De Rome A. Seals v. Joseph corona/dba Nola Automotive Repairs

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 2023
Docket2022-CA-0694
StatusPublished

This text of De Rome A. Seals v. Joseph corona/dba Nola Automotive Repairs (De Rome A. Seals v. Joseph corona/dba Nola Automotive Repairs) 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
De Rome A. Seals v. Joseph corona/dba Nola Automotive Repairs, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

DE ROME A. SEALS * NO. 2022-CA-0694

VERSUS * COURT OF APPEAL JOSEPH CORONA/DBA NOLA * AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS FOURTH CIRCUIT * STATE OF LOUISIANA *******

APPEAL FROM CIVIL DISTRICT COURT, ORLEANS PARISH NO. 2020-07511, DIVISION “B-5” Honorable Richard G. Perque, Judge Pro Tempore ****** Judge Dale N. Atkins ****** (Court composed of Judge Sandra Cabrina Jenkins, Judge Tiffany Gautier Chase, Judge Dale N. Atkins)

JENKINS, J. CONCURS IN THE RESULT

De Rome A. Seals 1828 Charbonnet Street New Orleans, LA 70117

PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

AFFIRMED MARCH 29, 2023 DNA TGC Pro se plaintiff, De Rome A. Seals (“Mr. Seals”), seeks review of the

September 16, 2022 trial court judgment dismissing his negligence claim against

defendant, Joseph Corona d/b/a NOLA Automotive Repairs (“NOLA Automotive

Repairs”) following a bench trial in this matter. For the reasons that follow, we

affirm.

RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

MR. SEALS’ SEPTEMBER 8, 2020 PETITION FOR DAMAGES

On September 8, 2020, Mr. Seals filed a Petition for Damages (“Petition”)

naming NOLA Automotive Repairs as defendant. Therein, Mr. Seals alleged that

in late April 2020, he took his 2005 Lincoln Navigator (“vehicle”) to NOLA

Automotive Repairs for replacement of eight spark plugs, including at least one

broken spark plug.1 Further, Mr. Seals contended that he brought his own spark

plugs to be installed in the vehicle, and that he had a conversation at NOLA

Automotive Repairs about the propensity for spark plugs to break in that particular

1 The record is inconsistent regarding how many spark plugs Mr. Seals sought to replace. His Better Business Bureau complaint, which is discussed more fully throughout this Opinion, stated that he sought repair of five spark plugs, “including a broken one.” The Petition referenced eight spark plugs, including one that “was broken inside the housing.”

1 vehicle. Mr. Seals also stated in his Petition that he asked to be notified if NOLA

Automotive Repairs discovered more than one broken spark plug in his vehicle.

Additionally, Mr. Seals asserted that when he picked up his vehicle on May 1,

2020, there was an additional $109.00 charge for another broken spark plug

replacement that he did not authorize, as well as a charge for “shop supplies.”

According to Mr. Seals’ Petition, he had a conversation with NOLA Automotive

Repairs the next day, May 2, 2020, to dispute the charges, and subsequently filed a

complaint with the Better Business Bureau (“BBB”) on June 8, 2020, which

NOLA Automotive Repairs responded to, by letter, on June 16, 2020.

Mr. Seals’ Petition further alleged that on August 8, 2020, he hired a

mechanic, Mike Cutrer (“Mr. Cutrer”) to “diagnose” the vehicle at a second

automobile repair shop, NOLA Auto Sports. Mr. Seals alleged that during Mr.

Cutrer’s examination, the on-board diagnostic scanner indicated that an

unidentified spark plug “was misfiring” and that Mr. Cutrer “removed said spark

plug[,]” which “was rusty and deeply covered with soot . . . .” Mr. Seals’ Petition

did not reference which spark plug was broken in the vehicle when he brought it

for repairs at NOLA Automotive Repairs or which spark plug Mr. Cutrer removed

during his inspection of the vehicle at NOLA Auto Sports. That is, the Petition

does not explain if the spark plug that Mr. Seals sought replacement of at NOLA

Automotive Repairs in late April 2020 is the same spark plug that Mr. Cutrer

removed from the vehicle on August 8, 2020, at NOLA Auto Sports.

In his Petition, Mr. Seals claimed that he suffered a loss of $687.00;2 undue

stress; loss of sleep; and $3,200.00 in lost wages. He sought damages in the

2 The BBB complaint showed a purchase of $616.70 at NOLA Automotive

Repairs. Mr. Seals’ Petition listed an uncategorized “[l]oss of $617.00, +$70.” The record is unclear as to what the additional $70 loss in the Petition refers.

2 amount of $3,817.00 “plus court cost[s],” as well as “any and all equitable/punitive

relief deemed by the court.”

Mr. Seals attached NOLA Automotive Repairs’ June 8, 2020 response to his

BBB complaint to his Petition. In this response, Yvette Koehn, who identified

herself as an administrator for NOLA Automotive Repairs, stated that NOLA

Automotive Repairs quoted the full repair price beforehand, and “kept [Mr. Seals]

informed through the whole process of replacing [his] spark plugs . . . .” The letter

from NOLA Automotive Repairs also stated that “shop supplies are for items that

[NOLA Automotive Repairs] use[s] while working on a vehicle,” and that the fee

“is legal according to [La.] R.S. 32:1263.[3]”

Additionally, Mr. Seals attached to his Petition a June 16, 2020 letter from

the law firm of Provosty, Sadler, & deLaunay, APC (“law firm”). The law firm

addressed the letter to NOLA Automotive Repairs and explained that Mr. Seals

“ha[d] contacted [the] law firm in connection with the unauthorized replacement of

one spark plug on his [vehicle] . . . .” Further, the letter provided that “[a]lthough

3 Louisiana Revised Statutes 32:1263 is titled “[m]otor vehicle repairs,” and

it provides:

A. Suppliers of mechanical repairs and services for any vehicle subject to regulation pursuant to this Chapter shall provide each consumer with an itemized bill indicating repairs and services performed, parts replaced, materials used, the total labor charge, and the identity of the mechanic, repairman, or supplier who performed the work. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a supplier of mechanical repairs and services from charging a service fee for the use of shop supplies such as rags, fender covers, small amounts of fluid, or other items which are not itemized, provided that the fee does not exceed ten percent of the total invoice for mechanical repairs or fifty dollars, whichever is less.

B. The provisions of this Section shall not apply to suppliers of mechanical repairs and services for any recreational vehicle subject to regulation of this Chapter.

3 Mr. Seals indicates that he authorized the replacement of one spark plug, he

disputes the $109.95 charge for the replacement of the additional [spark] plug, plus

the $26.39 charge for ‘shop supplies.’” The letter stated that “Mr. Seals maintains

that these were not authorized charges and amicably requests that they be refunded

within ten (10) days of the posting of this letter.”4

NOLA AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS’ OCTOBER 5, 2020 ANSWER

NOLA Automotive Repairs filed an Answer on October 5, 2020, wherein it

denied all the allegations in Mr. Seals’ Petition and contended that the trial court

should dismiss his Petition. Thereafter, the trial court held a bench trial on August

31, 2022.

AUGUST 31, 2022 TRIAL

Present at the August 31, 2022 trial were Mr. Seals and Jessie Wright (“Mr.

Wright”) for Mr. Seals; Patrick Giraud (“defense counsel”), counsel for NOLA

Automotive Repairs; and Joseph Corona (“Mr. Corona”), the owner of NOLA

Automotive Repairs.

4 We note that Mr. Seals’ Petition alleged that NOLA Automotive charged

him $109.00; but the June 16, 2020 letter from the law firm claimed that NOLA Automotive Repairs charged him $109.95.

4 Testimony of Jessie Wright

Mr. Seals called as a witness Mr. Wright, who identified himself as a truck

driver. Mr. Wright answered in the negative when asked whether he had any

vocational training in mechanical work or any expertise in mechanics that he could

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