Ward Chevrolet Olds, Inc. v. State Farm Automobile Casualty Insurance Co.

843 So. 2d 601, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 1047, 2003 WL 1825735
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 2003
DocketNo. 37,119-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 843 So. 2d 601 (Ward Chevrolet Olds, Inc. v. State Farm Automobile Casualty Insurance Co.) 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
Ward Chevrolet Olds, Inc. v. State Farm Automobile Casualty Insurance Co., 843 So. 2d 601, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 1047, 2003 WL 1825735 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

[, PEATROSS, J.

This appeal arises from an automobile accident that occurred in March 2001 when a vehicle being driven by Joshua Carroll was forced from the roadway by another vehicle driven by a phantom driver which crossed into Joshua’s lane of travel. After leaving the highway, Joshua’s vehicle collided with a third vehicle parked on the premises of Ward Chevrolet Olds, Inc, (‘Ward”). In October 2001, Ward filed suit against John S. Carroll, who is the father of Joshua B. Carroll, and against State Farm Automobile Casualty Insurance Company, which insured the vehicle Joshua was driving. After trial on the merits, the court assessed no fault to Joshua and found the phantom driver to be one hundred percent at fault in causing the accident; Ward appealed. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTS

The accident in this case occurred at approximately 9:00 p.m. on March 25, 2001, as Joshua Carroll was driving south on U.S. Highway 165 in Caldwell Parish in a 1979 Ford Bronco. Sandy Caraway was Joshua’s only guest passenger. Joshua, who was 16 years old at the time of the accident, testified that he was driving at or below the speed limit which he stated was 40 miles per hour. He indicated that he and Sandy were not having a conversation at the time and that no music was playing in the vehicle. Just before the accident, Joshua saw headlights approaching in the opposite lane, and then saw the headlights move over into his lane until all four tires of the oncoming vehicle were in Joshua’s lane. Joshua initially reacted by gradually moving over toward the shoulder, thinking that the |?,driver of the oncoming vehicle would realize that he or she was crossing the center line and return to the northbound lane. Once it was clear, however, that all four tires of the oncoming vehicle were in his lane of travel, Joshua was forced to swerve completely onto the shoulder of the road. According to Joshua, the oncoming car never came onto the shoulder, but Joshua did not have room to continue traveling on the shoulder when he reached the Ward dealership because there were show cars “parked on the shoulder.” Joshua testified that he attempted to get around the line of show cars by aiming for a lane in the dealership’s parking lot behind the line of cars. He was, however, headed towards a fence in the dealership parking lot where other show cars were lined against the back wall of the service garage and the fence. This line of cars required Joshua to also attempt to steer to avoid them, and, in doing so, the driver’s side headlight of his vehicle struck the rear portion of a black truck parked at the Ward dealership.

Sandy, Joshua’s passenger, corroborated Joshua’s testimony by stating that, as he and Joshua were traveling south, a truck traveling north, came into Joshua’s lane and had all four wheels in the southbound lane. Joshua then swerved to miss the vehicle and hit a truck in the Ward dealership parking lot. Sandy responded in the [603]*603negative when asked whether Joshua was speeding, whether Joshua was talking when the accident occurred, whether music was playing at the time and whether Sandy observed any careless or reckless driving by Joshua prior to the accident. Further, Sandy identified the phantom vehicle as a light-colored 13Chevy truck with a chrome-colored toolbox in the back. After the accident, Sandy saw the truck at a carwash north of the dealership.

Sandy was also asked whether, as the phantom vehicle moved into Joshua’s lane, there was enough room for Joshua to travel down the shoulder of the road. Sandy responded in the negative. He also responded in the negative when asked whether he observed any other action that Joshua could have taken other than swerving into the parking lot and hitting the Ward truck.

Jesse Butler was driving his vehicle behind Joshua’s vehicle that night and saw the accident occur. Jesse testified that a truck pulled in front of Joshua and that Joshua veered to the right to avoid hitting it. In doing so, “he turned again and he hit the truck.” Jesse saw Joshua’s brake lights being applied, but had no idea how fast he was going at the time of the accident. Jesse further stated that he did not observe Joshua’s vehicle being operated in any reckless or careless manner before the accident. Jesse’s testimony agreed with the testimony of Sandy that the phantom vehicle turned into the carwash north of the dealership after it had forced Joshua off the road.1 Jesse also indicated that he saw no other option available to Joshua other than striking the phantom vehicle or going off into the Ward dealership parking lot.

Caldwell Parish Sheriffs Office Deputy Billy Varnell investigated the accident that night. As a result of his investigation, he determined that |4Joshua’s vehicle had been heading south on Highway 165 and had “come off at an angle going into the [Ward dealership] parking lot.” He saw no skid marks left in the parking lot by Joshua’s vehicle. According to Deputy Varnell, the witnesses’ stories were “pretty consistent” in stating that a tan or possibly white pickup truck ran Joshua’s vehicle off the road. Deputy Varnell responded affirmatively when asked if there was ample room between the front of the Ward dealership truck and the southbound lane of U.S. 165 for Joshua’s vehicle to make an evasive maneuver without striking any vehicles in the Ward parking lot.

Dennis Ledbetter, general manager of the Ward dealership, went to the scene of the accident after receiving a call from the sheriffs department. He arrived before the vehicles had been moved. Mr. Ledbet-ter indicated that the only tire marks he saw were from the Ward truck that had been moved sideways by the impact. Mr. Ledbetter testified that there was a lane behind the truck of sufficient width for Joshua to travel and return to the roadway if Joshua’s vehicle had been traveling “at an average speed.” According to Mr. Led-better, the paved shoulder adjacent to the southbound lane of the highway was 7 feet wide and the front end of the Ward vehicle was 21 feet from the edge of the shoulder, making the distance from the edge of the highway to the truck approximately 28 feet. Mr. Ledbetter, a former state trooper, had stepped off these distances and stated that they were accurate within a foot one way or the other.

[604]*604The only other witness to testify at trial was Ronnie Ward, the owner of the dealership. Mr. Ward confirmed the measurement of 28 feet available lRfor Joshua to take evasive action. The great majority of Ward’s testimony, however, concerned the amount of damages suffered by the dealership as a result of the accident that damaged the truck.

In written reasons for judgment, the trial court noted that the testimony of Sandy, Jesse and Joshua revealed that Joshua had no alternative but to swerve to the right into the parking lot of the dealership to avoid a head-on collision. The trial court also noted that the witnesses testified that Joshua was traveling within the speed limit and in a careful manner prior to the accident. Although the trial court noted the testimony indicating that the Ward vehicle was approximately 28 feet from the fog line of Highway 165, and that it had been suggested that Joshua could have traveled along the shoulder within the 28 feet instead of striking the Ward vehicle, the trial court concluded that such an argument failed to recognize Joshua was faced with an unexpected, emergency situation.

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Bluebook (online)
843 So. 2d 601, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 1047, 2003 WL 1825735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-chevrolet-olds-inc-v-state-farm-automobile-casualty-insurance-co-lactapp-2003.