United Services Auto. Ass'n v. Craft
This text of 862 So. 2d 353 (United Services Auto. Ass'n v. Craft) 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
UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION and Carol K. Ferguson, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Cecil Raymond CRAFT, Legion Insurance Company, Bo Construction & Dirt Company, Inc. and Ellington Construction Company, Inc., Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*354 Richard L. Fewell, Jr., West Monroe, for Appellant.
F. Williams Sartor, Jr., Monroe, for Appellee.
Before WILLIAMS, GASKINS and PEATROSS, JJ.
WILLIAMS, J.
In this automobile accident case, the defendants, Cecil Raymond Craft and Bo Construction & Dirt Company, Inc. ("Bo Construction"), appeal a judgment assessing them with 100% fault in causing the accident and dismissing their reconventional demand against Carol Ferguson and United Services Automobile Association ("USAA").[1] For the following reasons, we affirm.
FACTS
This motor vehicle accident involved a dump truck operated by Cecil Raymond Craft ("Craft"), owned by Bo Construction and insured by Legion Insurance Company, and a 1995 GMC Suburban operated by Carol K. Ferguson ("Ferguson"), owned by Drs. Ferguson and Lolley and insured by USAA.
On September 12, 1997, at approximately 11:30 a.m., the dump truck and the GMC Suburban collided at the intersection of La. Highway 616, also known as Arkansas Road, and Wallace Road. The intersection of La. Hwy. 616 and Wallace Road is a "T" intersection. La. Hwy. 616 runs east and west and Wallace Road runs north and south, terminating at the south side of La. Hwy. 616. Both roadways are two-lanes and northbound traffic entering La. Hwy. 616 from Wallace Road is controlled by a stop sign.
On the day of the accident, a utility maintenance project was underway at the intersection. Ellington Construction Company, Inc. ("Ellington") employees were working in a manhole located directly in front of the intersection in the northbound lane of Wallace Road. The employees had parked their work vehicle in the northbound lane of Wallace Road to the south of the manhole and placed orange barrels to the south and west of the work site. The construction completely blocked the northbound lane of Wallace Road at the intersection, thereby forcing northbound traffic to enter La. Hwy. 616 from the southbound (westernmost) lane.
*355 Ellington employed Isaac Ward ("Ward") as a flagman to control traffic at the intersection of La. Hwy. 616 and Wallace Road. At trial, a diagram of the accident scene was introduced into evidence. Ward testified that he was standing to the north of the manhole, but east of the southbound lane of Wallace Road and slightly in the eastbound lane of La. Hwy. 616. He testified that, in addition to using a flag, he controlled the traffic entering the intersection from Wallace Road by blocking the open lane of the roadway with an orange barrel when there was traffic on La. Hwy. 616. Ward also testified that when traffic traveling northbound on Wallace Road approached the intersection, he stopped the eastbound traffic traveling on La. Hwy. 616 to allow vehicles to safely enter the highway.
Ward testified that when he saw Craft's dump truck approaching the intersection, he looked to the west, but did not see any vehicles approaching. He then waved Craft's dump truck out onto La. Hwy. 616. As the dump truck entered onto the highway, Ward looked to the west again and saw the white Suburban driven by Ferguson traveling east on La. Hwy. 616. Ward testified that his efforts to signal Ferguson to stop, by jumping up and down and waving his flag, were unsuccessful. He testified that Ferguson attempted to avoid the collision by maneuvering across the center line and veering to her left, but she collided with the dump truck. Ferguson's vehicle went off of La. Hwy. 616, where it ran into a ditch, destroyed two DOTD signs and finally came to rest off of the road some distance to the east.
At trial, Ferguson testified that she regularly traveled La. Hwy. 616 and was aware that the Wallace Road utility maintenance project had been ongoing for several days prior to the accident. She testified there had been flagmen at the intersection, but that none had ever stopped traffic on La. Hwy. 616. She also testified that she did not see Ward at the intersection controlling traffic on La. Hwy. 616 and that as she approached the intersection, she looked to "be sure that I was clear." Ferguson estimated that she was traveling below the speed limit of 45 miles per hour because her grandchild was in the car, she was aware that other children stood beside the road in that area waiting for buses and there were businesses along the highway. Ferguson testified that she did not see the dump truck before it entered La. Hwy. 616 and she did not know whether the dump truck stopped before attempting the left turn.
Craft did not testify at the trial. Two other witnesses, Louisiana State Police Trooper Christopher Towell and Mildred Burford, testified by deposition. According to Trooper Towell, Craft informed him at the scene that Ward had flagged him onto La. Hwy. 616. Craft also informed the trooper that he did not look to his left for traffic on La. Hwy. 616 because he assumed Ward had done so before directing him onto the highway. Trooper Towell testified that Craft related that Ferguson should not have been able to see Ward because he was standing to the east of Craft's dump truck as it entered the intersection and turned left onto the highway. According to Trooper Towell, Ward stated that he was standing next to the manhole at the time of the accident.
According to Burford, she was driving westbound on La. Hwy. 616 and was approaching the intersection prior to the accident. In her deposition she testified:
I was coming up on where Wallace comes out, and I saw a dump truck, I guess. And it was coming out of Wallace onto Arkansas [La. Hwy 616]. And then I saw the other car coming toward *356 me. We were kind of all going together right there, and the dump truck never slowed down. He never stopped. He come onjust come on out in the road and hit her and pushed her off into the ditch.
Burford testified that when she first saw the Suburban, it was less than one-half of a block from the intersection. Burford also testified that because she was so close to Craft's dump truck when it pulled out, she "would have hit him if he had not hit her [Ferguson]." Burford testified that she saw a flagman "off ... both roads completely" on the east side of the dump truck. She also testified that the flagman was not directing the traffic on either La. Hwy. 616 or Wallace Road.
The remaining witness, Alfred Craft, the owner of Bo Construction, did not see the accident, but arrived at the scene shortly after it occurred. He observed that the dump truck was positioned on La. Hwy. 616 and that Ferguson's vehicle was off of the road to the north.
The court granted a directed verdict in favor of Ferguson and USAA with regard to Craft's reconventional demand for personal injury damages because Craft did not appear for trial and his attorney did not assert any claims on his behalf. The court gave thorough reasons for judgment, finding that Ferguson was not at fault in causing the accident. The court found that Ferguson was a credible witness and that her testimony was consistent with Burford's testimony. The court noted that both Ferguson and Burford testified they did not see the flagman attempting to stop traffic and that they were so close in proximity to the dump truck when it entered the intersection that they both were in danger of colliding with it.
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862 So. 2d 353, 2003 WL 22900919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-services-auto-assn-v-craft-lactapp-2003.