Yellott v. Underwriters Ins. Co.

915 So. 2d 917, 2005 WL 2085661
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2005
Docket2004-1342
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 915 So. 2d 917 (Yellott v. Underwriters Ins. 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
Yellott v. Underwriters Ins. Co., 915 So. 2d 917, 2005 WL 2085661 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

915 So.2d 917 (2005)

M. Jayne YELLOTT
v.
UNDERWRITERS INSURANCE COMPANY and Sabine Pools, Inc.

No. 2004-1342.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

August 31, 2005.

*920 Rudie R. Soileau, Jr., Lake Charles, LA, for Plaintiff/Appellant — M. Jayne Yellott.

Patrick J. Briney, Richard R. Montgomery, Briney & Foret, Lafayette, LA, for Defendants/Appellees — Sabine Pools, Inc. and Underwriters Insurance Company.

V. Ed McGuire, III, Plauche', Smith & Nieset, Lake Charles, LA, for Intervenor/Appellee — State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.

Court composed of ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge, JIMMIE C. PETERS, MARC T. AMY, MICHAEL G. SULLIVAN, and ELIZABETH A. PICKETT, Judges.

THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

This personal injury action, arising out of a car collision between a left-turning pickup truck and the plaintiff's vehicle, which was attempting to pass, was tried by jury and resulted in a fault allocation of 50% to each driver. The jury awarded the plaintiff, M. Jayne Yellott ("Yellott"), $10,000.00 for loss of past earnings and $90,000.00 for past, present, and future medical expenses. However, the jury rejected Yellott's request for general damages and damages for loss of future earning capacity. Yellott has appealed, contending that a reallocation of fault is necessary based on the evidence presented at trial and that the damage award should be requantified and further modified to reflect general damages and damages for loss of future earning capacity.

The defendants, Sabine Pools, Inc. and its insurer, Underwriters Insurance Company (hereafter collectively referred to as "Sabine Pools"), answered the appeal, seeking an increase in the allocation of fault to Yellott and additionally seeking a reduction in all monetary damages awarded to her. Sabine Pools has also asked this court to modify the assessment of court costs imposed by the trial court.

Both parties have asked this court to consider whether a new trial is due as a result of the trial court's denial of the parties' respective motions to preclude lay opinion testimony of fact witnesses for both sides, which the parties contend constituted inadmissible and prejudicial testimony. We conclude that the trial court *921 committed legal error in allowing the lay opinion testimony of Trooper Ronald Mann and witnesses David Bunch and Michael LeLeux. We decline to remand for a new trial. Rather, because these legal errors interdicted the fact-finding process and were prejudicial, we conduct a de novo review of the record.

For the following reasons, we reverse the portion of the judgment which rejected the plaintiff's claims for general damages and damages for loss of future earning capacity. We award $100,000.00 in general damages and $181,694.00 for loss of future earning capacity. Further, we increase the award of damages to the plaintiff for past loss of earnings to $23,189.00 but decrease the award of medical expenses to the plaintiff to $34,500.00. Finally, we reallocate the assessment of fault to ninety percent to Sabine Pools, Inc. and ten percent to Ms. Yellott and trial court costs similarly of ninety percent to Sabine Pools, Inc. and ten percent to Ms. Yellott. The judgment is affirmed in all other respects.

I.

ISSUES

This appeal presents multiple issues. First, both sides of this dispute have asked this court to determine whether the trial court's admission of certain lay opinion testimony from multiple fact witnesses constituted error that necessitates a new trial. Additionally, this court is faced with the question of whether the jury's allocation of fault and its damage awards are reasonable based on the evidence presented at trial. Finally, this court has been asked to consider whether the trial court's assessment of court costs to the parties should be modified.

II.

FACTS

On August 21, 2000, a car accident occurred between Yellott, who was driving a Pontiac Grand Am, and David Bunch ("Bunch"), the employee/driver of a Sabine Pools GMC 3500 extended cab, heavy duty pickup truck. The events leading up to and during the accident are disputed, as well as the extent of Yellott's resulting injuries.

Shortly before the accident occurred, Bunch turned west onto Louisiana Highway 379 from an intersecting roadway, Independence Road, at a distance of approximately one mile ahead of Yellott's approaching vehicle. Highway 379 is a paved, two-lane roadway where passing is permitted. The speed limit is 55 miles per hour. Bunch testified that after seeing the approaching vehicle, he turned left onto the highway and turned on his left turn signal. He claims that he never exceeded 25 miles per hour once he turned onto the highway since he intended to make a left turn into the driveway of a co-worker's home, located about 100 yards west of the intersection.

Yellott, who was traveling westward in the right lane of Highway 379 in her Pontiac Grand Am, approaching Independence Road, was being followed by her friend, Rebecca Hoffpauir ("Hoffpauir"), who was driving a Ford Mustang. They both testified to seeing the Sabine Pools truck turn left onto Highway 379 off of Independence Road as they approached and confirmed that the driver was proceeding at a slow rate of speed, well below the speed limit, once on the highway. Both denied seeing a turn signal or any other indication from the driver that he was intending to make a turn.

Yellott testified that after driving behind the truck for a short distance, she decided *922 to pass it. Hoffpauir testified that she continued to drive in the right lane of the highway behind the Sabine Pools truck while Yellott began to pass. Yellott contends that after determining there was no oncoming traffic, she drove across the centerline into the left lane of the highway and increased her speed to attempt to pass the Sabine Pools truck. While in the process of overtaking the truck, she asserts that its driver, without warning or signaling in any manner, began a left turn, crossing over the centerline, directly into her lane of travel. Because of her position virtually parallel to the truck, she applied her brakes, but claims to have been unable to avoid the collision.

The record reflects that the collision with Yellott's vehicle bent the truck's large side mirror backwards towards the truck, and caused damage to the truck's front driver's side wheel assembly and tire. No other physical damage to the truck is evident from the record. Likewise, the only apparent physical damage to Yellott's car that was established in the record was damage to its front passenger side quarter panel. The impact knocked her car to the left and off of the roadway, where it vaulted a roadside ditch and came to rest in a neighboring lot. Yellott's airbags deployed as a result of the accident. Bunch stopped the Sabine Pools truck in the driveway that he was attempting to enter. Yellott argues in this appeal that the nature of the physical damage to both vehicles is evidence of their vehicles' respective locations at the time of the crash and is, consequently, evidence of Bunch's sole fault in causing it.

Sabine Pools' theory of how the accident occurred is based primarily on the testimony offered by Bunch and a co-worker, Michael LeLeux ("LeLeux"), who was riding as a passenger in the Sabine Pools truck at the time of the accident. Bunch claims that Yellott was solely responsible for the accident because she crashed into the truck as he was in the process of a lawful, left turn.

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Bluebook (online)
915 So. 2d 917, 2005 WL 2085661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yellott-v-underwriters-ins-co-lactapp-2005.