Kelly Juneau, individually and on behalf of her minor child, Chayse Juneau v. Louisiana Tennis Association, Inc., Acadiana Community Tennis Association, Inc., United States Tennis Association, Inc., and Southern Tennis Association, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  •                                STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2019 CA 0964
    KELLY JUNEAU, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF
    HER MINOR CHILD, CHAYSE JUNEAU
    VERSUS
    LOUISIANA TENNIS ASSOCIATION, INC., ACADIANA COMMUNITY
    TENNIS ASSOCIATION, INC., UNITED STATES TENNIS ASSOCIATION,
    INC., AND SOUTHERN TENNIS ASSOCIATION, INC.
    Judgment Rendered:
    FEB 2 7 2020.
    On Appeal from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge
    State of Louisiana
    Docket No. C636813, Sec. 21/ D
    Honorable Janice G. Clark, Judge Presiding
    Ashley F. Barriere                       Counsel for Plaintiff/ Appellant,
    Stephen M. Huber                         Kelly Juneau, individually and on behalf of
    Brian P. Marcelle                        her minor son, Chayse Juneau
    New Orleans, Louisiana
    Michael W. McKay                         Counsel for Defendant/ Appellee,
    Douglas J. Cochran                       United States Tennis Association, Inc.
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana
    BEFORE:     WHIPPLE, C. J., GUIDRY, AND BURRIS, 1 JJ
    1
    Judge William J. Burris, retired, serving pro tempore by special appointment of the
    Louisiana Supreme Court.
    BURRIS, J.,
    The plaintiff seeks review of a judgment that granted the motion for
    summary judgment filed by the          United   States   Tennis Association ( USTA),
    defendant, dismissing the plaintiff's claims against the USTA with prejudice.         For
    the reasons that follow, we affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In May 2014, then -fourteen year old Chayse Juneau allegedly sustained
    heat -related injuries while participating in the Louisiana Junior Qualifier tennis
    tournament in Lafayette, Louisiana.    While playing his second match of the day,
    Chayse' s coach, Abrie DuPlooy, noticed that he was " not himself." According to
    Mr.   DuPlooy, Chayse was " walking weird" and " didn' t move the way he usually
    moves."      Mr. DuPlooy called Kelly Juneau, Chayse' s mother, who was nearby but
    was not watching the match.         When   Ms. Juneau arrived     in the area where
    Chayse was playing, she observed that Chayse was " struggling" to breathe, was
    not steady on his feet, and appeared disoriented. Ms. Juneau located the official
    for Chayse' s match, Marijane Jeansonne, advised that she was Chayse' s mother,
    and asked Ms. Jeansonne to instruct Chayse that the " match is over with."             In
    response to Ms. Jeansonne' s inquiry as to why Ms. Juneau intended to end the
    match,    Ms.   Juneau explained her observations concerning Chayse' s physical
    appearance.      Because of the layout of the playing area,      Ms. Juneau was not
    close enough to speak to Chayse directly; additionally, communication between a
    player and a parent during match play is considered coaching and is not allowed
    per tournament rules.
    Ms.    Jeansonne interrupted Chayse' s match       and   advised   him, "[   Y] our
    mother has told me that you are not feeling well and she thinks that you need to
    stop playing."    Chayse stated that he was fine and wished to continue the match.
    Ms. Jeansonne relayed Chayse' s wishes to Ms. Juneau, who became " distraught"
    and continued to insist the match was over.          According to Ms. Juneau,         Ms.
    2
    Jeansonne threatened to ban her from the tournament if she entered the playing
    area to remove Chayse from the court.                    Ms. Jeansonne advised Ms. Juneau that
    if she was unhappy with the decision to allow Chayse to continue playing, she
    was "   welcome to take this up with the head referee."                       This was not done, and
    Ms. Juneau continued to watch Chayse' s match, from afar, until it was over.
    After    the     match,      Ms.   Juneau   and     Chayse spoke to Ashley Rhoney,
    tournament director.           Mr.    Rhoney was unaware of the events that transpired
    during Chayse' s match, and there is no indication that Ms. Juneau reported the
    incident to Mr.        Rhoney or complained about Ms. Jeannsone' s refusal                         to end
    Chayse' s    match.         However,       Mr.   Rhoney and the              medical    trainer,   Jennifer
    Pridmore, who was             nearby, observed that Chayse " didn' t look good."                        He
    appeared tired and dehydrated and his skin tone was " off."                            Ms. Pridmore was
    also unaware of Ms. Juneau' s prior concerns for Chayse' s health.                          Ms. Pridmore
    questioned Chayse concerning how much food and water he consumed before
    his match and concluded that he was dehydrated.                          Ms. Pridmore also learned
    that Chayse had taken a different, immediate release medication that morning,
    as opposed to his usual time -released dose,                        which she expected was likely
    contributing to his symptoms.
    For the next hour or so, efforts to cool and rehydrate Chayse continued.
    Chayse and Ms. Juneau discussed whether Chayse wanted to, and was physically
    able to,    play in the third match scheduled for later that afternoon.                       Ms. Juneau
    asked Chayse if he wanted to be examined by paramedics, who were positioned
    nearby at a college baseball game, but he declined. Eventually, once it became
    apparent        that     Chayse' s     condition    would       not     improve        without     medical
    intervention,      Ms.    Juneau      drove      Chayse    to   a    local    hospital.     Chayse     was
    diagnosed with acute rhabdomyolysis and renal failure and remained hospitalized
    for three days.          As a result of these injuries,         Chayse purportedly continues to
    c
    suffer from exercise heat intolerance, unusual fatigue from simple tasks, muscle
    cramps, and cognitive issues.
    The subject tennis tournament was organized and hosted by the Acadiana
    Community Tennis Association, Inc. ( ACTH), an organizational member of the
    USTA.     The USTA, whose principal office is located in New York, is the national
    governing body for the sport of tennis in the United States and is divided into 17
    sectional associations.    Each sectional association is empowered by the USTA to
    manage the sport of tennis in its geographical area, with the caveat that this be
    done in accordance with the USTA's constitution, bylaws, and regulations.             The
    Southern Tennis Association is the sectional association that includes Louisiana.
    Sectional associations are composed of district associations, which are governed
    by their own rules and regulations adopted in accordance with the requirements
    of the parent sectional association.        The Louisiana Tennis Association is the
    district association that governs tennis in the state.    Community associations, like
    the ACTA, are the lowest USTA organizational level.
    The Louisiana Tennis Association selected the ACTA to organize and host
    the 2014 Louisiana Junior Qualifier. The winner of the Louisiana Junior Qualifier
    competes in the Southern Tennis Association Junior Championship.             The winner
    of the Southern Tennis Association Junior Championship then competes in the
    USTA Junior Championship.
    Ms. Juneau ' filed the instant suit,    individually and on behalf of Chayse,
    against    the   USTA,   the   Southern   Tennis   Association,   the   Louisiana   Tennis
    Association,     and the ACTA for injuries allegedly sustained by Chayse while
    participating in the 2014 Louisiana Junior Qualifier. The USTA filed the subject
    motion for summary judgment in August 2018, arguing that Ms. Juneau could
    not satisfy her burden of proving that it owed or breached a duty to Chayse and,
    4
    therefore,    could not satisfy her burden of proving USTA' s negligence at trial. 2
    Ms. Juneau opposed the motion,            primarily asserting that the USTA owed and
    breached a duty to train its officials/ referees to recognize and respond to the
    signs and symptoms of heat -related illnesses and to train referees to stop a
    match at a mother's request when the request was based upon her child' s
    illness.    Ms. Juneau further asserts that the USTA had and breached a duty to
    implement appropriate policies and procedures concerning the recognition and
    treatment of heat -related illnesses.
    The trial court granted the USTA' s motion for summary judgment on
    January 16, 2019. 3 In response, Ms. Juneau filed the instant appeal, asserting
    the trial court erred in granting judgment in favor of the USTA, because genuine
    issues of material fact remain as to whether the USTA breached its duty to
    properly train referees and to implement appropriate policies and procedures.
    DISCUSSION
    Appellate courts review summary judgments de novo, using the same
    criteria that governs the trial court's consideration of whether summary judgment
    is appropriate.     Moreno v. Entergy Corp., 2012- 0097 ( La. 12/ 4/ 12),          
    105 So. 3d 40
    , 47.     Per La. Code Civ. P. art. 966. A( 3),   a motion for summary judgment shall
    be granted if the motion,       memorandum, and supporting documents show there
    is no genuine issue as to material fact and the mover is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.
    The burden of proof on a motion for summary judgment rests with the
    mover. La. Code Civ. P. art. 966. D( 1).        When, as here, the mover will not bear
    the burden of proof at trial on the issue raised in the motion, the mover' s burden
    z
    The Southern Tennis Association and the Louisiana Tennis Association moved for summary
    judgment with the USTA; however, the trial court denied the motion as to these defendants.
    The portion of the judgment denying the motion as to these defendants is not at issue in this
    appeal.
    3
    The trial court originally granted the USTA' s motion in October 2018 but subsequently
    granted Ms. Juneau' s motion for new trial. After hearing re -argument on the motion, the trial
    court again granted the USTA's motion for summary judgment in January 2019.
    5
    does not require him to negate all essential elements of the adverse party' s
    claim. Instead, he must point out to the court the absence of factual support for
    one or more elements essential to the adverse party's claim.                   The burden is on
    the adverse party to produce factual support sufficient to establish the existence
    of a genuine issue of material fact or that the mover is not entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law. La. Code Civ. P. art. 966. D( 1).
    A genuine issue is a triable issue.                 In determining whether an issue is
    genuine,    courts cannot consider the              merits,     make credibility determinations,
    evaluate testimony,        or    weigh   evidence.       Tate v. Outback Steakhouse of
    Florida, 2016- 0093 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 9/ 16/ 16), 
    203 So. 3d 1075
    , 1077.                  A fact is
    material if it potentially insures or precludes recovery, affects a litigant's ultimate
    success,    or determines the outcome of the legal dispute. Because it is the
    applicable substantive law that determines materiality, whether a particular fact
    in dispute is material can be seen only in light of the substantive law applicable
    to the case. 
    Id.
    It    is    undisputed     that   the   USTA       had   no   involvement   in    planning   or
    operating the 2014 Louisiana Junior Qualifier, and Ms. Juneau does not assert
    that representatives from the USTA were present at the event.                          She identifies
    Ms. Jeansonne as ' the referee alleged to have acted negligently."                     However, it is
    undisputed that Ms. Jeansonne was not an employee of the USTA, and the ACTA
    was   solely       responsible    for   selecting       and    compensating   tournament       staff,
    including Ms. Jeansonne.            Consequently, there is no basis to hold the USTA
    vicariously liable for any negligence allegedly attributable to Ms. Jeansonne.
    Therefore, Ms. Juneau must demonstrate that the USTA was directly negligent.
    Ms.        Juneau' s theory of liability against the USTA rests on the general
    negligence principles of La. Civ. Code art. 2315.                To succeed at trial, Ms. Juneau
    must satisfy all elements of the duty -risk analysis: duty, breach, cause -in -fact,
    0
    legal cause, and actual damages. Pontchartrain Natural Gas System v.
    Texas Brine Company, LLC, 2018- 0631 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 7/ 3/ 19), 
    281 So. 3d 1
    , 6, writ denied, 2019- 01423 ( La. 11/ 12/ 19), 
    282 So. 3d 224
    . A negative answer
    to   any   of   the    elements   of   the   duty -risk   analysis   prompts   a   no -liability
    determination. 
    Id.
    Ms. Juneau' s claim against the USTA is premised on the fact that the
    tournament was sanctioned by the USTA, and Ms.                   Jeansonne was a        USTA-
    certified referee.     The issue before the court is whether the USTA owed a duty to
    Chayse,    where its only involvement with this tournament was sanctioning the
    event and certifying that Ms. Jeansonne was qualified to officiate the event in
    accordance with the USTA' s rules of the game.
    The threshold issue in any negligence action is whether the defendant
    owed the plaintiff a duty, and whether a duty is owed is a question of law. 
    Id.
    The inquiry is whether the plaintiff has any law — statutory, jurisprudential, or
    arising from     general     principles of fault — to support the claim.              Lathan
    Company,        Inc.   v.   State, Department of Education,             Recovery School
    District, 2016- 0913 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 12/ 6/ 17), 
    237 So. 3d 1
    , 6, writ denied sub
    nom.   Lathan Company, Inc. v. State, Department of Education, 2018-
    0026 ( La. 3/ 9/ 18), 
    237 So. 3d 1191
    .       In deciding whether to impose a duty in a
    particular case, the court must make a policy decision in light of the unique facts
    and circumstances presented.           When no factual dispute exists and no credibility
    determinations are required, the legal question of the existence of a duty is
    appropriately addressed by summary judgment.              
    Id.
     For the reasons that follow,
    we conclude that the USTA owed no duty to Chayse under the facts of this case.
    USTA Sanctioned the Louisiana Junior Qualifier
    First, Ms. Juneau contends that the USTA owed a duty to Chayse because
    it sanctioned the tournament.           Andrew Walker testified via deposition as the
    VA
    USTA' s representative and explained that, to be ' USTA- sanctioned" means that
    the USTA is paid a sanctioning fee, its regulations are followed, and the results of
    the tournament " count towards rankings.'         Mr. Walker confirmed that the USTA
    does not require tournaments at the level of the Louisiana Junior Qualifier to be
    officiated by USTA- certified referees.      Even if the event is sanctioned by the
    USTA, the decision to hire USTA- certified personnel to officiate a tournament at
    this level is made by the local organization and ' would be dependent on section
    regulations."
    Ms. Juneau primarily relies on the opinions of Dr. Douglas Casa, whom she
    describes as " the preeminent national expert in the recognition and prevention of
    heat stroke and other exertional heat -related illness in athletic sporting events..."
    Dr. Casa generally concluded that the " tennis tournament and those associations
    that supervise it' s [ sic] activities failed to meet minimum standards related to
    health and safety issues for their tennis tournament participants on May 30,
    2014."     However, as discussed,    the ACTA had direct authority and control over
    this tournament. The USTA did not " supervise" the ACTA, and its involvement as
    the sanctioning -body was simply to supply the applicable rules of play and to
    permit the winner to advance to the next level of competition within the USTA
    tournament system.
    USTA Certified the Referee Used at the Louisiana Junior Qualifier
    We likewise find that Ms.   Juneau cannot succeed at trial in establishing
    that the USTA had a duty to properly train referees,            like Ms. Jeansonne, to
    recognize the signs and symptoms of heat -related illnesses or to stop a match at
    a parent's request, nor did the USTA have a duty to adopt adequate policies and
    procedures on the subject.
    4
    Mr. Rhoney confirmed this is the level of involvement by the USTA when it sanctions an
    event.
    E:3
    Ms. Jeansonne served as a roving umpire or referee for this tournament
    and Chayse' s match, specifically. She explained that players were responsible for
    officiating their own matches and for keeping score per USTA rules; however,
    she was assigned to oversee eight courts to ensure " fair                   play"    and to assist
    players should a dispute arise.          Ms. Jeansonne attended her first referee training
    through the USTA in 2007.         Since that time, she estimates that she has served as
    a referee in 40- 60 tournaments.               Ms. Jeansonne also attends annual trainings
    required by the USTA, during which referees are educated on any rule changes.
    Without identifying the legal source of the USTA's alleged duty,                         Ms.
    Juneau argues that the USTA recognized that it owed a duty to train officials
    regarding the signs and symptoms of heat -related illnesses by adopting its Friend
    at   Court    Manual.      The   Manual    contains     the   organization' s     regulations   and
    emergency care guidelines, including a section concerning "' HEAT ILLNESS." The
    emergency care guidelines identify heat illness as an " acute medical condition
    that arises from a combination of dehydration and overheating within the body."
    The guidelines briefly explain when heat illnesses most commonly occur, i.e., in
    hot and humid conditions, and identify common signs and symptoms.
    Contrary to Ms. Juneau' s argument, Mr. Walker, testifying on behalf of the
    USTA, explained that the emergency care guidelines are " focused" to tournament
    directors, like Mr. Rhoney, not referees, like Ms. Jeansonne. The training video
    shown to USTA- certified referees ( as            a"   refresher's and to trainees hoping to
    become       certified '   references    the    existence"    of   the   USTA emergency         care
    guidelines     and    suggests    that    trainees " should"       review   the   Manual. 5     The
    guidelines are not otherwise discussed during the referee training, and trainees
    are tested on techniques,         procedures, code of conduct, and              rules.   Thus, it is
    evident that the USTA did not assume a duty to train its referees on this issue.
    5
    In accordance with Mr. Walker's testimony, Ms. Jeansonne confirmed that she was not
    trained by the USTA to identify the signs or symptoms of heat -related illness.
    9
    See McGowan v. Victory and Power Ministries, 1999- 0235 ( La. App. 1st Cir.
    3/ 31/ 00),   
    757 So. 2d 912
    , 914, ("[ I] if a person undertakes a task which he
    otherwise has no duty to perform, he must nevertheless perform that task in a
    reasonable and prudent manner.'
    Ms.    Juneau' s   reliance    on   Dr.   Casa' s opinions     in   this   regard   is   also
    unavailing as we find that his opinions do not establish that the USTA owed a
    1
    duty to Chayse.         Instead, Dr. Casa' s conclusions focus on the conduct of the
    ACTA, Ms. Jeansonne, and Ms. Pridmore.                 Dr. Casa identified what he believes
    are the five " most egregious errors" by the defendants. Three of those concern
    the ACTA' s failure to follow the USTA' s Friend at Court Manual " regarding
    prevention, recognition, and treatment of exertional heat illnesses."               Dr. Casa did
    not identify any perceived inadequacies in the Manual or the USTA's referee
    training program but, instead, cited the tournament's lack of emergency policies
    and procedures.
    The remaining two ""egregious errors" identified by Dr. Casa concern Ms.
    Jeansonne and Ms. Pridmore' s response to Chayse' s condition and the adequacy
    of the care he received.         For instance, Dr. Casa finds fault in Ms. Jeansonne' s
    failure to heed Ms. Juneau' s requests to end Chayse' s match, speculating that
    her decision was " likely due to [ her] lack of knowledge related to the condition."
    However, there is no basis to hold the LISTA liable for Ms. Jeansonne' s decision.
    This is particularly true considering Mr. Walker's testimony that, per the USTA's
    rules, a parent has the authority to end a match.                Mr. Walker further explained
    that the USTA does not have specific policies and procedures dictating the
    circumstances under which a referee should suspend ( rather than end) a match
    6
    Further, this court is not bound by the conclusory opinions of experts on the legal question
    of whether a duty existed under the facts and circumstances of a case. Bowman v. City of
    Baton Rouge/ Parish of East Baton Rouge, 2002- 1376 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 5/ 9/ 03), 
    849 So. 2d 622
    , 629, writ denied, 2003- 1579 ( La. 10/ 3/ 03), 
    855 So. 2d 315
    .
    10
    at a    parent's request.       Instead, the referee has the discretion to respond and
    react to the parent' s request " based on the situation."
    Ms. Juneau asserts this case is "            comparable"    to Fecke v. Board of
    Supervisors         of    Louisiana      State        University    and     Agricultural         and
    Mechanical College, 2015- 0017 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 7/ 7/ 15),                    
    180 So. 3d 326
    ,
    writs granted 2015- 1807, 1806 ( La. 2/ 19/ 16), 
    186 So. 3d 1175
    ,                   1177, aff'd in
    part,   rev'd in part,    sub   nom.   Fecke v. Board of Supervisors of Louisiana
    State University, 2015- 1806 ( La. 9/ 23/ 16), 
    217 So. 3d 237
    , modified on reh' g
    sub     nom.   Fecke v.     Board of Supervisors of Louisiana State University
    and Agricultural and Mechanical College, 2015- 1806 ( La.                         10/ 19/ 16),   
    218 So. 3d 1
    .      We disagree.      In Fecke, an LSU student was injured when she fell
    from an indoor bouldering wall at the LSU Recreation Center ('' UREC'.                    The jury
    rendered a verdict in favor of the student and her parents, and the Board of
    Supervisors appealed.           After reviewing the evidence, this court concluded that
    the     Board' s   employees,     UREC   staff   members,       failed   to "   properly instruct,
    demonstrate, and certify" the plaintiff understood the proper techniques for
    climbing the bouldering wall in accordance with their duties set forth in the
    UREC' s manual and safety documents.             Id. at 346.
    Ms. Juneau asserts that, similar to the duty at issue in Fecke, the USTA
    had a duty to appropriately train its officials to follow appropriate protocols for
    recognizing and treating heat -related illnesses at tennis tournaments and failed
    to do so."     However, the duty owed and breached in Fecke was the duty to train
    and supervise users of the rock wall, and the negligent actors were employees of
    the Board, thus, making the Board vicariously liable for its employees' failure to
    train the plaintiff.     Id. at 343, citin   Ravey v. Rockworks, LLC, 2012- 1305 ( La.
    App. 3d Cir. 4/ 10/ 13), 
    111 So. 3d 1187
    ,              1192 ( discussing   the duty owed by a
    11
    gym to ensure that its members know how to properly use its equipment).             For
    this reason, we agree with the USTA that Fecke is distinguishable.
    In Edwards v.       Doug Ruedlinger, Inc., 95- 0785 ( La. App. 4th Cir.
    1/ 31/ 96), 
    669 So. 2d 541
    ,   543, a student was paralyzed while playing in a high
    school football game.     He and his mother filed suit against the Louisiana High
    School Athletic Association, Inc. ( LHSAA), alleging that " the LHSAA' s liability
    derive[ d]   from its status as " the   agency that was responsible for managing,
    coordinating, supervising, promulgating,        and setting rules and regulations' for
    high   school   interscholastic athletics in the state."    Id. at   544,   quoting the
    plaintiffs' third amended petition.      The plaintiffs argued that the LHSAA was
    liable for failing to require its members and LHSAA- sanctioned officials to teach
    and enforce existing rules during LHSAA- sanctioned games.           Id.    The Fourth
    Circuit disagreed and held that the LHSAA had no duty to control the conduct of
    those who failed to prevent the player's injury. Id. at 545.
    The Edwards plaintiffs further argued that the LHSAA had a duty to warn
    parents and participants of the risk of injury in light of the high number of
    paralyzing injuries among high school football players statewide.             Id.   The
    evidence established that the LHSAA required student athletes to submit to a
    physical exam and provide medical information, seemingly to identify a genetic
    predisposition to sustaining spinal injuries. Id. at 543. The court concluded that
    the LHSAA had no duty to warn, reasoning,
    The evidence shows the LHSAA exists to provide a framework for
    interscholastic competitions, not to ensure the safety of those
    individuals who participate in the various sports. Even if the LHSAA
    has recognized the potential for injury to some students and
    therefore requires a physical examination for all sports players, the
    assumption of this limited duty does not encompass a further
    requirement of specific warnings to football participants. Any duty to
    warn of such risks is better left to those who instruct and guide the
    players, not the LHSAA.
    Id. at 545.
    12
    The   Edwards court relied           on    Harvey v. Ouachita              Parish   School
    Board, 20, 574, 
    545 So. 2d 1241
     ( La.            App. 2d Cir.       1989), where the Second
    Circuit concluded that the LHSAA was not liable for the actions of game referees.
    In Harvey, an injured high school football player alleged that LHSAA- approved
    referees failed to remove overly aggressive players from the game.                   The plaintiff
    maintained     that the    LHSAA     controlled       the   referees,   because    referees were
    required to be registered by the LHSAA and pass a rules test given by the LHSAA
    in order to officiate varsity football games.               
    Id. at 1243
    .   The court affirmed
    dismissal of the LHSAA, noting that the requirement that officials pass a rules
    test served the LHSAA' s purpose of providing a framework for conducting high
    school athletic contests and promoting sportsmanship in high school athletics.
    
    Id. at 1245
    .     Much like the USTA, the LHSAA " establishes standards, minimally
    certifies officials for the individual schools to use, and conducts playoffs leading
    to the championships." 
    Id. at 1243
    . And, like the ACTA, " the schools themselves
    conduct the games and hire the officials." 
    Id.
    We recognize that Ms. Juneau' s allegations against the USTA are not
    identical to those asserted against the LHSAA in Edwards and Harvey, and the
    LHSAA, unlike the USTA, did not train officials.                 Nevertheless, we find these
    cases provide guidance.'       As the national governing body for the game of tennis,
    the USTA' s purpose is to " promote and grow the game of tennis."                     Even if the
    USTA recognized the risk of heat -related injuries during sanctioned events, we
    do not find that it had a duty to provide Ms. Jeansonne with the type of training
    Ms. Juneau alleges or to adopt policies and procedures to address the issue. Any
    duty to protect against such risks or to warn parents and participants is better
    left to those who instruct and guide the players, not the USTA.                   See Edwards,
    669 So. 2d at 545.        We cannot say that the USTA owed a duty to Chayse,
    The parties do not cite jurisprudence directly addressing the liability of a sports organization
    or association such as the USTA under similar facts, and this court has found none.
    13
    considering its only involvement with this tournament was sanctioning the event,
    which appears to be nothing more than recognizing its legitimacy for purposes of
    the USTA tournament structure, and certifying that Ms. Jeansonne was qualified
    to officiate the event in accordance with the USTA' s rules of the game.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment granting the United States Tennis
    Association' s motion for summary judgment is affirmed. Costs of this appeal are
    assessed against the plaintiff/ appellant, Kelly Juneau, individually and on behalf
    of her minor child, Chayse Juneau.
    AFFIRMED.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019CA0964

Filed Date: 2/27/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024