until approximately one-half second before the impact, at which time Plaintiff removed his foot from the accelerator and began to depress the brake. Plaintiff was traveling approximately *410 ninety-five mph at the time of impact. Plaintiff “should have been on alert and noticed [Defendant’s truck] before [Defendant] began to make her turn and [should have] adjusted his speed accordingly.”

Continuing with evidence presented in the light most favorable to Defendant, Defendant left her house on Woodview Drive, a residential street, shortly after 7:00 a.m. on 30 December 2009.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
762 S.E.2d 338, 235 N.C. App. 406, 2014 WL 3823721, 2014 N.C. App. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truhan-v-walston-ncctapp-2014.