Ebony Holmes v. City of New Orleans, Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, Hard Rock Construction, LLC, Tidewater Constructors, LLC v. Keeler & Associates, Inc. and Kinsale Insurance Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 21, 2025
Docket2024-CA-0551
StatusPublished

This text of Ebony Holmes v. City of New Orleans, Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, Hard Rock Construction, LLC, Tidewater Constructors, LLC v. Keeler & Associates, Inc. and Kinsale Insurance Company (Ebony Holmes v. City of New Orleans, Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, Hard Rock Construction, LLC, Tidewater Constructors, LLC v. Keeler & Associates, Inc. and Kinsale 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
Ebony Holmes v. City of New Orleans, Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, Hard Rock Construction, LLC, Tidewater Constructors, LLC v. Keeler & Associates, Inc. and Kinsale Insurance Company, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

EBONY HOLMES * NO. 2024-CA-0551

VERSUS * COURT OF APPEAL CITY OF NEW ORLEANS, * SEWERAGE AND WATER FOURTH CIRCUIT BOARD OF NEW ORLEANS, * HARD ROCK STATE OF LOUISIANA CONSTRUCTION, LLC, ******* TIDEWATER CONSTRUCTORS, LLC, V KEELER & ASSOCIATES, INC. AND KINSALE INSURANCE COMPANY

APPEAL FROM CIVIL DISTRICT COURT, ORLEANS PARISH NO. 2022-07540, DIVISION “F-14” Honorable Jennifer M Medley ****** Judge Rosemary Ledet ****** (Court composed of Judge Roland L. Belsome, Judge Rosemary Ledet, Judge Karen K. Herman)

Steven E. Psarellis STEVEN E. PSARELLIS, APLC 3939 N. Causeway Blvd., Suite 100 Metairie, LA 70002

Gerald Wasserman GERALD D. WASSERMAN, LLC 3939 North Causeway Boulevard, Suite 200 Metairie, LA 70002

COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

David A. Pote Paula M. Wellons TAYLOR WELLONS POLITZ & DUHE, APLC 1515 Poydras Street, Suite 1900 New Orleans, LA 70112

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES

VACATED AND REMANDED February 21, 2025 RML This is a property damage case. Ebony Holmes (“Ms. Holmes”) commenced RLB

KKH this case against multiple defendants, including the following three: (i) Tidewater

Constructors, LLC (“Tidewater”); (ii) Hard Rock Construction, LLC (“Hard

Rock”); and (iii) V. Keeler & Associates, Inc. (“V. Keeler”).1 Each defendant filed

a prescription exception; each defendant raised the same arguments. Each

defendant’s exception was scheduled for a separate hearing. At each hearing, the

trial court made the same ruling—sustained the prescription exception before it.

Thereafter, the trial court rendered three separate final judgments, one in each

defendant’s favor. In the two prior appeals in this matter, this Court vacated the

trial court’s judgments and remanded. 2 We do the same here.

1 V. Keeler’s liability insurer—Kinsale Insurance Company—was also named as a defendant.

For ease of discussion, we refer in this opinion to V. Keeler and Kinsale collectively as “V. Keeler.” 2 As to Tidewater, this Court vacated and remanded in Holmes v. City of New Orleans, 24-0047

(La. App. 4 Cir. 7/16/24), ___ So.3d ___, 2024 WL 3422500 (“Holmes One”); as to Hard Rock, Holmes v. City of New Orleans, 24-0269 (La. App. 4 Cir. 9/26/24), ___ So.3d ___, 2024 WL 4297478 (“Holmes Two”). 1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The factual background of this case is set forth in Holmes One and is not

relevant for deciding the narrow legal issue presented here—whether our prior

ruling in Holmes One is law of the case. In Holmes One, this Court vacated the

trial court’s judgment sustaining Tidewater’s prescription exception and remanded

for further proceeding. In so doing, this Court observed:

In the matter on appeal, the evidence required to resolve the exception of prescription is so intertwined with the evidence required to prove the merits of [Ms.] Holmes’ property damage claims against the public entities and respective contractors that judicial economy is not served in adjudicating prescription at this juncture. The district court abused its discretion in failing to refer the exception to the merits. The judgment granting the exception of prescription must be vacated.

Holmes One, 24-0047, p. 10, ___So.3d at ___, 2024 WL 3422500, *5.

In Holmes Two, this Court vacated the trial court’s judgment sustaining Hard

Rock’s prescription exception and remanded for further proceeding. In so doing,

this Court observed that “[t]he parties in this appeal are arguing the same legal

issues applied to the same factual background as in Holmes One.” Holmes Two,

24-0269, p. 5, ___ So.3d at ___, 2024 WL 4297478, *3.3 We further observed that

Hard Rock’s appeal presented “a textbook example of an appropriate situation in

which to apply law of the case.” Holmes Two, 24-0269, p. 4, ___ So.3d at ___,

2024 WL 4297478, *2. As noted at the outset, we reach the same result here.

To place the trial court’s three rulings and the three appeals in context, the

following time line of the pertinent procedural events is instructive:

3 Ms. Holmes pointed out in Holmes Two that “this Court’s decision in Holmes One should be

equally applied to all parties since all the defendants are solidarily liable for their joint negligence that damaged her residence.” In Holmes Two, we found Ms. Holmes’ argument on this point persuasive. The petition alleges that these defendants are solidarily liable.

2 • October 2023: The trial court granted Tidewater’s exception; Ms. Holmes appealed that judgment to this Court (2024-CA-0047—Holmes One).

• December 2023: While Ms. Holmes’ appeal in Holmes One was pending, the trial court granted Hard Rock’s exception;4 Ms. Holmes appealed that judgment to this Court (2024-CA-0269—Holmes Two).

• April 2024: The trial court held a hearing on V. Keeler’s exception and orally sustained the exception.5

• May 2024: The trial court, pursuant to this Court’s order, issued an amended judgment sustaining Tidewater’s prescription exception.

• June 2024: The trial court rendered a written judgment in V. Keeler’s favor, granting its prescription exception. Ms. Holmes appealed that judgment to this Court (2024-CA-0551) (“Holmes Three”).6

• July 2024: this Court, in Holmes One, vacated the judgment in Tidewater’s favor and remanded for further proceedings.

• September 2024: this Court, in Holmes Two, vacated the judgment in Hard Rock’s favor and remanded for further proceedings.

4 At the hearing on Hard Rock’s exception, Ms. Holmes’ attorney argued as follows:

Your Honor, the facts have not changed in the case. What we are requesting, since there are four defendants in this matter, in the interest of judicial economy—we’ve taken, actually, an appeal on the previous decision of this Court [granting Tidewater’s prescription exception]—and in the interest of judicial economy, so we don’t keep filing appeals upon appeals, since we’re expecting the other two defendants also to file, that we take this under advisement until the Court of Appeals issues a ruling [on Tidewater’s pending appeal]. In other words, put a pause on this until the Court of Appeals issues a ruling.

Hard Rock’s counsel, however, requested that the trial court rule on its exception. Granting the request, the trial court sustained Hard Rock’s prescription exception. 5 At the April 4, 2024 hearing on V. Keeler’s exception, Ms. Holmes’ attorney argued as follows:

The issues are the same, Your Honor. The only difference, since the last time that we were here, is that the record is now up in the Fourth Circuit. There is no record here from which technically anyone can rule on, and that’s why we wanted this thing to be pushed over to another hearing date after the record is returned to the district court. However, we do submit that the issues are the same.

THE COURT: Okay. I really don’t see a reason to delay. I’m going to go ahead and sustain the Exception of Prescription as to V. Keeler . . . 6 At the time of our decision in Holmes Two, Ms. Holmes’ appeal from the trial court’s judgment

in V. Keeler's favor has been lodged in this Court. But, as we observed in our opinion in Holmes Two, the appeal of that separate judgment was not before us.

3 • December 2024: this appeal, Holmes Three, from the June 2024 judgment in V. Keeler’s favor, was docketed.

DISCUSSION

The standard of review in this matter is de novo for two reasons. First, the

underlying judgment is one sustaining a prescription exception without any

evidence being introduced. See Wells Fargo Fin. Louisiana, Inc. v. Galloway, 17-

0413, p. 8 (La. App. 4 Cir. 11/15/17), 231 So.3d 793, 800 (citation omitted)

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Ebony Holmes v. City of New Orleans, Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, Hard Rock Construction, LLC, Tidewater Constructors, LLC v. Keeler & Associates, Inc. and Kinsale Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ebony-holmes-v-city-of-new-orleans-sewerage-and-water-board-of-new-lactapp-2025.