Claudeidra Minor v. Red River Parish Police Jury and ABC Insurance Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 12, 2022
Docket54,182-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Claudeidra Minor v. Red River Parish Police Jury and ABC Insurance Company (Claudeidra Minor v. Red River Parish Police Jury and ABC Insurance Company) 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
Claudeidra Minor v. Red River Parish Police Jury and ABC Insurance Company, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Judgment rendered January 12, 2022. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 54,182-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

CLAUDEIDRA MINOR Plaintiff-Appellant

versus

RED RIVER PARISH POLICE Defendants-Appellees JURY AND ABC INSURANCE COMPANY

Appealed from the Thirty-Ninth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Red River, Louisiana Trial Court No. 36,838

Honorable Eric R. Harrington, Judge Ad Hoc

BREITHAUPT, DUBOS, & WOLLESON, Counsel for Appellant LLC By: Michael L. DuBos Adam R. Karamanis

MARICLE & ASSOCIATES Counsel for Appellees, By: Gregory A. Grefer Red River Parish Police Jury and Travelers Indemnity Company

Before PITMAN, STEPHENS, and HUNTER, JJ. PITMAN, J.

Plaintiff Claudeidra Minor appeals a summary judgment granted in

favor of Defendant Red River Parish Police Jury (the “Police Jury”). For the

following reasons, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

On November 2, 2015, Plaintiff, an attorney for the Louisiana

Workforce Commission, was leaving the Red River Parish Courthouse when

her shoe heel caught on a torn piece of outdoor carpet that covered the

concrete stairs. Plaintiff fell from the top of the staircase to the bottom,

tumbling and hitting various parts of her body, including her head, on the

way down. She suffered injuries to her neck, back, head, legs, hands, arms,

feet, knees and other parts of her body, as well as cuts and bruises. She

looked up at the stairs from the bottom and noticed a tear in the carpet on the

edge of the top stair. She did not take pictures of the carpet or the stairs on

the day of the fall, but returned to the courthouse a month later and

photographed the alleged defect in the carpet, which she claimed caused her

fall.

Plaintiff filed suit against the Police Jury and its fictitious insurer1 and

alleged that her injuries were caused by its negligence and that of its

employees and that this negligence was the cause in fact of her accident.

She claimed it failed to provide a safe entrance to, and exit from, the

courthouse; failed to properly inspect and supervise the tidiness of the steps

around the courthouse; failed to timely inspect and supervise the premises to

1 In her petition, Plaintiff originally named Defendant ABC Insurance Company as the Police Jury’s insurer. She amended her petition to correct the insurer’s name to Travelers Insurance Company. It, however, answered the petition and clarified that its name is Traveler’s Indemnity Company (“Travelers”). It admitted that it was the Police Jury’s insurer, but denied all other allegations. avoid the accident; failed to properly instruct the maintenance crew to keep

the premises free and clear of defects and obstructions; and failed to warn of

the defect. Plaintiff also alleged that she had a claim based in strict liability

because the Police Jury knew or should have known of the dangerous defect

of the carpet on the stairs, which was under its control and over which it had

custody.

Discovery ensued, and on December 17, 2020, the Police Jury filed a

motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Plaintiff could not prove

essential elements of her claim against it, i.e., that it had knowledge of the

allegedly defective condition or that the condition caused the fall. In support

of its motion, it attached the petition; Plaintiff’s original and supplemental

depositions; and the deposition and affidavit of Jessie Davis, Parish Manager

for the Courthouse of Red River Parish.

The Police Jury contended that Plaintiff was unable to meet her

burden of showing there were genuine issues of material fact regarding its

constructive notice of the alleged defect on the stairs. In support of this

assertion, it pointed out that at her deposition, Plaintiff testified that the first

time she noticed the defect in the carpet was after her accident. She did not

notice it on her way into the courthouse or before her accident. She knew of

no witnesses who could testify why she fell and was not aware of any other

complaints about the carpet before her fall. She did not know if there were

any changes in the carpet between her first and second visit to the

courthouse, and she was unable to prove that the condition existed for a

significant period of time prior to her fall. There was no evidence to

establish when the condition existed and nothing from which to infer notice.

The Police Jury further asserted that its witness, Mr. Davis, who was in 2 charge of inspecting the building, did not recognize that the condition of the

carpet created a hazard. In fact, he testified that he was not even aware

Plaintiff had fallen until almost a year after the accident. He had no prior

knowledge or report of any issue with the carpet and does not know when

the tear in the carpet appeared.

Plaintiff opposed the motion for summary judgment with her

deposition, an affidavit and Mr. Davis’s deposition. She stated that although

she did not see the defect in the carpet prior to her fall because she was

looking straight ahead and not down at her feet, she is sure the defect existed

at the time of the fall because her heel caught on the stair and her foot was

immobilized, causing the fall. She claimed that there is no other explanation

for the sensation she experienced when the fall occurred and that the defect

in the carpet had to have been the catalyst for her fall. She testified that the

carpet showed signs of having been frayed, torn, degraded and discolored.

The Police Jury provided information that the carpet had been installed in

November 2010, and her accident occurred in November 2015. It had been

exposed to weather of all kinds in those five years. Although Plaintiff

admitted she did not take pictures of the stair with the gaping hole between

the carpet and the stair until a month after her accident, she claimed that the

carpet looked the same a month later as it did on the day of the accident.

She also stated that the defective condition was one that only occurs over a

long period of time.

Plaintiff asserted that the Police Jury had constructive notice of the

defect because the condition of the frayed and torn carpet indicated it had

been that way for some time. She stated that had the Police Jury used

reasonable diligence in inspecting the property within its control, it would 3 have discovered the defect and repaired it. She contended that she only

needed to show that there were genuine issues of material fact concerning

constructive notice of the defect to defeat the Police Jury’s motion for

summary judgment.

The motion for summary judgment was heard on February 3, 2021,

and the trial court granted it in favor of the Police Jury and dismissed

Plaintiff’s suit against it. The trial court’s oral reasons for judgment

addressed both causation and constructive notice issues, stating as follows:

Plaintiff alleges that her shoe heel caught on something in the area of the carpet separation. . . . [S]he didn’t actually see what caused the heel to catch as it occurred. After falling and looking at the area where she felt her heel get caught, she saw the carpet separation.

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