Court Opinion

ID: 7801711
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-18 15:07:26.518718+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:29:20.138249
License: Public Domain

STATE OF LOUISIANA

                             COURT OF APPEAL

                               FIRST CIRCUIT

                                2021 CA 1617

ASHLEY NICHOLE MAJOR BARES AND JAMES WESLEY MAJOR

                                  VERSUS

        PROGRESSIVE GULF INSURANCE COMPANY, ET AL

                            DATE OF JUDGMENT.            AUG 10 2022

    ON APPEAL FROM THE EIGHTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT,
        PARISH OF WEST BATON ROUGE, STATE OF LOUISIANA
                          NUMBER 45465, DIVISION C

                     HONORABLE ALVIN BATISTE, JR., JUDGE

Ralph L. Fletcher                       Counsel for Plaintiffs -Appellants
Ryan Chenevert                          Ashley Nichole Major Bares and
Baton Rouge, Louisiana                  James Wesley Major

John P. Wolff, III                       Counsel for Defendant -Appellee
Brian T. Butler                          Cashiola, Inc. and/ or Cash' s Casino,
Tori S. Bowling                          Inc. d/ b/ a Cash' s Truck Plaza
Sydnee D. Menou
Baton Rouge, Louisiana

               BEFORE: GUIDRY, HOLDRIDGE, AND CHUTZ, JJ.

Disposition: REVERSED AND REMANDED.
CHUTZ, J.

       Plaintiffs -appellants, Ashley Nichole Major Bares and James Wesley Major,
appeal the trial court' s judgment, granting summary judgment and dismissing their
claims for damages for the wrongful death and survival actions of James D. Major
 decedent) against defendant -appellee, Cashiola, Inc. and/ or Cash' s Casino Inc.

d/ b/a Cash' s Truck Plaza ( Cash' s),   finding Cash' s falls within the ambit of immunity
provided for the recreational use of its property. We reverse and remand.

                FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       On June 15,     2019, while operating a three-wheeler on Plaza West/Future

Street in Port Allen, Louisiana, decedent encountered a load of sand left in the

roadway and flipped. Decedent was thrown off the vehicle, sustained blunt force

trauma to his head, and died. His major children, Ashley and James ( collectively,
the Majors),   filed this lawsuit on September 5, 2019. They named as defendants

Beezy Trucking, LLC ( Beezy Trucking), its employee Roy M.                        Jones, and its

insurer, Progressive Gulf Insurance Company ( Progressive),               based on allegations

that Jones, while in the course and scope of his employment with Beezy Trucking,

had dumped the sand onto the roadway. The Majors additionally asserted

allegations of liability against Cash' s, averring that its negligence was a cause of

decedent' s death. Also named as a defendant was COSOGI, LLC ( COSOGI),                       who

the Majors averred had an ownership interest in the roadway upon which the

decedent died.'

 The record shows that after the Majors filed their petition, the matter was removed to federal
court based on allegations of diversity jurisdiction. After the federal court granted leave allowing
the Majors to file a supplemental and amending petition apparently adding COSOGI as a party,
the matter was remanded back to the 18th Judicial District Court ( JDC) for the Parish of West
Baton Rouge. Although this appeal record does not contain a copy of the amended pleading filed
in the 18th JDC, the parties do not dispute that COSOGI was duly named as a defendant in this
litigation.

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      On June 9, 2020, COSOGI filed a motion for summary judgment, claiming
that it was entitled to recreational use immunity. The trial court granted the motion

and dismissed COSOGI from the litigation in a judgment signed on December 2,

2020. That judgment was not appealed and is final.
                                                                  The Majors subsequently

settled and compromised their claims against Beezy Trucking,                          Jones,     and

Progressive, and on April 28, 2021, the trial court signed a judgment dismissing

these defendants from the lawsuit. Thus, only the Majors' claims against Cash' s

remain.

      Cash' s filed a motion for summary judgment on April 21,                    2021, asserting

that like COSOGI, it is immune from liability for the Majors' claims because of the

recreational use of the property at the time of the accident. After a hearing on
August 25, 2021, the trial court granted the motion and dismissed the Majors'

claims against Cash' s. The trial court signed a judgment on September 16, 2021

that the Majors have appealed.

                                      DISCUSSION

      After an opportunity for adequate discovery, a motion for summary

judgment shall be granted if the motion, memorandum, and supporting documents
show there is no genuine issue of material fact and the mover is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law. La. C. C. P. art. 966( A)(3). The summary judgment

procedure is favored and shall be construed to secure the just, speedy,                          and

inexpensive     determination   of    every   action.    La.    C. C. P.   art.    966( A)(2).    In

determining whether summary judgment is appropriate, appellate courts review

evidence   de    novo   under   the   same    criteria   that    governs     the     trial   court' s

determination of whether summary judgment is appropriate. In re Succession of

Beard, 2013- 1717 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 6/ 6/ 14),   147 So. 3d 753, 759- 60.

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        The initial burden of proof is on the party filing the motion for summary
judgment. La. C. C. P. art. 966( D)( 1).     The mover may meet this burden by filing

supporting documentary evidence consisting of pleadings, memoranda, affidavits,

depositions,     answers    to   interrogatories,   certified   medical    records,   written

stipulations, and admissions with the motion for summary judgment. La. C. C.P.

art.   966( A)(4).   The mover' s supporting documentary evidence must prove the

essential facts necessary to carry its burden.          Thus,   in deciding a motion for

summary judgment, the court must first determine whether the supporting

documents presented by the mover are sufficient to resolve all material fact issues.

Crockerham v. Louisiana Merl. Mut. Ins. Co., 2017- 1590 (                 La. App.    1st Cir.

6/ 21/ 18), 255 So.3d 604, 608.

         It is only once the motion for summary judgment has been properly

supported by the moving party, and the mover has made a prima facie showing that

the motion for summary judgment should be granted, the burden shifts to the non-

moving parties to produce factual support, through the use of proper documentary

evidence attached to their opposition, sufficient to establish that they will be able

to satisfy their evidentiary burden of proof at trial, that is, the existence of a

genuine issue of material fact or that the mover is not entitled to judgment as a

matter of law. Trichell v. McClure, 2021- 1240 ( La. App. lst Cir. 4/ 8/ 22), ---       So. 3d

             2022 WL       1053500,   at *   2. Because the applicable substantive        law

determines materiality, whether a particular fact in dispute is material must be

viewed in light of the substantive law applicable to the case. Bryant v. Premium

Food Concepts, Inc.,       2016- 0770 ( La. App.    1st Cir. 4/ 26/ 17), 220 So.3d 79, 82,

writ denied, 2017- 0873 ( La. 9/ 29/ 17), 227 So. 3d 288.

         The only issue raised in Cash' s motion for summary judgment was whether

the Majors' claims against Cash' s are correctly dismissed because the property was

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used for a recreational purpose at the time of the accident, thereby immunizing

Cash' s from liability. The Majors contend that even in light of Cash' s showing,
outstanding issues of material fact remain as to whether the decedent was using the

three-wheeler for recreational purposes precluding summary judgment.

       In Louisiana, limitation of liability is statutorily afforded to owners and

operators of property used for recreational purposes. Because the Recreational Use

Statutes are in derogation of common or natural rights, they are strictly interpreted
and must not be extended beyond their obvious meaning. Fournerat v Farm
Bureau Ins. Co.,        2011- 1344 ( La. App.         1st Cir. 9/ 21/ 12), 104 So. 3d 76, 81, writ

denied, 2012- 2148 ( La. 11/ 21/ 12),       102 So. 3d 59 ( citing Monteville v. Terrebonne

Parish Consol. Gov' t, 567 So. 2d 1097, 1100 ( La. 1990)). 2

       La. R.S. 9: 2795 provides in relevant part:

        A) As used in this Section:

         1) "    Land" means urban or rural land, roads, water, watercourses,
       private ways or buildings, structures, and machinery or equipment
       when attached to the realty.

        2) " Owner" means the possessor of a fee interest, a tenant, lessee,
       occupant or person in control of the premises.

        3) " Recreational purposes"   includes but is not limited to any of the
       following, or any combination thereof: hunting, fishing, trapping,
       swimming, boating, camping, picnicking, hiking, horseback riding,
       bicycle riding, motorized, or nonmotorized vehicle operation for
       recreation purposes, nature study, water skiing, ice skating, roller
       skating, roller blading, skate boarding, sledding, snowmobiling, snow
       skiing, summer and winter sports, or viewing or enjoying historical,
       archaeological, scenic, or scientific sites....

        B) (      1)   Except for willful or malicious failure to warn against a
       dangerous condition,         use,   structure,     or activity, an owner of land,
        except    an    owner     of   commercial         recreational   developments    or

        facilities, who permits with or without charge any person to use his
        land for recreational purposes as herein defined does not thereby:

2 Although the immunity afforded to those whose property is used for recreational purposes is set
forth in the provisions of both La. R.S. 9: 2791 and 2795, it is undisputed in this appeal that only
the provisions of the latter statute are before us.

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          a)
                  Extend any assurance that the premises are safe for any
        purposes.

          b) Constitute such person the legal status of an invitee or licensee to
             whom a duty of care is owed.

         c) Incur liability for any injury to person or property caused by any
        defect in the land regardless of whether naturally occurring or man-
        made. [ Emphasis     added.]

        Cash' s bore the burden of proof both as the moving party seeking summary

judgment and as the party asserting the affirmative defense of immunity.             See

Bailey v. Dept of Vulture, ,Recreation & Tourism, 2021- 0227 ( La. App. 1st Cir.

11/ 4/ 21),    332 So. 3d 679, 685. To succeed, Cash' s was required to establish that at

the time of the accident, the decedent was using Cash' s property for recreational

purposes. See Fournerat, 104 So. 3d at 82.

        In support of its motion, in addition to pleadings elsewhere contained in the

record,
           Cash' s attached a copy of the transcript of the hearing of COSOGI' s

motion for summary judgment and the deposition testimonies of Ruth Bilbe,

COSOGI' s corporate representative; Anthony " Tony" James Cashiola, Cash' s

corporate representative; and Jones.

        Bilbe explained that her great grandfather had purchased a large amount of

property in West Baton Rouge Parish. In the 1990s, a portion was sold to Cash' s.

Through inheritance, Bilbe acquired ownership of the approximately 120 -acre tract

of land adjacent to Cash' s from her mother. COSOGI was formed as the owner of

the tract of land from three entities created by the parents of the present- day

owners. Although Bilbe periodically drove over the roadway where the accident

had occurred, she did not know who built the road or the purpose for which it had

been constructed. She denied anyone at Cash' s had sought COSOGI' s permission

to use the roadway to allow the general public to get to Cash' s business

establishment but admitted that if a right of passage had been given to Cash' s in

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1998, it was her mother who had managed the property and Bilbe knew nothing
about the property management at that time. She also stated that who owned the

roadway was always " a gray area" and that COSOGI was never sure until the

accident occurred.

      Cashiola explained that he was a co- owner of the Cash' s facility, which
consists of a truck stop ( that apparently contains a store and a restaurant), a parking

lot, and a casino. According to Cashiola, he had purchased approximately seven
acres upon which Cash' s is situated in three transactions from COSOGI' s

predecessor -in -interest. The last purchase included a servitude allowing Cash' s to
access the back parking lot of the Cash' s establishment. Cashiola stated that he

poured the concrete for the roadway on the property he owned as well as for the

roadway upon which his servitude was located. He explained that using his private

roadway when connected to the servitude roadway on the property owned by

COSOGI allowed 18 -wheelers to use Court Street to safely return to the interstate

behind the establishment since exiting Cash' s in the front required the driver to

maneuver a left turn across four lanes of traffic.

      Through this showing, Cash' s established that while COSOGI owned the

land upon which the roadway was where the decedent had the accident, Cash' s had

a servitude of passage which it was exercising. Thus, the collective testimonies of

these deponents established, and the parties do not dispute, that Cash' s was an

owner as contemplated by La. R.S. 9: 2795( A)(2).

      But Cash' s failed to offer any evidence that the decedent' s use of the

roadway at the time of the accident was for recreational purposes.            Although

Cashiola speculated that when decedent encountered the pile of sand,             which

Cashiola estimated was between 15 and 17 inches high, decedent " wanted to jump"

it, the record contains no other evidence that the roadway was used for this or any

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recreational purpose.3 Specifically, the record is devoid of evidence of any driver —
including the decedent -- having used the roadway for recreational activity.

         The overwhelming evidence offered by both Cash' s and the Majors allows

for an inference by the trier of fact that the decedent was accessing Cash' s truck

stop and/ or casino to engage in commercial activity.                  Cashiola stated that the

purpose in constructing the roadway, which consisted of the servitude portion over

COSOGI' s land and the portion over Cash' s land, was to allow vehicular traffic to

access the Cash' s truck stop, parking lot, and casino. While Cashiola intended that

only 18 -wheelers would use the roadway, he was aware that private vehicles used

the roadway and he did not post any signage advising the driving public not to

trespass or restricting use of the roadway. Cashiola also acknowledged that

    everybody assumed ...      they had permission to use [ the roadway upon which the

accident occurred] to get to Cash' s."

         Bilbe agreed that after the accident, she became aware of the general

motoring public' s use of the roadway " to get to Cash' s." The only other use of the

roadway Bilbe mentioned was when she periodically visited COSOGI' s 120 -acre

tract. Like Cashiola, she offered no testimony suggesting any use of the roadway

by vehicles for recreational activities.

         In their opposition to Cash' s motion for summary judgment, the Majors

offered their respective affidavits in which each attested that the decedent was

retired and disabled and did not have a driver' s license or own any car, truck, or

other motorized vehicle. The only recreational use the decedent made of the three-

wheeler was to hunt. But on the day of the accident, he was not hunting. He had

driven from his residence along a trail that ran parallel to Court Street to go to

3
    During Jones' s deposition, the attorneys suggested a video recording of the accident existed but
it was not introduced into evidence.
Cash' s to purchase gas for the three-wheeler and to either play the video poker
machines or purchase snacks.

      Based on the deposition testimonies and affidavits, the record establishes

only that the decedent was using the roadway to access Cash' s for a commercial

purpose. Thus, on the showing made in conjunction with the motion for summary
judgment, Cash' s failed its initial burden of demonstrating the recreational use of

the roadway upon which the accident occurred so as to support its summary

judgment dismissal of the Majors' claims based on immunity.

      In its motion for summary judgment, and now on appeal in supporting the

trial court' s judgment, Cash' s suggests that despite its inability to show that the

decedent was using the roadway for recreational purposes, this court' s opinion in

Fournerat, 104 So.3d at 82- 83, necessitates a finding that Cash' s enjoys immunity

from liability. Cash' s reasons that since in both this case and Fournerat, each

decedent died as a result of injuries he sustained while driving a three- wheeler, we

are compelled to find the Majors' decedent was using the motorized vehicle for a

recreational purpose.

      In Fournerat, this court similarly had before it a review of the propriety of

the grant of immunity for recreational use to a landowner and a farming tenant in a

wrongful death action brought by the mother of a 45 -year- old man, who had been

operating a three-wheeler on property in Plaquemine,           Louisiana,   when   he

encountered a concealed and unprotected excavation that had been dug to

accommodate a drain pipe, which led underground to a drainage ditch or canal. As

a result of the injuries that he sustained in the accident, plaintiffs son died.

Fournerat, 104 So. 3d at 77.

       In response to the lawsuit, defendants claimed they were immune from

liability under the recreational use statutes. Based on a review of the record before

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it, this court concluded that the purpose of the property where the subject drain was

located was for a commercial activity to facilitate defendant' s sugarcane farming
operations.   The record was "   replete with   evidence"    showing that prior to this

incident, the landowner and the farming tenant knew that the general public and

neighbors recreationally traveled on the headland road upon which the decedent

drove the three- wheeler and permitted the recreational use of the property as long
as it did not interfere with the sugarcane farming operations. Fournerat, 104 So. 3d

at 82. Although plaintiff pointed out there was no evidence in the record about the

use her son was making of the property at the time of the accident, the court

concluded because there was no evidence that he was using it for anything other

than a recreational purpose, the landowner and sugarcane farming tenant enjoyed

immunity under La. R.S. 9: 2795. Fournerat, 104 So. 3d at 80- 82.

      In the matter presently before us, the undisputed evidence established that

the roadway upon which the decedent was traveling at the time of the accident was

built for the purpose of allowing access to a commercial establishment. The record

contains absolutely no evidence that the roadway was ever used by any motorized

vehicles, including three- wheelers, for recreational purposes. Moreover, the Majors

offered evidence to support findings the decedent was enroute to Cash' s to

patronize the business establishment when the accident occurred. By contrast, the

sugarcane farm headland road upon which Fournerat was traveling when he

encountered the hazard that resulted in his death was used for agricultural

purposes.     The   record contained no   evidence to       support for the   Fournerat

decedent' s presence on the headland road for anything other than a recreational

purpose.    Therefore,   we find the facts before us presently are sufficiently

distinguishable from those before the Fournerat court and decline to interpret

Fournerat, 104 So. 3d at 82- 83,     as broadly holding that every use of a three -

                                          K.
wheeler is recreational. Because Fournerat, 104 So. 3d at 82- 83 is inapposite,

Cash' s reliance on it is misplaced.

       Cash' s further suggests that since the trial court determined that COSOGI

was entitled to a summary judgment dismissal based on its reasoning that
Fournerat mandated a finding that the decedent' s three- wheeler use was for

recreational purposes, the law -of the
                                   - -case doctrine dictates the same result in the

subsequent       application   of La. R.S.   9: 2795 to Cash' s motion for summary

judgment. As such, Cash' s claims that its dismissal from this litigation is required

on this basis.

       As we have explained, in light of the evidentiary showing, Fournerat does

not mandate a finding that the decedent' s use was for recreational purposes.

Additionally, the law -of t-he -case doctrine, which refers to a policy by which the

court will not, on a subsequent appeal, reconsider prior rulings in the same case,

applies only against those who were parties to the case when the former appellate

decision was rendered and who thus had their day in court. Day v. Campbell-

Grosjean Roofing & Sheet Metal Corp., 260 La. 325, 256 So. 2d 105, 107 ( 1971).

Its application is proper only ( 1) in a trial or appellate court where a higher court

has decided the issue, but has remanded the case to the lower court for further

proceedings,      or (   2) when the same issue is presented to the same intermediate

appellate court that has previously decided that issue in the same case, but the

decision has not acquired the authority of the thing adjudged.            Even   when

applicable, the law -of t-he -case doctrine is discretionary and should not be applied

in cases of palpable error or where application would result in injustice. Frank

Maraist, Civil Procedure in 1 Louisiana Civil Law Treatise, § 6: 7 ( 2d ed. 2021).

Clearly, the discretionary doctrine of the law -of the -case is inappropriate in this

case where the propriety of the summary judgment dismissal of COSOGI has

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never been reviewed by a higher court. Cash' s assertion that we are bound to apply
the doctrine is without merit.

      Therefore, we have concluded that in its evidentiary showing in support of
its motion for summary judgment Cash' s failed to establish that the decedent was

traveling on the roadway for recreational purposes at the time of the accident so as

to support its claim of immunity from liability under La. R.S.            9: 2795. We also

have determined that the facts of Fournerot are distinguishable from those

presently before us such that its holding is inapplicable, and an application of the

law -of the -case doctrine is not warranted under the facts before us. Accordingly,

the trial court erred in granting the motion for summary judgment and dismissing

Cash' s from this litigation on the basis of recreational use immunity.

      For these reasons, we reverse the trial court' s judgment and remand for

further   proceedings.   Appeal    costs   are    assessed   against   defendant -appellee,

Cashiola, Inc. and/ or Cash' s Casino Inc. d/ b/ a Cash' s Truck Plaza.

       REVERSED AND REMANDED.

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