Tullis v. Rapides Parish Police Jury
This text of 670 So. 2d 245 (Tullis v. Rapides Parish Police Jury) 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.
Opinion
Lavelle TULLIS, et ux., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
RAPIDES PARISH POLICE JURY, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*246 Donald R. Wilson, Marksville, for Lavelle Tullis et ux.
Steven Patrick Mansour, Alexandria, for Rapides Parish Police Jury, et al.
Edward E. Rundell, Alexandria, for Continental Insurance Co.
Before KNOLL, THIBODEAUX and AMY, JJ.
AMY, Judge.
This case arises from a vehicular collision between a Schwan's truck and a 1986 Ford Bronco on a Rapides Parish Road. Three children, Nathalie Tullis, Matthew Tullis, and Jennifer Wolfe, who were all backseat passengers in the Ford Bronco, were killed as a result of the accident. Lavelle Tullis and Linda Tullis (plaintiffs), Nathalie and Matthew Tullis' parents, filed suit against the Rapides Parish Police Jury (defendant), contending that the road conditions on the Parish Road were defective, that it was unreasonably dangerous, and that these defects were a cause in fact of the accident. After trial on the merits, the trial court dismissed plaintiffs' claims against defendant. Plaintiffs appealed. For the following reasons, we affirm.
*247 DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD
On the night of March 7, 1990, Cynthia Wolfe asked her school friend, Tracy Tullis, to accompany her to the library in the Wolfe family's 1986 Ford Bronco. Jennifer Wolfe (Cynthia's younger sister), Lavelle Tullis, Jr., Matthew Tullis, and Nathalie Tullis (Tracy's siblings) went with them. On the way home from the library, Cynthia decided to drive by the home of Robert Alexander, a boy whom she liked. While traveling on Gilley Williams Road, a narrow two lane blacktop road in North Rapides Parish, Cynthia Wolfe saw Robert Alexander's vehicle and decided to follow him. While pursuing Robert Alexander, she lost control of her vehicle, crossed the center line and collided with an oncoming Schwan's truck. Nathalie Tullis, Matthew Tullis, and Jennifer Wolfe died as a result of the accident.
Lavelle Tullis and Linda Tullis (plaintiffs), Nathalie and Matthew Tullis' parents, filed suit against the Rapides Parish Police Jury (defendant), contending that the road conditions on Gilley Williams Road were defective, rendering it unreasonably dangerous, and that these defects were a cause-in-fact of the accident.
After trial on the merits, the trial court dismissed plaintiffs' claims against defendant. In written reasons for judgment, the trial court noted that the experts at trial agreed the road is substandard, and cited the following characteristics: that it is too narrow for the volume of traffic, that the travel lanes are nine feet instead of ten feet wide, that the three 25 mph speed signs posted before the bridge were placed closer to the roadway than regulations require because portions of the shoulder along the one mile roadway are not wide enough, and that there are places along the road where there is a 5-7 inch drop-off between the surface of the road and the shoulder. Nevertheless, the trial court concluded that the dispositive issue in this case is whether or not the condition of the parish road actually caused or contributed to the accident. The trial court found that:
the plaintiffs have failed to carry the required burden of proof that the condition of the road caused or contributed to the accident. First, the evidence is insufficient to prove the car went off the road. Second, the evidence is insufficient to prove there was a drop off great enough to constitute an unreasonable risk of harm at any place where the car might have gone off of the road.
Plaintiffs timely perfected this appeal and their sole assignment of error is that the trial court's finding that the defects in Gilley Williams Road were not a cause-in-fact of the fatal accident constituted manifest error.
The record demonstrates that Gilley Williams Road is a mile long, is eighteen to nineteen feet wide, and ends at the Ball Cutoff Road. Furthermore, it was established that there is a bridge 3/10 of a mile south of the Ball Cutoff Road; that there were three posted 25 mph speed limit signs; that Cynthia was traveling north toward the Ball Cutoff Road; and that the collision occurred at a point in the road after Cynthia's vehicle had crossed over the bridge. The Bronco was in a slide and was hit broadside in the southbound lane of travel by an approaching vehicle.
Sergeant Ronald Lewis, investigating State Trooper, testified that the point of impact between the Bronco and the Schwan's truck was 120 feet north of the bridge heading toward the Ball Cutoff Road. He testified that the Bronco was heading sideways when the impact occurred and that the yaw marks present demonstrated that the vehicle had been going sideways for 70 feet. He also testified that he walked the accident scene 100 yards south of the bridge, but he did not find any excessive drop-offs or any evidence that a vehicle had left the road. He further testified that all of the Bronco's yaw marks and sideways skidding took place north of the bridge. Wilbert Sanders, a State Trooper who also investigated the scene, testified that there was no evidence that Cynthia Wolfe had left the roadway.
The record demonstrates that Cynthia Wolfe gave a voluntary statement on March 8, 1990, in which she stated that she hit a bump on the bridge. At trial, she testified that all she remembered was hearing some gravel and hitting a bump or something. Tracy Tullis, front seat passenger, testified *248 that before the bridge "for some reason we swerved and then right in the bridge it was a bump of some kind of something and then she just lost control after that." Lavelle Tullis, Jr., back seat passenger, testified that the vehicle hit a bump in the road. Robert Alexander testified that there was a bump in the bridge which jars a driver to the left. James Fister, plaintiffs' expert in road analysis, traffic engineering, and accident reconstruction, testified that there was an abrupt vertical alignment on the bridge, which a driver would feel and that it was his opinion that the road played a part in the accident.
The trial court determined that the concrete bridge on Gilley Williams Road is slightly higher than the road, causing a "bump" in the roadway, but that "the evidence was insufficient to prove the bump at the bridge constituted an unreasonable risk of harm to the traveling public." In assessing whether a thing presents an unreasonable risk of harm, the utility of the thing is balanced not only against the likelihood and magnitude of the risk; also to be considered is "a broad range of social, economic, and moral factors including the cost to the defendant of avoiding the risk and the social utility of the plaintiff's conduct at the time of the accident." Oster v. Department of Transp. and Development, 582 So.2d 1285, 1289 (La. 1991). A trial court's factual determination about whether a condition is unreasonably dangerous or presents an unreasonable risk of harm is a factual finding which will not be reversed on appeal unless it constituted manifest error. Hunter v. State DOTD, 620 So.2d 1149 (La.1993).
The Parish of Rapides has a duty to make its parish roads reasonably safe for drivers exercising ordinary care and reasonable prudence. Johnson v. American Southern, Ins. Co., 569 So.2d 1071 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1990). Since a Parish is not the guarantor of safety on its roads, the simple fact that an accident occurred does not mean that a condition presents an unreasonable risk of harm or is unreasonably dangerous. Manuel v.
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670 So. 2d 245, 1996 WL 15462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tullis-v-rapides-parish-police-jury-lactapp-1996.