St. Petersburg Times
2/4/2011
Robbyn Mitchell
TAMPA — A driver who pulled off Interstate 75 to avoid a plume of black smoke from the vehicle in front of him, but then plummeted down a ditch, was not responsible for his own death, a jury decided Thursday.
Mary Bottini’s eyes filled with tears after the ruling, which ordered GEICO to pay more than $30 million, her attorney said.
Gerard Bottini, then 46, was on his way home from a March 2007 trade show in Miami when a vehicle in front of him on I-75 in Hillsborough County emitted a cloud of dark smoke, dropping his visibility to zero, said Steve Yerrid, an attorney for his estate.
With other traffic to his right and behind him, he pulled off the shoulder.
“What he couldn’t have known is there was a 5-foot ditch,” Yerrid said. Bottini’s Ford pickup plunged down the embankment, and the crash crushed the driver’s side roof down to 3 inches from the seat.
Bottini died and his two co-workers were injured.
GEICO denied the claim. The company’s attorneys argued Bottini wasn’t wearing a seat belt and caused the accident by over-steering in a panic, Yerrid said.
“Unfortunately in some cases, wearing a seat belt doesn’t matter,” he said.