Wilson Jolivette v. Ray Hebert

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 12, 2016
DocketCA-0016-0246
StatusUnknown

This text of Wilson Jolivette v. Ray Hebert (Wilson Jolivette v. Ray Hebert) 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
Wilson Jolivette v. Ray Hebert, (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

16-246

WILSON JOLIVETTE

VERSUS

RAY HEBERT, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF IBERIA, NO. 123073 HONORABLE EDWARD LEONARD, JR., DISTRICT JUDGE

SHANNON J. GREMILLION JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Shannon J. Gremillion, and D. Kent Savoie, Judges.

AFFIRMED AS AMENDED.

Jerry J. Falgoust Falgoust and Caviness, LLP P.O. Box 1450 Opelousas, LA 70571-1450 (337) 942-5812 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Wilson Jolivette George R. Privat Tucker F. Giles Michael M. Thompson Law Offices of Keith S. Giardina 9100 Bluebonnet Centre Boulevard, Suite 300 Baton Rouge, LA 70809 (225) 293-7272 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS: Peerless Insurance Company Ray Hebert Hangariff's Machine Shop, Inc. GREMILLION, Judge.

The plaintiff, Wilson Jolivette, appeals the jury‘s determination that he was

70% at fault in a pedestrian/truck accident. He further appeals the jury‘s award of

$56,000 in damages. Defendants, Ray Hebert, Hanagriff‘s Machine Shop, Inc.,

and Peerless Insurance Company, filed a brief in April 2016, urging that the jury

erred in assigning fault to Ray Hebert. Additionally, in June 2016, the defendants

filed a brief arguing that the jury did not commit manifest error in its damage

awards. For the following reasons, we affirm as amended.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On October 9, 2012, Jolivette departed his employment at Valerus in New

Iberia, Louisiana, on foot and attempted to cross the frontage road adjacent to

Louisiana Highway 90 to await the arrival of his nephew, Milton Prejean, who

sometimes brought Jolivette to and from work. Hebert, who was employed by

Hanagriff‘s Machine Shop, Inc., was driving his employer‘s 2005 two-ton

International flatbed diesel-engine truck. Jolivette‘s right hand collided with the

driver‘s side mirror of the truck operated by Hebert, causing Jolivette to spin.

Jolivette fractured his wrist and his left ankle.

Jolivette filed a petition for damages in August 2013. Following a two-day

jury trial in July 2015, the jury found Hebert 30% at fault and Jolivette 70% at fault

in causing the accident. The jury awarded Jolivette $10,000 for physical pain and

suffering, past and future, $36,000 for past medical expenses, and $8,600 for past

loss of earnings, for a total of $54,600 in damages. Jolivette assigns as error the

jury‘s assessment of fault and general and special damage awards. Hebert assigns

as error the allocation of 30% fault to him. DISCUSSION

Testimony

Hebert testified that he has been employed with Hanagriff‘s Machine Shop

for thirty-nine years. Hebert said that on the day of the accident he had delivered

some parts and was returning to the plant in Centerville, Louisiana. He said the

International truck that he was operating was white, approximately thirty-five feet

long, and nine feet tall. He was familiar with the route and had traveled it before.

He said that it was a sunny, clear day at around 4:00 p.m. when the accident

occurred. Hebert was on the service road adjacent to Louisiana Highway 90. The

roadway was dry and straight and there was no traffic that obscured or blocked his

vision. Hebert said he does have a restriction on driver‘s license for partial vision

loss in one eye. Hebert said that he did see Jolivette prior to the accident occurring.

Hebert testified that he was traveling about 45 miles per hour prior to and

when the accident occurred. Hebert did not apply his brakes or blow his horn. He

admitted that he saw Hebert walking towards the roadway and stepping into the

roadway in the direction that he was traveling. Hebert said that he was about

twenty or twenty-five feet away when he saw Jolivette stepping onto the road from

the shoulder into the lane adjacent to the one Hebert was travelling in.

Hebert reviewed some photographic evidence showing the location of the

accident, and the skid marks left in the road after he hit his brakes following

impact, which indicated he had veered off to the shoulder. Hebert testified: ―I

observed him getting ready to step onto the road. I looked away to see where I was

going, and that‘s the last I seen [sic] him until he spun away from the truck.‖

Hebert said that Jolivette apologized for walking into the truck and said he was

looking the other way for his ride.

2 Rachel Louviere testified that she witnessed the accident. Louviere had

been traveling behind Hebert‘s truck. Louviere had been on the telephone with her

sister-in-law at the time of the accident. She testified:

I . . . I was on the phone and it took me enough time to tell my sister- in-law ―Is he going to stop?‖ and she was like, ―what?‘ And I said, ―The man that‘s crossing onto the road, he‘s going to walk into that truck. Oh my God, I have to hang up he just walked into the truck.‖ . . . . He ran into the truck.

Louviere said that Jolivette was looking towards New Iberia, in the direction

that his ride would approach from. She said that Jolivette never turned and looked

to the right in the direction she and Hebert were traveling from Lafayette.

Louviere said that upon impact with Hebert‘s vehicle, Jolivette ―flew up into the

air and landed on the ground really hard.‖ She noticed that his ankle was twisted.

On cross-examination, she said that Jolivette apologized for not noticing the truck.

Jolivette, who was sixty years old at the time of trial, testified that he had

been employed as a diesel mechanic for the majority of his life. He began working

at Valerus in 2012, about five or six months before the accident occurred, earning

$15.00 per hour. At the time of trial, Jolivette was still employed by Valerus.

Jolivette said that, on the days when his nephew would pick him up from work, he

would look both ways before crossing the service road while standing in the

Valerus driveway. He said he did not see the Hebert truck and started walking

across the service roadway. He testified:

Q. When you proceeded to cross the roadway, what direction were you looking?

A. I was looking to the left. Q. Okay. Did you ever look back to the right before the accident occurred?

A. No, sir.

3 ....

Q. But while you were walking across the road, you didn‘t look back either?
A. No, I didn‘t look back. I kept looking to the left.

Jolivette said that the truck mirror hit his hand, causing him to spin around

fast and break his ankle. Jolivette was transported to the emergency room at

Lafayette Regional, where medical personnel performed X-rays and bandaged his

ankle and wrist. By the next morning, Jolivette‘s girlfriend noticed that his hand

was turning black. Jolivette decided to go to a different hospital—Lafayette

General—where medical staff again took x-rays, but found that his hand was

fractured and his ankle was broken. The following day, surgery was performed on

his wrist and pins were placed. Jolivette said the hospital wanted to perform

surgery on his ankle, but because he had no health insurance at the time, he was

referred to Earl K. Long hospital in Baton Rouge. Jolivette then went to Earl K.

Long, where he was going to have surgery on his ankle. However, the surgery was

cancelled due to Jolivette‘s potassium levels being too high. Jolivette did not have

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