Watson v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Insurance Co.

459 So. 2d 1235, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 10299
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 1984
DocketNo. 83-CA-1151
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 459 So. 2d 1235 (Watson v. State Farm Fire & 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
Watson v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Insurance Co., 459 So. 2d 1235, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 10299 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

EDWARDS, Judge.

Ora D. Watson, individually and as tutrix of her minor child, Jo Ann, and her six major children sued Earl Creel and his insurer, State Farm Fire and Casualty Insurance Company, for the wrongful death of her husband, Doyle Watson, killed in a deer hunting accident by Earl’s twelve year old son, Shane. She settled with Farm Bureau Insurance Company, Shane’s mother’s insurer, for 85% of the policy limits in exchange for a restrictive release and eonven-ant not to sue Shane. State Farm declined a similar discounted settlement offer, denying any liability on the part of Shane or his father.

At trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants, finding that the decedent, Doyle Watson, was 100% at fault in causing the accident. The trial court entered judgment in conformity with the verdict and dismissed the suit. Plaintiffs appeal.

The principal issue is whether the jury was clearly wrong in finding Doyle Watson solely at fault in causing the accident.

Plaintiffs’ main theory at trial was that Shane mistook Watson for a deer because of the color of Watson’s clothing and that he negligently fired his rifle before properly identifying and distinguishing his target, especially at dusk when visibility was poor. In addition to his vicarious liability for the negligence of his son, plaintiffs base Earl Creel’s personal negligence on his failure to train and supervise Shane in the proper and safe use of his weapon, in allowing Shane to hunt alone, unattended and unsupervised, and in allowing him to use a dangerous rifle, with which he had limited experience and which was beyond his capability and maturity to handle safely.

The defendants’ theory was that Shane actually sighted a deer and fired only after he had properly identified his target. They [1237]*1237contend that Doyle Watson was solely at fault in causing the accident, first, in walking into Shane’s line of fire, after having positioned Shane there himself and instructed him where to watch for emerging deer, and second, in failing to wear the required “hunter’s orange” vest under LSA-R.S. 56:143 or otherwise make himself more visible to Shane and the other hunters.

According to the record, Willie Creel, his son Earl, Earl’s son Shane, and Earl’s sixteen year old stepson, Tony, arrived at Doyle Watson’s farm about three o’clock in the afternoon on December 29, 1981, to go deer hunting. Willie Creel and Doyle Watson had been friends for a number of years. After a short visit, they all drove out into the field behind Watson’s house to position themselves for the hunt. Each hunter was armed with a shotgun, except for Shane, who was using a Marlin .30-30 rifle, which his father Earl had given him for his twelfth birthday a few weeks before. Each was wearing a vest or a jacket with the required “hunter’s orange” under LSA-R.S. 56:143, except for Watson who was wearing a green and brown camouflaged jacket over a white t-shirt, gray work pants, and a dark baseball cap with a white front.

Tony was positioned in a deer stand about 500 yards into the field along the side of a winding road. Shane was positioned in a deer stand farther down on the edge of some woods, overlooking a large field, which was about 433 feet wide and 950 feet long. The field rolled into a slight knoll in the middle and then sloped gradually down to the edge of some woods on the other side. The grass in the middle of the field stood about two feet high. Because of this grass and the knoll, only the upper half of a man, walking along the edge of the woods on the other side, could be seen from the deer stand.

Mr. Watson showed Shane where to watch for the deer, which usually appeared out of the woods on the other side of the field to eat his turnip greens, and told him if he tired of watching from the deer stand or became cold to climb down and sit behind some hay bales close by. Earl Creel was positioned next, farther down out of sight of Shane. Willie Creel and Doyle Watson positioned themselves last.

According to Earl, when the sun began to set a couple of hours later, he climbed down out of his stand to wait for Willie to pick him up in the truck. At approximately 5:25 p.m., he heard the retort of Shane’s rifle. When Willie picked him up, they drove over to Shane’s stand and saw him standing in the middle of the field looking for something. He told them, as they approached, that he had seen and fired at a deer standing next to a puddle of water. They all began looking around for a deer, but after a few moments, Earl found Watson’s body lying face down in a rutted road which paralleled the woods directly across from Shane’s stand. He had been shot once in the head. Death was apparently instantaneous.

According to Shane, after a couple of hours in the stand, he grew cold and moved over to the hay bales. Scanning with the scope of his rifle, he spotted a deer in the middle of the field. It had a brown body and a white patch on its chest and was moving up and down the field. He watched it for about five minutes: It lowered its head to drink from a puddle of water, and when it raised its head up again, Shane fired.

Captain Jack Underwood, Chief of Detectives of the Washington Parish Sheriff’s Department, arrived around 6:10 p.m. He testified that visibility was still pretty good. It was still “good dusk;” not exactly nightfall yet. The position of the body and the trail of footprints indicated that Watson had been walking along the rutted road at the edge of the woods in the direction of his house, apparently heading for home after the hunt. There were no obstructions across the field except for the roll of the hill itself and the knoll in the middle. The distance between Watson’s body and the hay bales measured 461 feet.

Arceneaux v. Domingue, 365 So.2d 1330 (La.1978) obliges us to accept the findings [1238]*1238of the jury, just as we would the findings of a trial judge, when they are based upon a reasonable evaluation of credibility, and prohibits us from reversing those findings, even though we may have made different findings had we tried the case, unless the record as a whole establishes them to be clearly wrong.

In this case, as tragic and as senseless as Mr. Watson’s death was, we cannot say that the jury’s finding is clearly wrong, turning as we think it does on the witnesses’ credibility.

Shane was quite positive in his testimony about actually sighting a deer and firing at it after properly identifying his target:

Q. ... Now, when you were at the stand there, what kind of vision did you have? Would you classify it as good or were there any problems or obstructions to your visibility?
A. Yes, it was good visibility except there was kind of a weed grass about this high all through the field.
# ⅜ >Js sH sjc ⅜
Q. Okay, Shane, now lets go back to, you are saying that you thought you saw something. Okay, now where was it that you thought you saw something at first?
A. ... Where I thought I saw something, I was maybe right about here, and I thought I saw something about there. It was straight in front of me.

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Bluebook (online)
459 So. 2d 1235, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 10299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-state-farm-fire-casualty-insurance-co-lactapp-1984.