Yrle v. St. Tammany Fire Protection District 1

973 So. 2d 177, 2007 WL 4896234
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2007
Docket2007 CA 0699
StatusPublished

This text of 973 So. 2d 177 (Yrle v. St. Tammany Fire Protection District 1) 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
Yrle v. St. Tammany Fire Protection District 1, 973 So. 2d 177, 2007 WL 4896234 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

JOHN YRLE
v.
ST. TAMMANY FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT #1 AND AMERICAN ALTERATIVE INSURANCE COMPANY.

No. 2007 CA 0699.

Court of Appeals of Louisiana, First Circuit.

December 21, 2007.

ALAN B. TUSA, CAROL T. RICHARDS, Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellant, JOHN YRLE.

JAMES E. MOORE, Jr. Attorney for Defendants-Appellees, St. TAMMANY FIRE PROTECTION, District #1 and American, Alternative Ins. Co.

Before CARTER, C.J., PETTIGREW, and WELCH, JJ.

WELCH, J.

John Yrle, plaintiff, appeals a judgment dismissing his lawsuit against defendants, St. Tammany Fire Protection District #1 and its insurer, American Alternative Insurance Corporation, upon finding that plaintiff was solely at fault in causing a motor vehicle accident. We affirm.

DISCUSSION

On February 11, 2001, a Mardi Gras parade was scheduled to run in the afternoon on Front Street in Slidell, Louisiana. At approximately 12:38, a 911 call was made reporting a fire at Yee's Chinese Restaurant, located on Pontchartrain Drive, near Front Street. The caller reported that fire was coming out of an exhaust fan on the top of the building. Emergency dispatch sent out a general alarm, called out six units to the commercial fire, and instructed them to proceed "Code 3." Code 3, an emergency status, is activated in response to an active fire where there is a potential loss of life, injury to persons, or a substantial threat of property loss. Because of his station's close proximity to the fire, Captain George Elliot, Jr. radioed dispatch to determine if his fire engine, Unit 128, should respond to the fire. Dispatch confirmed and ordered Unit 128 to respond to the fire.

Unit 128 left the West End station and proceeded to Front Street in Code 3 status, with its lights and sirens activated. A call came in over the radio announcing that smoke could be seen in the sky, and Unit 111, the on-scene command unit, announced that smoke was coming from the back of the building. Soon thereafter, the command unit advised all units that the fire at Yee's was a grease fire in the kitchen and requested that dispatch send the first four units called to the fire and cancel the rest. The dispatcher then announced that units 118, 117, 168, and 167 were to proceed to the fire and cancelled all other units per command. Unit 128 made a call into dispatch to ask if it had been cancelled.

Before a response was received, a call came over the radio announcing that flames were coming through the roof. Unit 128, which had dropped down to Code 1 or non-emergency status, resumed its Code 3 status and proceeded along Front Street with its sirens and horns activated.

At the same time, plaintiff was stopped in traffic in the southbound left-hand lane of Front Street on his motorcycle, waiting to make a left turn into the parking lot of a bar to watch the parade with his friends. He observed Unit 128 approaching in his rear view mirror with its lights flashing and heard the sirens. Traffic along both of the southbound lanes of Front Street was congested; however, there was no traffic in the northbound lanes of Front Street. At some point, while traveling down Front Street, Captain Steven Billman, who was driving Unit 128, decided to enter the northbound lanes of Front Street to get around the traffic in the southbound lanes. While Unit 128 was in the northbound lane driving against traffic, plaintiff made a left turn directly into the path of the vehicle and was struck by Unit 128. Thereafter, plaintiff filed this lawsuit seeking to recover damages for injuries to his shoulder and knee sustained in the collision.

A threshold issue presented to the trial court was the appropriate standard of care applicable to Captain Billman, the driver of Unit 128. Louisiana Revised Statutes 32:24(B)(4) permits a driver of an authorized emergency vehicle, who is responding to an emergency call, to disregard regulations governing the direction of movement for vehicles. The Louisiana Supreme Court determined that a driver of an emergency vehicle whose actions fall under La. R.S. 32:24 will be liable only if his conduct constitutes reckless disregard for the safety of others and thus rises to the level of gross negligence. Lenard v. Dilley, XXXX-XXXX, pp. 6-7 (La. 1/15/02), 805 So.2d 175, 180. For a case to fall under this standard, an emergency vehicle must be authorized and the driver must be: (1) responding to an emergency call; (2) the accident must arise out of one of the listed driver actions, including moving against the normal flow of traffic, and (3) the driver must make use of audible or visual signals sufficient to warn motorists of their approach. Dilley, XXXX-XXXX at p. 7, 805 So.2d at 180. If the emergency vehicle driver's conduct does not fit the statute, his actions must be gauged by a standard of ordinary negligence. Id.

At trial, plaintiff insisted that Unit 128 had been cancelled from its Code 3 status and should have been proceeding Code 1 at the time of the collision, which would obligate it to obey the normal regulations governing traffic. Defendants insisted that Unit 128 had properly resumed its Code 3 status upon hearing the radio transmission that flames were going through the roof, and that all of the requirements of La. R.S. 32:24 had been met. Accordingly, defendants insisted they could only be liable to plaintiff if Captain Billman acted in reckless disregard for the safety of others.

The evidence on this issue consisted of a tape of the radio transmissions broadcast near the time of the fire, the testimony of Captain Billman and Captain Elliot, who rode in Unit 128 that day, as well as the testimony of Fire Chief Larry Hess and plaintiff's expert witness, Wilmer Dane. Captains Billman and Elliot testified that they initially responded Code 3 to the fire, but stepped down to Code 1 after hearing it was a grease fire. However, they testified, upon hearing that there were flames through the roof, they stepped back up to Code 3 to respond to the fire.

Chief Hess and Mr. Dane testified as to whether Captain Billman's actions in resuming Code 3 status were consistent with normal firefighter practices. Plaintiff sought to exclude the testimony of Chief Hess on the ground of relevancy because he was not the fire chief at the time of the accident, but was hired in October of 2002. The court overruled the objection, believing that the fact Chief Hess was not the fire chief on the date of the accident would go to the weight of his testimony. Chief Hess testified that if a responder heard a transmission that flames were going through a roof, the normal procedure would be to resume under the proper working code for a fire, which is Code 3. He attested that there was no need for the officers to wait for dispatch to tell them to resume to Code 3. Mr. Dane, however, disagreed and opined that the operators should have been in Code 1 status at the time of impact. He opined that Captains Billman and Elliot should have terminated their response to the fire and believed that at the time of the collision, they had self-dispatched and were "free-lancing." On cross-examination, it was revealed that Mr. Dane's opinion was based on his belief that the collision occurred before the transmission of flames coming through the roof was broadcast. On cross examination, Mr. Dane admitted that if the transmission about flames coming through the roof was heard before the collision, he would give the operators some leeway and would conclude that resuming Code 3 status was acceptable.

After considering all of the evidence, the trial court determined that Unit 128 was operating under Code 3 status at the time of the collision.

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Related

Stobart v. State Through DOTD
617 So. 2d 880 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1993)
Lenard v. Dilley
805 So. 2d 175 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2002)

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973 So. 2d 177, 2007 WL 4896234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yrle-v-st-tammany-fire-protection-district-1-lactapp-2007.