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(GERMAN
MAGANA |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(LUIS
ESPAT |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 364 of 1980
Rajasingham, J.
Mr. Dujon,
for Plaintiff
Mr. D. Courtenay, for Defendant.
Road
traffic accident - Assessment of damages - Accident caused
by sole negligence of Defendant - Need for Plaintiff to
prove actual expenses incurred in repairing motor vehicle
following the accident.
JUDGMENT
The Plaintiff's
claim is for damages arising from an accident, between his
pick-up and a pick-up belonging to the Defendant, on the 27th
of November, 1979. The Defendant, while admitting the collision,
asserts that the collision was entirely due to the negligent
driving of the Plaintiff.
The version
of the accident given by the two parties only agree on the
identity of the vehicles and their respective drivers and
on the damage caused to the vehicles; they differ entirely
on how the accident itself occurred.
The Plaintiff
gave evidence and stated that at about 9:30 a.m. that morning
he was approaching Belmopan, along the main road into Belmopan
called Constitution Drive, when the Defendant drove out of
a "picado" or dirt road on to this main road and
ran into the Plaintiff's vehicle. The Plaintiff says he himself
was pulling up with the intention of taking the second entrance
into the Marsden Gas Station because he had seen friends at
the gas station. He says he saw the Defendant's pick-up on
the dirt road and heard someone call out something which made
the Defendant turn and look back as his vehicle continued
to move forwards. It is the Plaintiff's contention that it
was this lack of attention that caused the Defendant to run
into the Plaintiff's vehicle. The Plaintiff called two teachers,
Christino Dominguez and Diana Shields as his witnesses. The
Plaintiff and his witnesses were all from Orange Walk and
had journeyed to Belmopan to see the Premier. They were thus
comparative strangers to Belmopan. The evidence of Christino
Dominguez and Diana Shields was substantially the same as
that given by the Plaintiff. There were some discrepancies
in their evidence such as which entrance of the gas station
their vehicle was at when the Plaintiff passed. I am of the
opinion that these apparent contradictions arise from their
attempts to describe in words a scene with which they are
not familiar and which they were trying to recall three years
later. I was particularly impressed with the evidence of Diana
Shields. She was very certain of what she said and at pains
to avoid any misunderstanding. She described in graphic detail
the exchange of words that took place immediately after the
incident. She said she told the Defendant right away that
he was at fault, when the Defendant sought to accuse the Plaintiff.
She said she had recognized Magaña's vehicle and was
laughing at him because he was late and had missed "the
meeting" - when the accident occurred. She says she saw
the Defendant look back as he continued to drive out into
the main road and hit the Plaintiff. Dominguez says he was
waiting to drive out of the gas station when the accident
occurred. He said he was coming out of the entrance furthest
from Belmopan. Shields said they were waiting to drive out
of the entrance nearest to Belmopan. There appears to have
been some misunderstanding on the part of Dominguez, perhaps
of the questions, because he goes on to say that the Plaintiff
had not yet passed him when the accident occurred and that
"the road Espat came out of was slightly to the left
of me as I waited at the gas station". The only dirt
road that could be on his left as he came out of the gas station
is the access road into the construction site and that could
only be on his left if he was coming out of the entrance nearest
to Belmopan - as Shields said he was. The other side-road,
Forest Drive, could never be on his left no matter which entrance
of the gas station be came out of. Thus an apparent contradiction
clearly appears to be the result of a misunderstanding on
his part.
I might
deal here in passing with a rather curious line of Defence
to which the Defendant clung tenaciously even in his evidence.
The Plaintiff was cross-examined on the basis that the only
side-road was Forest Drive and that no such access road as
was mentioned by the Plaintiff had ever existed. The Plaintiff
was thus required to call a witness, Oliver Gillett, to prove
that in November 1979, there had indeed been a road giving
access to what was then the construction site for the new
Police Training School. Subsequently in his own evidence,
given after Gillett had stated that such a road had existed,
the Defendant said he could not refute Gillett, but did not
himself remember such a road as he never had reason to use
it. I find it a little difficult to believe that the Defendant,
himself a building contractor resident in Belmopan, could
not remember this access road leading off the main road into
Belmopan and situated across the road from the only gas station
in Belmopan. Perhaps the fact that it only existed for about
a year and does not exist any longer caused the Defendant
to forget it, but it hardly explains his denial when he was
reminded of it by Gillett's evidence.
The Defendant
gave evidence and stated that he had driven past the first
entrance of the gas station and rather than make what he called
a "cumbersome" turn through the second entrance
in his pickup with power steering, he decided to reverse and
enter the gas station to get gas. He said, in examination-in-chief,
that he reversed till he was opposite the entrance and stopped
and that he then looked in front before "moving forward".
He later went back on this and said he stopped after he had
reversed part of the way; he did not say why he did so. However,
he must have realized that the vehicles collided between the
two entrances to the gas station and hence if he said he reversed
up to a point "almost opposite the gas station entrance"
he would literally have gone too far. In his examination-in-chief
he said he went "a few feet" beyond that entrance;
in cross examination he said he had over run that entrance
by 40 feet and later extended that to 60 feet. Whether it
be all the way or part of the way, he said he reversed and
stopped and looked forward, either to turn into the gas station
as was implied in examination-in-chief or for no apparent
reason as appeared to be the case later. Upon looking forward
he says he saw the Plaintiff's vehicle coming at an angle
across the road into him with the Plaintiff himself distracted
by his female passenger. He said the Plaintiff ran into him
as his vehicle remained stationary and the Plaintiff's bumper
hooked his bumper and dragged his vehicle until it lay across
the road. Being curious as to how it was physically possible
for two bumpers to meet head-on and hook each other, I asked
him to explain the phenomenon to me and he then said the Plaintiff
may have seen him at the last moment and attempted to swing
away and caused the bumpers to hook one into the other. I
am afraid the explanation leaves me no wiser.
The Defendant
called Assistant Inspector of Police Lucius Pratt as a witness
to speak of the investigation made by the Police. The evidence
of this witness placed the point of impact in the center of
the road, thus contradicting the Defendant who said he was
on his edge of the road when he was hit. This witness was
shown to be speaking to what he concluded rather than what
he in fact saw or heard. He said in examination-in-chief that
he "enquired from Dominguez and he said he did not see
anything" (unquote). Upon seeking to clarify this, I
learnt that he had merely called generally for witnesses and
none had come forward from a crowd which included Dominguez.
I do not, therefore, feel it safe to rely on this witness
in arriving at my decision.
The structural
damage is consistent with both versions of the accident and
is therefore, not helpful in deciding the matter.
Upon a
consideration of all the evidence I am of the opinion that
the accident occurred in the manner described by the Plaintiff
and his witnesses. The evidence shows that the Defendant entered
a main road from a dirt road while his attention was drawn
elsewhere, and hit the Plaintiff's vehicle almost head on
by swinging towards the Defendant's right in the beginning
of a turn towards the direction in which he was proceeding,
namely towards Hummingbird Highway. The final positions of
the vehicles are entirely consistent with the Plaintiff's
version.
I hold
that the accident was caused entirely by the negligence of
the Defendant. The Plaintiff called one Javier Samos as a
witness to speak to the extent of the damage to his vehicle
and the cost of the repair. According to Samos the repair
was completed within a month of the accident. The Plaintiff
says he could not do it for nearly a year and that it took
fourteen months before he had it done and got back his vehicle.
Samos was very definite that it was completed by New Year
1980, the end of 1979. It may be that Samos is mistaken about
the year, but I do not propose to speculate on that.
I am not
at all happy about the estimate produced by the Plaintiff.
The prospect of spending $7900 to repair a vehicle which when
completed was going to be worth $7,000, does not attract me
at all. The damage described by the Plaintiff is entirely
structural and does not affect the engine, gearbox or axles
and the major part of the suspension; it is entirely damage
to the bodywork and a bent chassis. The evidence also shows
that the estimate was made without ascertainment of actual
cost but by reference to other repairs. Samos said the bonnet
and mudguard were replaced and not repaired. I think that
is an unjustifiable extravagance. The figures $600 and $500
for these items are reduced to $200 and $150 respectively
as being reasonable for knocking out and straightening these
two items; these figures as quoted do not include painting
which is listed separately. The sum set out against the cost
of a radiator is exorbitant. I think that a sum of $400 would
be sufficient to replace the entire core of the radiator.
I therefore reduce the sum set out against the cost of a radiator.
I therefore reduce the sum set out against the cost of a radiator
from $775 to $400. I think the sum of $1800 set out against
"body work" is unjustified in view of the estimate
being based on the replacement of most damaged parts rather
than repair. The repair of the body structure too is separately
listed. Hence this sum can only be for knocking out small
areas of body panels, since the bonnet and mudguard were replaced
by new ones. I therefore reduce the labour charged for bodywork
from $18000 to $600. That would be a fair wage for knocking
out small areas of bodywork, re-aligning chasis and re-settling
the cab. The left door is already listed as a left-side body
structure. Under the title "mechanical parts" is
an item referred to as "beam axle - is bent". This
can only be a reference to the chasis because no other undercarriage
damage has been spoken of by anyone. I cannot accept this
item without some explanation to show that it is not the item
covered by "body work" in the first part of the
estimate. I therefore, disallow it as not proved.
I award
a sum of $5,165.30 as damages incurred in repairing the Plaintiff's
vehicle. I award a sum of $200 as damages arising from the
loss of use of the pick-up for one month.
I give
judgment for the Plaintiff in a sum of $5,365.30 and costs.
In view
of my finding that the accident was caused entirely by the
negligence of the Defendant, I dismiss the Defendant's counterclaim.
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