Court Opinion

ID: 9376503
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-02 20:04:11.227944+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:07.352242
License: Public Domain

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

                          STATE OF LOUISIANA

                            COURT OF APPEAL

                              FIRST CIRCUIT

                               2022 CA 0564

                              JARED BENOIT

                                 VERSUS

JASON BOURGEOIS, ROLAND LEBLANC D/ B/ A LEBLANC TREE
 SERVICE, ABC INSURANCE COMPANY AND DEF INSURANCE
                      COMPANY

                           DATE OF JUDGMENT.           MAR 0 3 2023

   ON APPEAL FROM THE SEVENTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
                 PARISH OF LAFOURCHE, STATE OF LOUISIANA
                         NUMBER 138089, DIVISION B

                   HONORABLE STEVEN M. MILLER, JUDGE

Shelley Hammond Provosty                Counsel for Plaintiff A
                                                              - ppellant
Peirce A. Hammond, 11                   Jared Benoit
J. Roumain Peters III
New Orleans, Louisiana

Jason P. Foote                          Counsel for Defendant -Appellee
Devin Caboni- Quinn                     Jason Bourgeois

Kaleigh K. Rooney
Metairie, Louisiana

Roland LeBlanc                          Pro Se for Defendant -Appellee
Thibodaux, Louisiana                    Roland LeBlanc d/ b/ a LeBlanc Tree
                                        Service

                  BEFORE: THERIOT, CHUTZ, AND HESTER, JJ.

Disposition. AFFIRMED.
CHUTZ, J.

       Plaintiff-appellant, Jared Benoit, appeals the trial court' s summary judgment

dismissal    of    his   claims      against   defendant -appellee,      Jason    Bourgeois,     the

homeowner who owned the tree that Benoit identified as the tree he fell from while

working for Roland LeBlanc d/b/ a LeBlanc Tree Service.' For the following

reasons, we affirm.

                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       On April 2, 2019, Benoit filed a petition for damages, naming Bourgeois as

a defendant and averring that on April 28, 2018, when climbing a tree for a tree -

trimming job on property owned by Bourgeois, Benoit fell from the tree. Benoit

noted that at the time he fell from the tree, he was working part-time for LeBlanc' s

tree service. 2 Benoit alleged that pursuant to a verbal contract between LeBlanc' s

tree service and Bourgeois, on April 28, 2018, he climbed a tree and trimmed it

without incident. When he climbed the next tree that LeBlanc' s tree service agreed

to trim, he fell " due   to a rotten branch of the tree that broke as he was holding onto

it." Benoit claimed the tree from which he fell was " diseased and rotten and

presented an unreasonably [ dangerous] condition"               that Bourgeois knew or should

have known about and either remedied or warned him of. Thus, according to

Benoit' s petition, Bourgeois was liable to Benoit for damages for the injuries he

sustained.

       Bourgeois answered the petition,                generally denying Benoit' s claims,      and

asserted various defenses. Thereafter,             Bourgeois filed a motion for summary

 In his petition for damages, Benoit named " Roland LeBlanc d/ b/ a LeBlanc Tree Service" as a
defendant. The record does not contain any pleading by Roland LeBlanc d/ b/ a LeBlanc Tree
Service who, in this appeal, appears in a pro se capacity. To avoid confusion, we refer to the
individual Roland LeBlanc as " Roland" and Roland LeBlanc d/ b/ a as LeBlanc Tree Service as
 LeBlanc' s tree service,"   although we note that in his deposition testimony, Roland identified the
business he operated as " LeBlanc' s Lawn and Tree Service."

2 It is undisputed that at the time of the incident, LeBlanc' s tree service carried no workers'
compensation insurance.

                                                   2
judgment urging entitlement to dismissal from the lawsuit. After a hearing, the trial
court agreed and, on March 11,       2022, signed a judgment granting the motion for

summary judgment and dismissing Bourgeois from the lawsuit. Benoit appealed.

                                      DISCUSSION

        A ruling on a motion for summary judgment is reviewed under a de novo

standard,      with the appellate court using the same criteria that govern the trial

court' s determination of whether summary judgment is appropriate, i.e.,        whether

there is any genuine issue of material fact, and whether the movant is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law. Jones v. Whips Elec., LLC, 2022- 01035 ( La.

11/ 22/ 22), 350 So. 3d 846, 848.

        The burden on the party moving for summary judgment does not require him

to negate all essential elements of the adverse party' s claim, action, or defense, but

rather to point out to the court the absence of factual support for one or more

elements essential to the adverse party' s claim, action, or defense. La. C. C. P. art.

966( D)( 1);    Jones, 350 So. 3d at 849. When a motion for summary judgment is

made    and    supported,   an adverse party may not rest on the mere allegations or

denials of his pleadings, but his response, by affidavits or as otherwise, must set

forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. La. C. C. P. art.

967( B);   Jones, 350 So. 3d at 849. Once a motion for summary judgment has been

properly supported by the moving party, the failure of the non- moving party to

produce evidence of a material factual dispute mandates the granting of the motion.

Id.

        The liability of the homeowner defendant is governed by La.            C. C.   art.

2317. 1,   which provides, in pertinent part, "[   tjhe owner or custodian of a thing is

answerable for damage occasioned by its ruin, vice, or defect, only upon a showing

that he knew or, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have known of the ruin,

                                             3
vice,   or defect which caused the damage, that the damage could have been

prevented by the exercise of reasonable care, and that he failed to exercise such

reasonable care."     An essential element to a claim under Article 2317. 1 is proof that

the owner or custodian had actual or constructive knowledge of the defect,

meaning the party either knew of the defect or, in the exercise of reasonable care,

should have known of the defect. Jones, 350 So. 3d at 850.

        On   appeal,    Benoit   contends the      record contains    ample    evidence    that

Bourgeois should have known the branch that broke as Benoit held onto it was

rotten at the time LeBlanc' s tree service was trimming the trees on Bourgeois' s

property. As     such, Benoit urges the trial         court erred in granting summary

judgment.

        In support of his motion,       Bourgeois submitted his deposition testimony

along with that of Roland and Benoit. According to the collective testimony, the

following facts were established.       On or around April 28, 2018, close to noon,

Benoit accompanied Roland and Roland' s brother-in- law, Dustin LeBlanc, to the

premises owned by Bourgeois,           Roland' s wife' s uncle, to trim several trees.'

Having worked with Roland and other tree services, Benoit had tree -trimming

experience. Roland and Benoit had known each other since they were teenagers,

and Roland had taught Benoit how to climb trees for tree service purposes. Before

the April 2018 job, Roland met with Bourgeois on the property. LeBlanc' s tree

service had undertaken tree services for Bourgeois on his property on two prior

occasions. According to Bourgeois, for $ 600. 00,        LeBlanc' s tree service agreed to

cut branches from two water oaks on his property.'         Bourgeois stated that he wanted

3 Although Benoit and Bourgeois recalled the accident date as April 28, 2018, LeBlanc believed
it was on April 27, 2018,

4 The deponents described the trimming project as " lifting" the trees, which was the removal of
the lower branches.

                                               M
the trees trimmed because the branches were growing close to the shop he had in

the back of his house, and he was concerned they may fall on the house during a

storm. Another concern he had was that the branches were in the way when grass

cutting. Roland testified that Bourgeois wanted the trees trimmed because the

lower branches rubbed the shop in the back of the house and there were a few

rotten branches for which Bourgeois wanted the dead wood taken out to "        make

them look pretty." Approximately two or three weekends later, LeBlanc' s tree

service business returned to do the job.

      Although the deponents' recollections varied as to which tree Benoit was in,

what his assignment was, and where Roland and Dustin were physically located

when Benoit fell, it is undisputed that the branch that gave way was rotten. Benoit

landed on his back and was taken by ambulance to a hospital where he received

medical care for five shattered vertebrae in his lower back.

      Importantly for purposes of this summary judgment, Roland testified that

Bourgeois did not instruct LeBlanc' s tree service on how to execute the tree -

trimming project. Bourgeois, according to Roland, was interested only in the end

result and did not offer any thoughts or direction on how to accomplish the job.

Roland was unaware of any expertise that Bourgeois had in trees and stated that

there was nothing about the tree from which Benoit fell that Roland believed

would have led Bourgeois to know of any rot or disease in it. In Roland' s opinion,

Bourgeois did nothing to cause the accident and could not have done anything to

prevent it.

      Bourgeois testified that he lived on the property where the incident occurred

for 48 years, with the last 26 years on a subdivided portion with a separate address.

He was unaware of any problems with the two trees he wanted LeBlanc' s tree

service to trim, and specifically did not know of any rotting branches or disease in

                                           5
the tree that Benoit identified as the one from which he fell. Bourgeois stated that

he did not direct LeBlanc' s tree service, or any of its workers trimming the trees

that day, on how to do the job. According to Bourgeois, he was not a tree expert,

which was why he hired LeBlanc' s tree service, and he relied on the tree service to

determine the manner necessary to perform the trimming work safely and

competently. Bourgeois explained that he did not direct LeBlanc' s tree service to

use a worker to climb the tree rather than to rent a man lift; the decision to have a

worker climb the tree was made by LeBlanc' s tree service.

      Bourgeois and Benoit agreed that they did not know each other prior to the

day of the incident. They introduced themselves to one another, and Benoit went

about his work duties. Benoit acknowledged that although Bourgeois was present

as LeBlanc' s tree service undertook the project,     Benoit did not receive any

direction from Bourgeois on how to accomplish the trimming. Additionally, Benoit

testified that Roland never advised Benoit that Bourgeois had any specific

instructions for him to follow. Although Benoit speculated that Bourgeois had to

have a reason to cut the trees and must have inspected them, he admitted he was

not saying that Bourgeois knew the tree had the rotten branch that broke.

      Benoit stated that from the ground there was nothing visible that he could

see that indicated the tree had a rotten branch, and there was nothing visible from

the ground that should have alerted Bourgeois of a rotten branch in the tree.

Specifically, he saw no mold growing or other indications of rot. Insofar as the

claim that Bourgeois failed to maintain the tree from which he fell, Benoit

conceded that he did not know how Bourgeois would have known there was a

rotten branch. In light of Benoit' s past experience, he suggested that Bourgeois

could have hired someone to maintain the tree, adding, " I guess like what

Bourgeois] did, hire [ LeBlanc' s tree service]."

                                           0
      Benoit explained that in the past, when there was a noticeable problem with

a tree, LeBlanc' s tree service discussed it with him before he climbed the tree.

Ultimately, Benoit conceded he had no information that Bourgeois knowingly

allowed Benoit to place his weight on a branch Bourgeois thought was rotten.

      With this showing, Bourgeois pointed out an absence of factual support for

the knowledge or constructive knowledge element of Benoit' s custodial liability

claim. Thus, the burden shifted to Benoit to produce evidence of a material factual

dispute. In response, Benoit offered no additional        items,   relying instead on

excerpts from the same three depositions and arguing that in light of his long

relationship with the property, Bourgeois must have known there was a rotten

branch in the tree that Benoit identified as the one from which he fell.

      We find this showing insufficient to create a material issue of fact. Benoit,

an experienced tree service worker, testified that there was nothing visible from the

ground to indicate a rotten branch was present in the tree from which he fell. And

Roland, the owner and operator of LeBlanc' s tree service, stated that nothing about

the tree that Benoit identified as having fallen out of would have alerted Bourgeois

to rot or disease in it. And Roland was unable to point to anything that Bourgeois

did to cause the accident or could have done to prevent it. Given that experienced

tree service workers did not discover the rotten branch before undertaking the

project, the record lacks factual support for the theory that Bourgeois, who lacked

any expertise in tree service, should have found the branch in the exercise of

ordinary care. Accordingly, because Benoit failed to establish a material issue of

fact, the trial court correctly granted summary judgment and dismissed Bourgeois

                                          7
from Benoit' s lawsuit.'

                                             DECREE

       For    these    reasons,    the   trial   court' s     summary judgment         dismissal    of

defendant -appellee, Jason Bourgeois, is affirmed. Appeal costs are assessed against

plaintiff-appellant, Jared Benoit.

       AFFIRMED.

  Benoit complains that the trial court erred in applying " the repairman case Iaw" to support the
dismissal of his claims against Bourgeois. Prior to 1996, the liability of an owner or a custodian
of a thing with a vice or defect was rooted in La. C. C. art. 2317, which imposed strict liability
based upon status rather than on personal fault. See Millien v. Jackson, 09- 56 ( La. App. 5th Cir,
12129109), 30 So. 3d 167, 173 ( citing Celestine v. Union Oil Co. of California, 94- 1868 ( La.
4110195), 652 So. 2d 1299, 1303, as an example). Even before the 1996 amendment to Article
2317, the Louisiana Supreme Court recognized " there is no per se exception of repairmen from
the ambit of an owner' s strict liability. Such exception only applies if a factual analysis results in
a determination that the risk of injury or harm is unreasonable under the circumstances."
Celestine, 652 So. 2d at 1304- 05. Thus, the Celestine court held that it was not adopting a
repairman exception to strict liability under Article 2317 but concluded instead that " plaintiff' s
status as a repairman is a significant factor in [          the]   determination of whether a risk is
unreasonable."   Celestine, 652 So. 2d at 1305. In its oral reasons supporting its dismissal of
Benoit' s claims, the trial court referenced the repairman case law but actually concluded " There
was no evidence to show that ...     Bourgeois knew or should have known that this branch that
gave way was, in fact, defective, and that he, in [ any way] concealed it from the [ Benoit]."
Because Bourgeois pointed out an absence of factual support for the essential element of his
actual or constructive knowledge of the alleged defect, the trial court' s conclusion is correct.
Thus, the significance of Benoit' s status as a tree service worker in a determination of whether
the presence of a rotten branch in a tree that Bourgeois hired LeBlanc' s tree service to trim
constituted a defect which presented an unreasonable risk of harm is immaterial, and we
pretermit any discussion of the issue.