Bernard Gibson v. Jalou Cash's, LLC, Cash Magic Winners, and Scottsdale Insurance Company ( 2020 )


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  •                                STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2019 CA 1308
    V
    BERNARD GIBSON
    VERSUS
    JALOU CASH' S, LLC, CASH MAGIC WINNERS, AND SCOTTSDALE
    INSURANCE COMPANY
    L                                                               JUL, 1 7 2020
    Judgment rendered:
    On Appeal from the
    Twenty -First Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of Tangipahoa
    State of Louisiana
    No. 2017- 0002326, Div. " C"
    The Honorable Robert H. Morrison, III, Judge Presiding
    Lawrence Black Jones                         Attorneys for Plaintiff/Appellant
    Stephen F. Armbruster                        Bernard Gibson
    New Orleans, Louisiana
    Scott Davis                                  Attorney for Defendant/ Appellee
    Metairie, Louisiana                          Jalou Cash, Cash Magic, Scottsdale
    Insurance
    BEFORE: McCLENDON, WELCH, AND HOLDRIDGE, JJ.
    HOLDRIDGE, J.
    Plaintiff, Bernard Gibson,       appeals a judgment sustaining a peremptory
    exception raising the objection of prescription and granting a motion for summary
    judgment in favor of defendants, Jalou Cash' s, LLC, Cash Magic Amite, LLC, and
    Scottsdale Insurance Company (collectively " defendants").         We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    On August 18, 2017, Mr. Gibson filed this lawsuit against defendants,
    alleging that on or about August 19, 2016, he was a guest at Forest Gold Truck
    Plaza &
    Casino in Amite, Louisiana, when a large speaker fell from the ceiling
    onto his head.   He alleged that he sustained severe injuries to his neck, back, and
    shoulders as a result of the incident and sought to recover damages from
    defendants based on negligence and strict liability causes of action.
    On April 9, 2019,
    defendants filed a peremptory exception raising the
    objection of prescription and a motion for summary judgment.            In support of the
    exception and the motion, defendants offered evidence showing that the subject
    incident occurred on August 13, 2016, not on August 19, 2016, as alleged in Mr.
    Gibson' s petition.     In light of this evidence, defendants claimed that the lawsuit,
    filed on August 18, 2017, more than one year after the date of the accident, had
    prescribed.
    Defendants supported the motion and exception with evidence of three
    reports of the incident listing the date thereof as August 13,               2016.   These
    documents included both a handwritten and typed incident report compiled by
    casino personnel, as well as a Weiser Security Services, Inc. report. Additionally,
    defendants    offered    the   deposition   testimony   of   Mr.   Gibson,    a   letter   of
    representation from Mr. Gibson' s attorney to Forest Gold Truck Plaza and Casino,
    and two letters from Nationwide' s claims adjuster to Mr. Gibson' s attorney.
    2
    In the representation letter, dated September 19, 2016, Mr. Gibson' s attorney
    advised the casino that he was representing Mr. Gibson for an incident that
    occurred at the casino on August 19, 2016.        Mr. Gibson' s attorney requested that
    the letter be forwarded to the company' s general liability carrier and asked that the
    company contact the attorney or his office if it had any " information, questions, or
    comments."
    On October 25, 2016, a Nationwide claims representative sent a letter to Mr.
    Gibson' s attorney acknowledging receipt of the letter of representation for Mr.
    Gibson.    The letter assigned Mr. Gibson a claim number and listed the date of loss
    as "   August 19, 2016."   In the letter, Mr. Gibson' s attorney was advised that the
    loss was under investigation, and he was asked to provide additional information
    regarding the facts of the incident. The attorney was asked to make Mr. Gibson
    available for a recorded statement and to provide details regarding Mr. Gibson' s
    injuries and treating physician.    The claims adjuster provided contact information
    and requested that Mr. Gibson' s attorney contact her if he had any questions or
    needed additional information.
    On November 1,     2016, Nationwide' s claims representative sent another
    letter to Mr. Gibson' s attorney advising that the policy contained Medical Payment
    Coverage with a limit of $1, 000. 00 per claimant and that medical expenses must be
    incurred by Mr. Gibson and reported to the insurer within one year of the date of
    the accident.   This Medical Payment Coverage was offered to Mr. Gibson, and his
    attorney was asked whether Mr. Gibson was making a bodily injury claim.           The
    letter lists the date of the loss as " August 19, 2016."
    Mr. Gibson testified in his deposition that on the evening of the accident, he
    went to the casino with two friends.    He stated that while he was playing one of the
    machines, something fell from the ceiling and hit him on the head.         Mr. Gibson
    3
    testified that after the object fell from the ceiling and hit him, he was covered in a
    white substance and was " in a daze."
    Following the incident, Mr. Gibson was first
    approached by a casino hostess, Candy, who took pictures and gave him a glass of
    water.
    Mr. Gibson recalled that Candy asked if he was alright, but he could not
    remember what he told her.      He also recalled that a security guard, who had been
    standing near the machine where Mr. Gibson was playing, wrote up a report after
    asking Mr. Gibson for his address and telephone number. Mr. Gibson recounted
    that someone told him a speaker had fallen on him and inquired whether he wanted
    an ambulance.
    Mr. Gibson, who was wheel -chair bound and had a lengthy hospital
    stay in the past, declined to go to the hospital. He testified that as soon as he came
    to his " senses," he told his companions to take him out of the casino. Mr. Gibson' s
    friends drove him home, where Mr. Gibson' s girlfriend also lived.         When Mr.
    Gibson awoke the next morning, he was sore and had a headache. Mr. Gibson first
    sought medical treatment for injuries stemming from the accident on September 6,
    2016.    Mr. Gibson stated that no one from the casino tried to get in contact with
    him following the incident.
    For the purpose of the motion and exception, Mr. Gibson did not dispute that
    the subject accident occurred on August 13,      2016, as established by defendants'
    documentary evidence.         Instead,   in opposition to the motion for summary
    judgment, Mr. Gibson argued that material issues of fact existed in this case,
    precluding the entry of summary judgment in this case. According to Mr. Gibson,
    these contested material facts include: whether defendants provided Mr. Gibson
    with documentation that would confirm the correct date of the accident; whether
    defendants telephoned Mr. Gibson to discuss the accident with him; whether the
    defendants who compiled the evidence provided it to the insurance adjuster with
    whom Mr.      Gibson' s attorney communicated with about the accident; whether
    defendants        adequately      responded        to       Mr.   Gibson' s    attorney' s    request    for
    information about the accident;             whether there was any impediment preventing
    defendants from providing Mr. Gibson' s attorney with copies of reports and videos
    relevant of the accident; whether defendants concealed true and important facts
    about the occurrence of the accident from Mr. Gibson' s attorney; and whether
    defendants misled Mr. Gibson' s attorney about the actual date of the accident. Mr.
    Gibson urged that the doctrine of contra non valentem should be applied by the
    court to suspend the running of prescription, insisting that defendants withheld
    information that would have allowed him to timely file his lawsuit. Specifically,
    Mr. Gibson focused on the fact that after his attorney wrote to defendants asking
    for " information," the attorney received two responses indicating that the " date of
    loss"   was August 19, 2016, a date they knew was incorrect.                        Mr. Gibson argued
    that    despite    his     attorney' s   request    for      information      regarding      the   accident,
    defendants remained silent about its true date and played                            on      Mr. Gibson' s
    uncertainty as to the date of the accident by inducing Mr. Gibson to believe
    something they knew to be untrue. According to Mr. Gibson, it would be unfair to
    permit defendants to profit from their concealment and refusal to disclose
    information about the correct date of Mr. Gibson' s accident. Further, Mr. Gibson
    submitted,
    defendants would not be prejudiced by allowing the lawsuit to be
    maintained, as they knew about the accident and had ample opportunity to view
    reports and videos of the accident.                No evidence was attached to Mr. Gibson' s
    memorandum to support his opposition to the motion for summary judgment or to
    controvert the prescription objection.
    A hearing on the motion and exception was held, during which defendants
    offered the       entire   record as evidence,          including the exhibits attached to their
    5
    motion for summary judgment.'           Mr. Gibson did not offer any evidence at the
    hearing to support his contra non valentem argument.             The trial court found that
    Mr.   Gibson had not demonstrated that defendants concealed information or
    mislead him.      Based on the uncontroverted fact that the lawsuit was not filed
    within one year of the date of the accident, the trial court sustained the prescription
    objection.
    On June 18, 2019, the trial court signed a judgment sustaining the objection
    of prescription, granting the motion for summary judgment, and dismissing all of
    Mr. Gibson' s claims against defendants with prejudice. This appeal, taken by Mr.
    Gibson, followed.
    DISCUSSION
    Mr. Gibson' s delictual action is subject to a prescriptive period of one year.
    This prescription commences to run from the day the injury or the damage is
    sustained.
    La. C. C. art. 3492; Mulkey v. Century Indemnity Company, 2019-
    1551 ( La. App 1st Cir. 8/ 7/ 19), 
    281 So. 3d 717
    , 721, writs denied, 2019- 01534 ( La.
    11/ 25/ 19), 
    283 So. 3d 495
     and 2019- 01576 ( La. 11/ 25/ 19)             So. 3d (       
    2018 WL 6523175
    ).       In this case, the lawsuit was not prescribed on the face of the
    petition, as Mr. Gibson alleged that the accident occurred on August 19, 2016, and
    the lawsuit was filed within one year of that date.            Since the petition had not
    prescribed on its face, defendants bore the burden of proving that the lawsuit was
    prescribed.   Mulkey, 281 So. 3d at 721.
    At the trial on the peremptory exception, evidence may be introduced to
    support or controvert the exception when the grounds thereof do not appear from
    1 We note that there are two completely different standards for an exception hearing as opposed
    to a hearing on a motion for summary judgment. See La. C. C. P. arts. 931, 966. While evidence
    may be introduced at a hearing on a peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription,
    evidence may not be introduced at a hearing on a motion for summary judgment. The only
    documents that may be considered by the court on a motion for summary judgment are those
    documents properly attached to the motion or opposition. See La. C. C. P. art. 966 (13)( 2).
    6
    the petition.   La. C. C. P.   art.   931;   Mulkey, 281 So. 3d at 721.     If evidence is
    introduced on the peremptory exception, the trial court' s findings of fact are
    reviewed under the manifest error -clearly wrong standard of review. Id.         Pursuant
    to this standard of review, if the findings are reasonable in light of the record
    viewed in its entirety, an appellate court may not reverse, even if convinced that
    had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence
    differently. Id.
    Defendants introduced evidence demonstrating that the subject accident did
    not occur on August 19, 2016, as alleged in the petition, but occurred on August
    13, 2016.   This evidence is uncontroverted.         Therefore, defendants satisfied their
    burden of proving that Mr. Gibson' s lawsuit was filed more than one year from the
    date of the accident in which his injuries were sustained,            falling outside the
    prescriptive period of La. C. C. 3492.
    Because the defendant offered evidence which established that the lawsuit
    was filed outside the one- year prescriptive period, Mr. Gibson bore the burden of
    proving with competent evidence that prescription was interrupted or suspended.
    See Raborn v. Albea, 2013- 0633 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 4/ 16/ 14),           
    144 So. 3d 1066
    ,
    1071, writ denied, 2014- 1239 ( La. 9/ 26/ 14), 
    149 So. 3d 264
    . Mr. Gibson maintains
    that prescription on his cause of action was suspended under the jurisprudential
    doctrine known as contra non valentem non currit praescriptio, which means that
    prescription does not run against a party unable to file suit.        Jenkins v. Starns,
    2011- 1170 ( La. 1/ 24/ 12), 
    85 So. 3d 612
    , 623.      Courts have applied the suspensive
    theory of contra non valentem in four circumstances. Mr. Gibson contends that the
    third and fourth categories of contra non valentem may apply in this case to
    suspend the running of prescription on his claim. In the third category, contra non
    valentem has been applied when the defendant has done some act to prevent the
    plaintiff from availing himself of his cause of action. In the fourth category, courts
    have applied the doctrine to suspend the running of prescription when the cause of
    action is not reasonably knowable by the plaintiff, even though his ignorance is not
    induced by the defendant. See Jenkins, 85 So. 2d at 623.
    The Supreme Court has made it clear that the doctrine of contra non
    valentem applies only in " exceptional circumstances."      Marin v. Exxon Mobil
    Corp., 2009- 2368 ( La. 10/ 19/ 10), 
    48 So. 3d 234
    , 245. In Marin, the court stated
    that " this   principle will not exempt the plaintiff' s claim from the running of
    prescription if his ignorance is attributable to his own willfulness or neglect; that
    is, a plaintiff will be deemed to know what he could by reasonable diligence have
    learned."     Thus, the fourth category of contra non valentem will not exempt the
    plaintiff' s claim from the running of prescription if his ignorance is attributable to
    his own willfulness or neglect.      Marin, 
    48 So. 3d at 246
    . Since it has been
    established that the plaintiff' s accident occurred on August 13, 2016, the issue
    becomes whether or not the plaintiff could have learned of the date of his accident
    by reasonable diligence.
    Mr. Gibson failed to offer evidence demonstrating that his cause of action
    was not reasonably knowable to him on August 13,            2016.   Mr. Gibson was
    accompanied at the casino with two friends when a speaker fell from the ceiling
    and hit him in the head.     The cause of Mr. Gibson' s injuries and damages were
    immediately known to Mr. Gibson at the time of the accident.        While Mr. Gibson
    may have been momentarily " dazed" by the accident, he recalled providing
    information to casino employees and that one of the employees appeared to be
    writing a report of the incident.    Mr. Gibson could have easily ascertained the
    correct date of the accident by requesting a copy of the incident report. Further, he
    could have questioned his friends or his fiance to ascertain the actual date of the
    accident.   In short, Mr. Gibson failed to show that his disability, age, or temporary
    impairment from being hit by the speaker played any part in the untimely filing of
    his lawsuit.   Therefore,   the trial court' s conclusion that the fourth category of
    contra non valentem did not apply under the circumstances of this case is entirely
    reasonable and is not manifestly erroneous.
    In order for the third category of contra non valentem to apply, a plaintiff
    must demonstrate that: ( 1)   the defendant engaged in conduct which rises to the
    level of concealment, misrepresentation, fraud or ill practices; ( 2) the defendant' s
    actions effectually prevented the plaintiff from pursuing a cause of action; and ( 3)
    the plaintiff must have been reasonable in his inaction. Marin, 
    48 So. 3d at 252
    .
    Mr. Gibson offered no evidence to show that defendants did anything to
    prevent him from availing himself of his cause of action. The initial letter sent by
    plaintiff' s attorney to the defendant listed the accident date as August 19, 2016.
    No evidence was introduced by Mr. Gibson as to why he did not know that the
    actual date was August 13, 2016.          Subsequent letters sent by the insurance
    company referenced the date August 19, 2016, in accordance with the plaintiff' s
    attorney' s initial letter. The evidence shows that Mr. Gibson was aware a report
    was being prepared shortly after the incident by the casino, but there is no evidence
    demonstrating that Mr. Gibson or his attorney requested that report or any other
    evidence that may have been compiled in connection with his claim from the
    casino or the insurer.   There are requests from the claims adjuster for additional
    information surrounding the incident and medical evidence regarding the nature of
    Mr. Gibson' s injuries; however, there is no evidence showing that Mr. Gibson' s
    attorney provided this evidence.   In the absence of any evidence introduced by the
    plaintiff from which one could reasonably conclude that defendants misled Mr.
    Gibson regarding the actual date of the accident, the trial court did not manifestly
    E
    err in refusing to apply the third category of contra non valentem to suspend the
    running of prescription on Mr. Gibson' s lawsuit.
    For these reasons,    we conclude that the trial court properly sustained the
    peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription. As we have resolved
    the matter before us on the prescription objection, we pretermit any discussion of
    the entry of summary judgment in favor of defendants.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment sustaining the peremptory exception
    raising the objection of prescription and dismissing this lawsuit with prejudice is
    affirmed.   All costs of this appeal are assessed to appellant, Bernard Gibson.
    AFFIRMED.
    a
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019CA1308

Filed Date: 7/17/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024