Benjamin T. Meyers v. Louisiana Dept. of Transportation Development

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 24, 2021
DocketCA-0020-0620
StatusUnknown

This text of Benjamin T. Meyers v. Louisiana Dept. of Transportation Development (Benjamin T. Meyers v. Louisiana Dept. of Transportation Development) 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
Benjamin T. Meyers v. Louisiana Dept. of Transportation Development, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

20-620

BENJAMIN T. MEYERS, ET AL.

VERSUS

LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION & DEVELOPMENT, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF IBERIA, NO. 131010 HONORABLE VINCENT JOSEPH BORNE, DISTRICT JUDGE

CANDYCE G. PERRET JUDGE

Court composed of Candyce G. Perret, Jonathan W. Perry, and Sharon Darville Wilson, Judges.

AFFIRMED. Jo Ann Nixon 129 W. Pershing Street New Iberia, LA 70560 (337) 369-7437 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLANTS: Benjamin T. Meyers Doreathea M. Viltz

Lauren Camel Begneaud Caffery, Oubre, Campbell & Garrison, L.L.P. 100 E. Vermilion Street, #201 Lafayette, LA 70501 (337) 232-6581 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Louisiana Farm Bureau Insurance Company

Hoai T. Hoang Special Assistants Attorney General 700 St. John Street, 5th Floor Post Office Box 3527 Lafayette, LA 70502 (337) 232-9700 COUNSEL FOR OTHER DEFENDANT: Louisiana Department of Transportation & Development PERRET, Judge.

Plaintiffs-Appellants appeal the trial court’s January 11, 2019 Judgment

granting Defendant-Appellee’s, Louisiana Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance

Company (“Farm Bureau”), Dilatory Exception of Lack of Procedural Capacity

and Peremptory Exception of Prescription. The 2019 Judgment dismissed with

prejudice all claims asserted against Farm Bureau. On appeal, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY:

Benjamin Meyers avers that on October 19, 2016, he was traveling in a 2005

Cadillac DeVille owned by Doreathea 1 Viltz 2 when he hit a “sink hole” with

“boulders which protruded out of the hole” on Louisiana Highway 675. Meyers

claims that this boulder hit the undercarriage of the car, which caused property

damage and caused Mr. Meyers personal injuries. On October 19, 2017, Mr.

Meyers filed suit against Louisiana Department of Transportation and

Development (“DOTD”), Office of Risk Management, Farm Bureau Insurance

Company, and “XYZ” to represent any other unknown or unidentified defendants.

Mr. Meyers asserted that the DOTD failed to maintain the state highway and that

Farm Bureau issued a policy of comprehensive insurance coverage for the vehicle.

He asserted that all Defendants were liable for the damages he set forth, including

pain and suffering, medical and pharmaceutical expenses, loss of use of the

vehicle, cost of preservation of the vehicle pending repairs, and all other associated

costs that will be demonstrated. In a separate paragraph, Mr. Meyers sought

property damage to the vehicle.

1 The record contains several spelling variations of Ms. Viltz’s name. We use “Doreathea” as this is the spelling Ms. Viltz used when signing the amended petition. 2 Ms. Viltz is Mr. Meyers’ mother. This fact was not alleged in the original petition but was included on the In Forma Pauperis Affidavit filed with the Petition for Damages. The DOTD and Office of Risk Management responded by filing a

Declinatory Exception of Insufficiency of Service of Process and Dilatory

Exception of Lack of Procedural Capacity on November 9, 2017. The exceptions

alleged that the Office of Risk Management lacked the procedural capacity to be

sued and that La.R.S. 13:5107 and La.R.S. 39:1538 require that the Secretary of

the Department of the DOTD, the Office of Risk Management, and the Attorney

General’s Office be served, which had not occurred. Prior to a hearing on the

above exceptions, the DOTD also filed a Peremptory Exception of No Right of

Action alleging that Mr. Meyers has no right to assert damage claims for Ms.

Viltz’s vehicle.

Farm Bureau similarly responded, filing a Declinatory Exception Pleading

Insufficiency of Citation and Service of Process and Peremptory Exception of No

Cause and/or Right of Action. Farm Bureau alleged there was no

company/corporation known as “Farm Bureau Insurance Company” as stated in

the Petition for Damages and that service was attempted at an address other than

the address for service listed with the Louisiana Commissioner of Insurance.

Lastly, Farm Bureau argued that Mr. Meyers failed to state facts in his petition

showing that he was the owner of the vehicle, the named insured under the policy,

had a contractual relationship with Farm Bureau, or was a third party beneficiary to

the policy. Thus, Mr. Meyers had no right of action to bring this suit and failed to

assert a cause of action against Farm Bureau.

After the hearing on the above exceptions, the trial court signed a judgment

on April 19, 2018, granting the DOTD’s exception of insufficiency of service of

process, exception of no right of action, and exception of lack of procedural

capacity. The judgment dismissed the Office of Risk management with prejudice.

2 The judgment also granted Farm Bureau’s exception of insufficiency of citation

and service of process and exception of no cause and no right of action. Despite

granting the exceptions, the trial court permitted Mr. Meyers to correct the

citation/service of process and no right/cause of action deficiencies within sixty

days of the judgment.

Accordingly, on June 15, 2018, Mr. Meyers filed Plaintiff’s First

Supplemental and Amended Petition for Damages. This pleading amended the

first paragraph to read, “The petition of BENJAMIN T. MEYERS and

DOREATHER [sic] M. VILTZ, persons of full age and both majority and

domiciled in Iberia Parish, Louisiana.” The amended petition deleted the Office of

Risk Management as a defendant but failed to make an amendment to Farm

Bureau. Additionally, the amended petition made changes to allege that Farm

Bureau was liable to Ms. Viltz, specifically, under its policy of comprehensive

insurance coverage for damages to the vehicle, and that both Defendants were

liable to Ms. Viltz for the vehicle’s property damage. Mr. Meyers maintained his

claims that the DOTD was also liable to him, as well as Ms. Viltz for its failure to

maintain a state highway and maintained the personal injury damages he suffered.

The petition no longer asserted that Farm Bureau was liable for Mr. Meyers’

personal injury damages. The amended petition is signed by both Mr. Meyers and

Ms. Viltz.

The DOTD filed a motion to dismiss, citing again Mr. Meyers’ failure to

properly and timely serve the DOTD and failure to assert a right of action against it

for Ms. Viltz’s claims. Similarly, Farm Bureau also filed a motion to dismiss for

Mr. Meyers’ failure to correct the prior deficiencies in his Petition for Damages

3 within sixty days.3

Additionally, Farm Bureau filed a Dilatory Exception of Lack of Procedural

Capacity and Peremptory Exception of Prescription asserting Mr. Meyers “lacks

procedural capacity to add Doreathea M. Viltz as a plaintiff” and that any claims of

Ms. Viltz have prescribed. Farm Bureau notes that no relationship was alleged

between Mr. Meyers and Ms. Viltz, other than her ownership of the vehicle that he

was operating on the date of the incident. Furthermore, Farm Bureau argued that

as a competent major, Ms. Viltz must bring her own suit, and Mr. Meyers cannot

simply add Ms. Viltz as a plaintiff via an amending petition. Farm Bureau

suggested that to assert her claims, Ms. Viltz must either file a separate suit or

intervene in Mr. Meyers’ suit, which she can no longer do because her claims are

prescribed.

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