Bailey ex rel. Brown v. Exxonmobil Corp.

102 So. 3d 167, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 459, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 749, 2012 WL 1957561
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 2012
DocketNos. 11-CA-459, 11-CA-460
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 So. 3d 167 (Bailey ex rel. Brown v. Exxonmobil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey ex rel. Brown v. Exxonmobil Corp., 102 So. 3d 167, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 459, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 749, 2012 WL 1957561 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

JUDE G. GRAVOIS, Judge.

^Plaintiffs filed this action in 2009 seeking recovery of damages resulting from the wrongful deaths of their decedents as a result of their decedents’ exposure to naturally occurring radioactive material (“NORM”), and other hazardous, toxic, and carcinogenic radioactive material, including technologically enhanced radioactive material (“TERM”), that accumulated on the inside of pipes used in oil production.1 Defendants filed exceptions of prescription, arguing that plaintiffs’ claims were prescribed on their faces because all of their decedents had died more than one year prior to filing suit. Plaintiffs asserted in their petition and argued in opposition to the exceptions of prescription that prescription on their causes of action had been suspended by the earlier filing of a putative class action suit.

The trial court granted the exceptions of prescription, finding that plaintiffs had previously “opted out” of the putative class as a result of their filing of an earlier suit, and dismissed plaintiffs’ suit with prejudice. The trial court also denied plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss 'without prejudice and [169]*169plaintiffs’ exception of lis pendens. From these rulings, plaintiffs appeal.

|fiOn appeal, plaintiffs argue that prescription in these wrongful death claims had been suspended pursuant to LSA-C.C.P. art. 596 by the filing of the putative class action suit, a class to which they allege they all belonged. Class certification in that suit was denied on April 14, 2008. The judgment denying certification of the class was affirmed on appeal on January 28, 2010. Thus, plaintiffs argue, pursuant to Article 596, they had until one year and thirty days after the date the ruling denying class certification was affirmed on appeal in which to file suit, and thus this suit, filed on March 16, 2009, was timely.

For the following reasons, we find that prescription in the instant suit was suspended by the filing of the earlier class action suit, and thus this suit was tiinely filed. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s grant of defendants’ exceptions of prescription and remand this matter for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The background facts and procedural history of this proceeding are rather detailed and somewhat convoluted. The inception of this litigation can be traced back to May 22, 2001, when a multi-million dollar jury verdict was rendered in a suit entitled Grefer v. Alpha Technical,2 a suit by landowners in Harvey, Louisiana, who had leased their land to various oil field defendants who conducted pipe-cleaning operations on the land leased to them. The verdict in Grefer awarded the plaintiffs compensatory and punitive damages as a result of the defendants’ 17contamination of their immovable property with radioactive material from the defendants’ pipe-cleaning operations.

The next day, on May 28, 2001, Pollard v. Alpha Technical Services was filed in Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans (“Pollard CDC”)3 by plaintiffs asserting damages for personal injuries for exposure to NORM. The plaintiffs in Pollard CDC had either worked at one of the various pipe yards in question or lived near one of the pipe yards, including the Intracoastal Tubular Services, Inc. (“ITCO”) pipe yard in Harvey, Louisiana.

On May 10, 2002, Pollard CDC was consolidated with other purported class action cases and re-captioned In Re Harvey TERM Litigation in Civil District Court in Orleans Parish, which included both personal injury and wrongful death claims for exposure to NORM.4

[170]*170On December 20, 2002, several hundred plaintiffs whose claims fit the proposed class definition of claims included in the In Re Harvey TERM Litigation, filed a separate suit in Civil District Court in Orleans Parish entitled Lester v. ExxonMobil, et al (“Lester CDC ”).5 Many of the plaintiffs involved in the instant appeal and their decedents were actually named as plaintiffs in Lester CDC. The record indicates that no wrongful death claims were made by the plaintiffs in Lester CDC. Noteworthy, the plaintiffs in Lester CDC asserted in their petition that they did not desire to have their claims heard as part of the pending class action, and in the event the putative class became certified and if the certification |swas affirmed on appeal, they would nevertheless opt out with notices to class counsel and to the Court.

On March 23, 2006, the claims of 26 Lester CDC plaintiffs, who were allegedly exposed to NORM at the ITCO pipe yard facility in Harvey, were severed and transferred to the 24th Judicial District Court (No. 63CM02) (“Lester 24th JDC”) on an exception of venue.

On February 20, 2009, new plaintiffs— Donna Meerman (Mrs. Leonardus Meer-man) and Evelyn Gauthreaux (Mrs. Murphy Gauthreaux) and Mr. Gauthreaux’s children — -joined in Lester 24th JDC by filing a motion for leave to file a Clarifying and Amending Petition raising, for the first time in Lester 24th JDC, wrongful death claims resulting from the deaths of their decedents who were also named as personal injury plaintiffs in Lester CDC. In addition to asserting these wrongful death claims, the Clarifying and Amending Petition adopted all of the allegations made in the original Lester CDC petition, and all subsequent supplemental and amending petitions. This motion was granted on April 30, 2009 and the Clarifying and Amending Petition was filed. The defendants in Lester 24th JDC excepted to the wrongful death claims asserted in the Clarifying and Amending Petition as being prescribed. The Lester 24th JDC trial court granted defendants’ exception of prescription, finding that the wrongful death claims made by the plaintiffs in the Clarifying and Amending Petition were prescribed. On appeal, in Lester v. Exxon Mobil Corp. (“Lester”),6 this Court affirmed the granting of the exception of prescription by the Lester 2íth JDC trial court. In Lester, this Court found that the Clarifying and Amending Petition was prescribed because: 1) by filing their own suit (the Lester CDC cumulated action) prior to the trial court’s ruling on class certification in In Re Harvey TERM Litigation, the plaintiffs in the | ^Clarifying and Amending Petition had effectively “opted out” of the benefits of participation in the In Re Harvey TERM Litigation class action under LSA-C.C.P. art. 596;7 and 2) the Clarify[171]*171ing and Amending Petition did not relate back to the 2002 original petition because it failed to meet all of the Giroir8 criteria.

In the meantime, on February 20, 2009, some of the persons who were named as personal injury plaintiffs in Lester CDC filed a new suit in Civil District Court in Orleans Parish entitled Olivia Bailey, et al v. ExxonMobil Corp., et al (“Bailey CDC ”),9 raising for the first time wrongful death claims resulting from their decedents’ exposure to NORM at the ITCO pipe yard. On March 16, 2009, these same plaintiffs filed a nearly identical suit in the 24th Judicial District Court, also entitled Olivia Bailey et al v. ExxonMobil Corp.

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 3d 167, 11 La.App. 5 Cir. 459, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 749, 2012 WL 1957561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-ex-rel-brown-v-exxonmobil-corp-lactapp-2012.