Gerald P. Snyder, Gavin P. Snyder and Tommy a Guidry, Jr., All as Proper Representatives of the Decedent Karen G. Snyder Versus Donavan D. Bourgeois and Sara S. Bourgeois and Their Unknown Insurance Company Abc Insurance Company and Brad Parrino Trucking, LLC and Their Unknown Insurance Company Xyz Insurance Company ( 2023 )


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  • GERALD P. SNYDER, ET AL.                               NO. 22-CA-598
    VERSUS                                                 FIFTH CIRCUIT
    DONAVAN D. BOURGEOIS, ET AL.                           COURT OF APPEAL
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    PARISH OF ST. JAMES, STATE OF LOUISIANA
    NO. 40,295, DIVISION "D"
    HONORABLE STEVEN C. TUREAU, JUDGE PRESIDING
    October 04, 2023
    SUSAN M. CHEHARDY
    CHIEF JUDGE
    Panel composed of Judges Susan M. Chehardy,
    John J. Molaison, Jr., and Scott U. Schlegel
    AFFIRMED
    SMC
    JJM
    SUS
    COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT,
    GERALD P. SNYDER, GAVIN P. SNYDER AND TOMMY A GUIDRY, JR.,
    ALL AS PROPER REPRESENTATIVES OF THE DECEDENT KAREN G.
    SNYDER
    Robert J. Snyder, Jr.
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE,
    BRAD PARRINO TRUCKING, LLC
    Michael J. Remondet, Jr.
    Michael R. Guidry
    CHEHARDY, C.J.
    Plaintiffs-appellants, Gerald P. Snyder, Gavin P. Snyder, and Tommy A.
    Guidry, Jr., seek review of the trial court’s July 28, 2022 judgment granting a
    motion for summary judgment filed by defendant-appellee, Brad Parrino Trucking,
    LLC. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    Background and Procedural History
    On May 23, 2020, Karen Snyder and her husband Gerald Snyder visited
    property in Paulina in St. James Parish that belonged to Donavan and Sara
    Bourgeois. According to the petition, the Snyders had the Bourgeois’ permission to
    be on the property. Around that time, Brad Parrino Trucking, LLC (“Parrino”), had
    been excavating a pond for dirt to be used in the construction of the Bourgeois’
    home. The pond was approximately 200 feet long, 50 feet across, and 15 feet deep.
    When Gerald Snyder entered the pond to move some of the hoses connected to a
    pump, Karen followed him and allegedly fell into the pond, tragically sustaining
    injuries to her vertebrae and head that resulted in her death on May 28, 2020.
    On February 22, 2021, plaintiffs-appellants filed a wrongful death and
    survival action arising out of Karen’s death. The Bourgeois defendants and Parrino
    both filed motions for summary judgment, which the trial court denied in order to
    permit plaintiffs to conduct discovery. After discovery, the Bourgeois defendants
    filed a second motion for summary judgment seeking dismissal of plaintiffs’
    claims. The trial court denied summary judgment, but this Court granted the
    Bourgeois’ writ application, reversed the trial court’s judgment, and granted
    summary judgment in the Bourgeois’ favor, finding that the pond was an open and
    obvious condition that did not create an unreasonable risk of harm. As such, Mr.
    and Mrs. Bourgeois could not be held liable for the decedent’s death as a matter of
    law. Snyder v. Bourgeois, 21-608 (La. App. 5 Cir. 1/24/22), 
    2022 WL 202811
    22-CA-598                                 1
    (unpublished writ disposition). Plaintiffs did not submit a writ application to the
    Louisiana Supreme Court seeking supervisory review of that ruling.
    Parrino subsequently filed a second motion for summary judgment arguing
    that because this Court already determined that the pond constituted an open and
    obvious condition, and because the law-of-the-case doctrine provides that a court
    will not reconsider its own ruling of law in the same case, Parrino also cannot be
    held liable as a matter of law. Parrino attached the affidavits of Brad Parrino and
    Donavan Bourgeois to his motion.1
    In opposition, plaintiffs argued that genuine issues of material fact exist as to
    whether Parrino had authority to grant third persons access to the property and
    whether Parrino had any right of control over the construction, design, or location
    of the pond. Plaintiffs also contended that the affidavits attached to Parrino’s
    motion are procedurally defective, and that Parrino erred in failing to attach a list
    of essential legal elements to his motion for summary judgment.2
    Furthermore, plaintiffs took issue with this Court’s application of the risk-
    utility balancing test, which resulted in a grant of summary judgment in favor of
    the Bourgeois defendants. First, plaintiffs stated that this Court did not consider the
    fact that digging the hole for the pond was unlawful under St. James Parish
    Ordinance 82-25, which requires a building permit from the Planning Commission.
    According to plaintiffs, because defendants did not obtain a building permit, there
    was no “utility” in digging the hole under the first prong of the risk-utility
    balancing test.3 Plaintiffs argue that if this Court had known that the defendants
    1
    Mr. Parrino’s affidavit states that the property where the accident occurred is owned solely by Donovan
    and Sara Bourgeois; Brad Parrino Trucking, LLC, did not have authority to grant third persons access to
    that property; and Brad Parrino Trucking, LLC, did not have any right or control over the construction,
    design, or location of the pond on the property. Mr. Bourgeois’ affidavit stated that he is a co-owner of
    the property in question; that he hired Parrino to construct a pond on his premises, which construction
    commenced in March 2020; that on May 23, 2020, the construction of the pond was approximately 50%
    complete, and the pond was approximately 200 feet long, 50 feet wide, and 12 to 15 feet deep.
    2
    Parrino instead included a list of “Essential Legal Arguments [sic]” in his motion for summary
    judgment.
    3
    On the other hand, Mr. Bourgeois testified in his deposition that he went to the parish before
    constructing the pond to ask about a permit and was told that “a permit was not required because I was
    22-CA-598                                           2
    began digging the pond without the necessary permit, the Court would not have
    determined that the pond served a useful purpose for the homeowner in
    constructing a home, or that the pond was an open and obvious condition.
    Additionally, plaintiffs point out that this Court indicated that no evidence
    had been offered to show the cost of roping off the area or otherwise warning of
    the potential hazard. Plaintiffs now contend that it would have cost less than $400
    to rope off the area and to provide a warning of the potential dangers. In support,
    plaintiffs offered the affidavit of Mr. Gerald Snyder, who states that he researched
    at Home Depot the prices of rope, steel posts, and signs that could have been used
    to warn someone of the dangerous area. No additional evidence is offered in
    support of the information relayed in Mr. Snyder’s affidavit, however.
    After a hearing, the trial court granted Parrino’s motion for summary
    judgment and dismissed plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs now seek review of that
    ruling.
    Analysis
    A motion for summary judgment shall be granted if the motion,
    memorandum, and supporting documents show that there is no genuine issue as to
    material fact and that the mover is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. La.
    C.C.P. art. 966 A(3). The burden of proof rests with the mover. La. C.C.P. art. 966
    D(1). Nevertheless, if the mover will not bear the burden of proof at trial on the
    issue that is before the court on the motion for summary judgment, the mover’s
    burden on the motion 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. 
    Id.
     The burden is on the adverse party to produce factual
    further past the boundary for how close you are to the levee, and I did not need a permit. So I did check
    before. They told me I didn’t need one, so we proceeded.”
    22-CA-598                                            3
    support sufficient to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material fact or to
    show that the mover is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id.; see also
    Robinson v. Otis Condominium Assoc., Inc., 20-359 (La. App. 5 Cir. 2/3/21), 
    315 So.3d 356
    , 360-61, writ denied, 21-0343 (La. 4/27/21), 
    314 So.3d 837
    .
    We review the grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment de novo.
    Bourgeois v. Allstate Ins. Co., 15-451 (La. App. 5 Cir. 12/23/15), 
    182 So.3d 1177
    ,
    1181. Under this standard, we use the same criteria as the trial court in determining
    if summary judgment is appropriate: whether there is a genuine issue of material
    fact and whether the mover is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. La. C.C.P.
    art. 966 A(3); Richthofen v. Medina, 14-294 (La. App. 5 Cir. 10/29/14), 
    164 So.3d 231
    , 234, writ denied, 14-2514 (La. 3/13/15), 
    161 So.3d 639
    .
    On appeal, plaintiffs-appellants assert that Parrino was negligent in failing to
    maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition, failing to place signs properly
    to warn users of a dangerous area, allowing and creating a hazardous and
    dangerous condition, failing to inspect the premises, and failing to exercise due
    care. In essence, these allegations state claims under La. Civ. Code arts. 2315,
    2316, 2317, and 2317.1.4
    La. Civ. Code art. 2317.1, which governs negligence claims against a
    property owner or custodian, provides, in pertinent part:
    The 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, 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.
    4
    La. Civ. Code art. 2315(A) states: “Every act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges
    him by whose fault it happened to repair it.” La. Civ. Code art. 2316 states: “Every person is responsible
    for the damage he occasions not merely by his act, but by his negligence, his imprudence, or his want of
    skill.” La. Civ. Code art. 2317 states: “We are responsible, not only for the damage occasioned by our
    own act, but for that which is caused by … the things which we have in our custody.”
    22-CA-598                                            4
    “Whether a claim arises in negligence under La. Civ. Code art. 2315 or in premises
    liability under La. Civ. Code art. 2317.1, the traditional duty/risk analysis is the
    same.” Farrell v. Circle K Stores, Inc., 22-0849 (La. 3/17/23), 
    359 So.3d 467
    , 473.
    As noted above, this Court previously determined that plaintiffs-appellants
    had failed to present evidence to prove that the pond constituted an unreasonably
    dangerous condition. See Snyder v. Bourgeois, 
    2022 WL 202811
    , at *2. This Court
    addressed the elements of the risk-utility balancing test and found that the pond
    was useful to the landowners in the construction of their home on private property;
    that the decedent’s actions of entering the area, near the large body of water, was
    dangerous by nature; and that no evidence had been presented regarding the cost of
    roping off the area or the social utility of the decedent’s presence at the site. 
    Id.
    This Court further stated that a landowner is not liable for an injury that results
    from a condition that should have been observed by the individual in the exercise
    of reasonable care or that was as obvious to a visitor as it was to the landowner.
    
    2022 WL 202811
    , at *3. See also Williams v. Leonard Chabert Med. Ctr., 98-1029
    (La. App. 1 Cir. 9/26/99), 
    744 So.2d 206
    , 211, writ denied, 00-0011 (La. 2/18/00),
    
    754 So.2d 974
    . This Court stated:
    In this case, the construction pond was two hundred feet
    long and fifty feet wide. The affidavit of the respondent,
    Gerald Snyder, establishes that he and the decedent were
    aware of the pond, with the enclosed pump, and
    approached it. … As we found in [Fluence v. Marshall
    Bros. v. Lincoln-Mercury Inc., 10-482 (La. App. 5 Cir.
    11/23/10), 
    54 So.3d 711
    , 712-13, an] “open and obvious
    hazard” case, a defendant violates no duty to the plaintiff
    if the danger should have been observed by an individual
    in the exercise of reasonable care and the plaintiff was
    aware of the condition. 
    Id.
    Snyder, 
    2021 WL 202811
    , at *3.
    Since that disposition, the Louisiana Supreme Court issued its decision in
    Farrell, supra, which provides additional guidance to courts evaluating whether an
    22-CA-598                                   5
    alleged defect presents an unreasonable risk of harm or constitutes an open and
    obvious condition. In Farrell, the Louisiana Supreme Court reversed the trial
    court’s ruling denying the defendant’s motion for summary judgment in a premises
    liability suit filed after the plaintiff slipped and fell while trying to traverse a large
    puddle of water at the edge of a gas station parking lot.
    The Farrell Court cleared up the admitted confusion in the jurisprudence
    surrounding the application of the duty/risk analysis when assessing an allegedly
    unreasonably dangerous condition in general negligence or premises liability
    claims. The Court first reaffirmed the well-settled rule that under the duty/risk
    analysis, a plaintiff must prove five separate elements: (1) the defendant had a duty
    to conform his conduct to a specific standard (the duty element); (2) the
    defendant’s conduct failed to conform to the appropriate standard (the breach
    element); (3) the defendant’s substandard conduct was a cause-in-fact of the
    plaintiff’s injuries (the cause-in-fact element); (4) the defendant’s substandard
    conduct was a legal cause of the plaintiff’s injuries (the scope of duty element);
    and (5) proof of actual damages (the damages element). Id. at 473 (citing Malta v.
    Herbert S. Hiller Corp., 21-209 (La. 10/10/21), 
    333 So.3d 384
    , 395). If the
    plaintiff fails to prove any one element by a preponderance of the evidence, the
    defendant is not liable. Mathieu v. Imperial Toy Corp., 94-952 (La. 11/30/94), 
    646 So.2d 318
    , 326.
    The Farrell Court then explained that Louisiana’s jurists have exhibited a
    tendency to conflate the duty and the breach elements when evaluating an
    allegedly unreasonably dangerous condition. The duty element, which is a question
    of law, examines whether there is any legal support for plaintiff’s claim that
    defendant owed him a duty. La. Civ. Code arts. 2315, 2316, 2317, and 2317.1
    require the custodian of immovable property to discover any unreasonably
    22-CA-598                                    6
    dangerous condition on his premises and either correct the condition or warn
    potential victims of its existence. Farrell, 359 So.3d at 473-74.
    Whether there is a breach of that duty is a mixed question of fact and law,
    which we assess through application of the risk/utility balancing test by evaluating:
    (1) the utility of the complained-of condition; (2) the likelihood and magnitude of
    harm, including the obviousness and apparentness of the condition; (3) the cost of
    preventing the harm; and (4) the nature of the plaintiff’s activities in terms of
    social utility or whether the activities were dangerous by nature. Id. (citing Bufkin
    v. Felipe’s Louisiana, LLC, 14-0288 (La. 10/15/14), 
    171 So.3d 851
    , 856).
    In opposing the motion for summary judgment, the plaintiffs in Farrell
    argued that a pool of water is not itself a dangerous condition, but that algae, mold,
    and slime within the puddle constituted hidden dangers, and a reasonable person
    who did not know how long the puddle had been there would not presume that the
    puddle contained a layer of algae. Applying the duty/risk analysis, the Supreme
    Court held that the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiffs to maintain the premises
    in a reasonably safe condition. Farrell, 359 So.3d at 474. The next question was
    whether the defendant breached that duty, or whether the complained-of condition,
    analyzed according to the risk/utility balancing test, constituted an unreasonably
    dangerous condition or presented an unreasonable risk of harm. Id. See also
    Broussard v. State ex rel. Office of State Bldgs., 12-1238 (La. 4/5/13), 
    113 So.3d 175
    , 184 (finding that “the analytic framework for evaluating an unreasonable risk
    of harm is properly classified as a determination of whether a defendant breached a
    duty owed, rather than a determination of whether a duty is owed ab initio”).
    The second prong of the risk/utility balancing test addresses the likelihood
    and magnitude of the harm, including whether a condition is open and obvious:
    The open and obvious concept asks whether the
    complained of condition would be apparent to any
    reasonable person who might encounter it. If so, that
    22-CA-598                                  7
    reasonable person would avoid it, and the factor will
    weigh in favor of finding the condition not unreasonably
    dangerous. Whether the plaintiff has knowledge of the
    condition is irrelevant in determining whether the thing is
    defective. Otherwise, the analysis resurrects the long ago
    abolished doctrines of assumption of the risk and
    contributory negligence, both of which focus on the
    knowledge and acts of the plaintiff.
    Farrell, 359 So.3d at 478. After finding that the third and fourth factors in the
    risk/utility analysis bore little weight under those facts, the Court in Farrell held
    that “the allegedly hazardous condition, be it the pool of water at the edge of the
    parking lot or the slippery substance contained within the water, was not an
    unreasonably dangerous condition.” Id. at 479. Accordingly, the Court found that
    defendants had met their initial burden of pointing out the absence of factual
    support for the breach element—the second prong of the duty/risk analysis. The
    burden then shifted to the plaintiffs to produce factual support sufficient to
    establish the existence of a genuine issue of material fact with regard to the breach
    of the duty owed, or to show that defendants were not entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law. Id. at 480.
    Here, plaintiffs-appellants argue on appeal that there was a “hidden danger”
    in the form of a quicksand-like substance under the “murky water” of the pond,
    that there were no warning signs or barriers in place, and that the pond was being
    dug without a permit. After our de novo review of the record, and in light of the
    Supreme Court’s recent elucidation in Farrell of the law regarding the duty/risk
    analysis, the risk/utility balancing test, and open and obvious conditions, decided
    after this Court’s previous disposition in the present case, we find no error in this
    Court’s previous determination that the pond failed to present an unreasonable risk
    of harm. We simply update the analysis performed in our previous disposition to
    note that on the record before us, pursuant to Farrell, Parrino arguably owed a duty
    to plaintiffs to warn of any unreasonably dangerous condition, but that Parrino did
    22-CA-598                                  8
    not breach that duty, as the pond in question was open an obvious and did not
    constitute an unreasonably dangerous condition.
    Under the risk/utility balancing test, the utility of digging the pond was
    established because the excavated dirt was being used to support the foundation of
    a house to be built on the property. We need not address plaintiffs’ argument
    concerning the defendants’ failure to obtain a permit to dig the pond, because the
    record is devoid of any evidence to prove that Perrino was, in fact, required to
    obtain such a permit. Plaintiffs attached a copy of St. James Parish Ordinance 82-
    25, but they did not include any additional information to substantiate their
    allegation that the Bourgeois property is governed by the language of that
    Ordinance or to indicate that the responsibility of obtaining such a permit would
    fall to Perrino.
    Further, proof that an ordinance has been violated to establish liability is
    premised on a negligence per se theory, which has been rejected in Louisiana
    jurisprudence. See, e.g., Faucheaux v. Terrebonne Consol. Gov’t, 
    615 So.2d 289
    ,
    292-93 (La. 1993) (holding that the “violation of a statute or regulation does not
    automatically, in and of itself, impose civil liability. Civil responsibility is imposed
    only if the act in violation of the statute is the legal cause of damage to another.”);
    Bellsouth Telecomm., Inc. v. Eustis Eng’g Co., 08-0865 (La. App. 4 Cir. 12/19/07),
    
    974 So.2d 749
    , 752 (holding that “a statutory violation must be determined as a
    legal cause of the accident” and “the finding of a violation of a statute is only the
    beginning of a duty-risk analysis.”). In short, even if plaintiffs had introduced
    sufficient evidentiary proof that a permit to dig the pond was required here,
    plaintiffs have not proved how the lack of a permit caused Mrs. Snyder’s injuries,
    nor why the lack of a permit eliminates the utility of the pond under the first
    component of the risk-utility balancing test.
    22-CA-598                                  9
    Second, as previously determined, the pond—50 feet by 200 feet—was open
    and obvious to all who encountered it. Third, the statements in Mr. Snyder’s
    affidavit regarding the cost of materials needed to rope off the area, even if those
    statements had been supported by admissible summary judgment evidence, fail to
    tip the balance against Parrino in determining whether Parrino breached a duty it
    owed to the decedent. Finally, there is no evidence before us to substantiate the
    social utility of the decedent’s activity.
    In sum, nothing in either Parrino’s motion for summary judgment or in
    plaintiffs’ opposition suggests that this Court’s previous determination—that the
    construction pond presented an open and obvious condition that did not constitute
    a reasonable risk of harm—was rendered in error. Parrino has shown that plaintiffs
    are unable to meet their burden of proof at trial, which plaintiffs have failed to
    refute. Accordingly, Parrino is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.
    La. C.C.P. art. 966 D(1).
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s ruling granting the motion for
    summary judgment filed by Brad Parrino Trucking, LLC, and dismissing with
    prejudice plaintiffs’ claims against Brad Parrino Trucking, LLC, is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    22-CA-598                                    10
    SUSAN M. CHEHARDY                                                                    CURTIS B. PURSELL
    CHIEF JUDGE                                                                          CLERK OF COURT
    SUSAN S. BUCHHOLZ
    FREDERICKA H. WICKER
    CHIEF DEPUTY CLERK
    JUDE G. GRAVOIS
    MARC E. JOHNSON
    ROBERT A. CHAISSON                                                                   LINDA M. WISEMAN
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    FIRST DEPUTY CLERK
    JOHN J. MOLAISON, JR.
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    22-CA-598
    E-NOTIFIED
    23RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT (CLERK)
    HONORABLE STEVEN C. TUREAU (DISTRICT JUDGE)
    DEAN T. DEFRANCESCH (APPELLANT)        JAMES A. HARRY (APPELLANT)            ROBERT J. SNYDER, JR. (APPELLANT)
    TOMY J. ACOSTA (APPELLANT)             MICHAEL J. REMONDET, JR. (APPELLEE)
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Document Info

Docket Number: 22-CA-598

Judges: Steven C. Tureau

Filed Date: 10/4/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/21/2024