Cajuns for Clean Water, LLC v. Cecelia Water Corporation

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 2016
DocketCW-0015-0804
StatusUnknown

This text of Cajuns for Clean Water, LLC v. Cecelia Water Corporation (Cajuns for Clean Water, LLC v. Cecelia Water Corporation) 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
Cajuns for Clean Water, LLC v. Cecelia Water Corporation, (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

15-804

CAJUNS FOR CLEAN WATER, LLC, ET AL.

VERSUS

CECELIA WATER CORPORATION, ET AL.

ON REMAND FROM THE LOUISIANA STATE SUPREME COURT

********** ON WRIT OF REVIEW FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. MARTIN, NO. 82253-B HONORABLE PAUL J. deMAHY, DISTRICT JUDGE **********

SYLVIA R. COOKS JUDGE

**********

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Jimmie C. Peters, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

AFFIRMED. John Michael Parker L. Adam Thames Ashley C. Meredith Taylor, Porter, Brooks & Phillips L.L.P. P.O. Box 2471 Baton Rouge, LA 70821-2471 (337) 387-3221 Attorneys for Defendants/Relators, Cecelia Water Corporation d/b/a Cecilia Water Corpopration, et al.

Dean J. Guidry The Guidry Law Firm P.O. Box 5255 Lafayette, LA 70502 (337) 266-2250 Attorneys for Defendants/Relators, Cecelia Water Corporation d/b/a Cecilia Water Corpopration, et al.

Jacques P. Soileau Soileau & Soileau P.O. Box 344 Breaux Bridge, LA 70517 (337) 332-4561 Attorney for Plaintiffs/Respondents Cajuns for Clean Water, L.L.C., et al COOKS, Judge.

Cajuns for Clean Water, LLC, Jacqueline Berard, and Brandi Berard

(Plaintiffs) filed a petition for damages in St. Martin Parish on January 15, 2015,

against Cecelia Water Corporation d/b/a Cecilia Water Corporation1 (Defendant or

Cecilia Water) and its unknown insurer. The LLC alleges in the petition that

Jacqueline Berard has assigned to it certain litigious rights in this matter. The

petition for damages alleges Plaintiffs are residential, commercial and recreational

customers who were provided water resources exclusively by Defendant for ten

years prior to filing suit. The suit alleges Defendant is a privately held, non-profit

corporation awarded a publicly registered monopoly under state and local laws

contractually obligated to provide Plaintiffs with water. The suit also alleges

Defendant is contractually obligated to provide “water to its customers in

compliance with minimal standards and guidelines, in accordance with state and

federal laws and regulations, and in sufficient quantity and quality so as not to

impair, impede, or obstruct the usability of the water or access to water…” The

suit further alleges:

Breach of any of the terms of the aforesaid legal and contractual obligations of a public water supplier, which result in damages to its customers, such as those of the Defendant Cecelia Water, give rise to multiple claims for damages by those customers, including but not limited to the following: (1) breach of contract, (2) redhibition, (3) products liability, (4) negligent chemical assault and/or bodily trespass, (5) general tort and negligence, and (6) detrimental reliance, amongst others.

Defendant Cecelia Water has been careless, negligent, reckless, and wanton in the provision of water to Plaintiff customers herein, and in the maintenance, upkeep, and management of its water distribution system, which constitutes a breach of their contractual and legal

1 In this opinion we refer to the Defendant as Cecilia Water using the correct spelling of this name. In Plaintiffs’ petition the Defendant is often referred to as “Cecelia Water” and we therefore do not change the spelling in quoted material. obligations to Plaintiffs, and which breaches have caused the Plaintiffs herein actual compensable damages . . . .

Plaintiffs’ suit alleges Defendant breached its contractual obligations to them

over a period of ten years of service by failing to provide “wholesome, reliable,

and usable water[.]" These alleged breaches include, but are not limited to, certain

instances specified in the lawsuit as follows:

(1) Bacterial MCL violations in 2008 and in 2010;

(2) Arsenic MCL violations in 2006, in 2007, in 2010, and 2013;

(3) Extraordinarily low or zero water pressure to its customers (meaning universal unavailability of water to its customers for extended periods of time) from January 1-31, 2010; from September 5-31, 2013; and f from January 15-February 15, 2014, among others; and

(4) Specific directives issued by Defendant Cecelia Water to its customers in 2013 and 2014, either requiring them to boil water using it (at extra cost to customers) for significant periods of time, or severely restricting the otherwise ordinary usability and access to the water and water service that they were paying for. Both the boil orders and the alleged limited availability of water itself were caused by breaches of Cecelia Water’s legal and contractual obligations to its customers. []

Each of the foregoing breaches as to either the quantity or the quality of the water made available to customers of Cecelia water have caused the Plaintiffs in this lawsuit extensive damages . . . .

Plaintiffs also allege in their petition Defendant received requested rate

increases and federal loans to cover the costs of addressing the alleged deficiencies

but have instead used the funds to add more customers to their already overloaded

capability further compounding the problems of quantity and quality of the water

being provided. The petition sets forth allegations of intentional, wanton, and

reckless conduct by Defendant which has caused direct harm to Plaintiffs through

biologically contaminated water as well as arsenic-laced water, all contrary to its

2 contractual and legal obligations to provide safe and sanitary drinking water to its

customers. The alleged damages suffered by Plaintiffs include, but are not limited

to:

(1) Out of pocket expenses, including but not limited to, for purchasing bottled water, hotel rooms for family bathing, replacement costs of property damaged by outages;

(2) Loss of use and enjoyment of their property, homes, and businesses;

(3) Mental anguish and emotional distress, and particularly on being in their homes or businesses for weeks on end and being unable to bathe, flush fecal matter from their toilets, cook, or clean for multiple weeks.

Plaintiffs also include as an element of alleged damages for Defendant’s

alleged breach of contract, negligence, and bad faith a “reduction in the purchase

price and/or return of the purchase price” of the “defective water[.]” They also

seek “incidental damages” allegedly caused by the defective, unusable water as

well as “attorney’s fees, expert witness fees, and costs[.]” Plaintiffs allege their

damages were caused by Defendant’s “carelessness, recklessness, and negligence”

more particularly described in their Petition for Damages. The Plaintiffs also

allege tort injury by “chemical battery and/or bodily trespass” as a result of

Plaintiffs drinking contaminated water delivered to them by Defendant. They

assert this battery has resulted in physical injury to themselves, their children, and

guests which has caused serious mental anguish, emotional pain and suffering, and

bodily injury. Lastly, Plaintiffs allege the water supplied by Defendant is an

unreasonably dangerous product as defined by Louisiana’s Products Liability Act.

Plaintiffs allege the water supplied “was defective in that it suffered from a

manufacturing defect and was either not filtered or treated and/or was improperly

filtered or treated or processed before it was delivered to Plaintiffs for

3 consumption[.]” They further allege the water “was defective in that it suffered

from breach of an express or implied warranty of usability and fitness for

consumption, within the meaning of the Louisiana Product[s] Liability Act.”

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Cajuns for Clean Water, LLC v. Cecelia Water Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cajuns-for-clean-water-llc-v-cecelia-water-corporation-lactapp-2016.