Ida Peralez v. Hdi Global Specialty Se

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 2022
DocketCA-0022-0343
StatusUnknown

This text of Ida Peralez v. Hdi Global Specialty Se (Ida Peralez v. Hdi Global Specialty Se) 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
Ida Peralez v. Hdi Global Specialty Se, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

22-343

IDA PERALEZ

VERSUS

HDI GLOBAL SPECIALTY SE, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF IBERIA, NO. 137691 HONORABLE ANTHONY JUDE SALEME, JR., DISTRICT JUDGE

CANDYCE G. PERRET JUDGE

Court composed of Shannon J. Gremillion, John E. Conery, and Candyce G. Perret, Judges.

AFFIRMED. Matthew D. McConnell McConnell Law Offices Post Office Box 52024 1502 W. University Avenue Lafayette, LA 70505-2024 (337) 347-6404 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Ida Peralez

Norman E. Anseman, III Patrick R. Schmidt Perrier & Lacoste, L.L.C. One Canal Place 365 Canal Street, Suite 2550 New Orleans, LA 70130 (504) 212-8820 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES: United Specialty Insurance Company F R M, Inc. McDonald’s Corporation LSM/STM, Inc. PERRET, Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant, Ida Peralez, appeals the trial court’s November 24, 2021

Judgment dismissing her claims against Defendants-Appellees, United Specialty

Insurance Company,1 McDonald’s Corporation, F R M, Inc., and LSM/STM, Inc.

The Judgment granted Defendants’ Exception of Prescription. On appeal, we affirm

the trial court’s ruling.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY:

The trial court succinctly set forth the facts and procedural history of this case

in its Reasons for Judgment:

Plaintiff alleges that an accident with injury occurred on July 9, 2020[,] at a McDonald’s in New Iberia. A petition for damages was fax filed with the Iberia Parish Clerk of Court on July 9, 2021. The original petition was filed with the Clerk on July 26, 2021. Defendants filed exceptions of prescription alleging that the case had prescribed because the original petition was not delivered within the required time- period following the fax filed petition under La.R.S. 13:850.

Plaintiff filed an opposition to the peremptory exceptions arguing that the original petition was delivered to the clerk within seven days of the fax filed petition as required by [La.]R.S. 13:850 because the original petition had been mailed within the prescribed time-period. Furthermore, plaintiff argued that the suspension of prescription as a result of Hurricane Laura, issued on August 28, 2020[,] by the Louisiana Supreme Court due to the Governor’s Emergency Declaration, gave the plaintiff an additional thirty days within which to timely file suit.

Defendants filed a reply memorandum addressing the plaintiff’s suspension argument alleging that the suspension was a limited suspension that had no effect in this case as plaintiff’s claims did not prescribe within the thirty-day suspension period, August 21, 2020[,] through September 20, 2020.

1 Plaintiff named HDI Global Specialty SE as a defendant in the petition and case caption; however, in Defendants’ Exception of Prescription, United Specialty Insurance Co. appeared and noted Plaintiff incorrectly identified it as HDI Global Specialty SE. After considering the parties’ arguments and the statutes, the trial court

granted Defendants’ Exception of Prescription, finding that, as far as filing the

petition, the operative filing date was July 26, 2021:

The courts of appeal in Louisiana have decided . . . that the clerk of court’s physical possession of or having received and stamped filed the original petition was necessary to satisfy delivery under [La.]R.S. 13:850. . . .

. . . . plaintiff did not meet the requirements of La. R.S. 13:850 in order to have the effective date of filing this suit relate back to the fax filing date. Rather, the date of filing of the plaintiff’s petition in this case is July 26, 2021.

Furthermore, the trial court concluded that La.Civ.Code art. 3472.1 and the

Louisiana Supreme Court’s Order following Hurricane Laura, providing for a

suspensive period, did not add thirty days to Plaintiff’s time to file her petition:

To this Court, the plain reading of paragraph B of La. C.C. art. 3472.1 is that any right to file a pleading during the time of the suspension of prescription provided by this article ends sixty days after the termination of the emergency order or order of the Louisiana Supreme Court. The right to file a pleading pursuant to the suspension provided by this article does not carry forward beyond sixty days after termination of suspension. The 30-day emergency suspension of prescription and peremption periods from August 21, 2020[,] to September 20, 2020, due to Hurricane Laura, applied to claims that would have prescribed in that time. Paragraph B allowed the claims that would have prescribed in the time period from August 21, 2020[,] through September 20, 2020[,] to be filed within 60 days of the September 20, 2020 termination of suspension date. The emergency suspension of prescription and peremptive dates due to Hurricane Laura would not apply to Plaintiff’s claims which prescribed on July 9, 2021, nearly seven months later.

Therefore, using the effective filing date of July 26, 2021, the trial court found

that Plaintiff filed her petition more than one year after her injury on July 9, 2020,

and dismissed Plaintiff’s claims and assessed her with court costs:

IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the Exceptions of Prescription filed by the McDonald’s Corporation, United Specialty Insurance Company, F R M, Inc, and LSMSTM, Inc. are granted.

2 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the Petition for Damages filed by Ida Perelez [sic] is dismissed with prejudice for failure to deliver the original of the fax-filing to the Clerk of Court within the time requirements of La.R.S. 13:850.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that cost[s] in bringing this matter are to be paid by the plaintiff.

Thereafter, Plaintiff filed a Motion and Order for Suspensive Appeal, which was

granted.

On appeal, Plaintiff abandons her argument regarding the timeliness of her

petition under La.R.S. 13:850 and chooses to appeal the judgment based on the trial

court’s refusal to find her one-year prescriptive period suspended for thirty days

under La.Civ.Code art. 3472.1 and the emergency declarations in place due to

Hurricane Laura. Plaintiff asserts two assignments of error, summarized as follows:

(1) the trial court erred as a matter of law in failing to add thirty days to Plaintiff’s

one-year period to file suit due to the Supreme Court’s thirty-day suspension in the

wake of Hurricane Laura, and (2) the trial court failed to determine any ambiguity

in La.Civ.Code art. 3472.1 in favor of Plaintiff, despite the well-settled principle that

prescriptive statutes are strictly construed in favor of maintaining the obligation

sought to be extinguished.

DISCUSSION:

Typically, exceptions of prescription are reviewed on appeal for manifest

error when evidence is introduced at the hearing on the motion, but when no

evidence is introduced, the motion is “analyzed on the facts pled in the petition,

which are accepted as true, and review of the judgment is limited to whether the trial

court’s decision was legally correct.” Med. Review Panel for Bush, 21-954, p. 6 (La.

5/13/22), 339 So.3d 1118, 1123.

3 However, to answer the Assignments of Error raised herein, this court must

determine whether La.Civ.Code art.

Related

Hall v. Hall
617 So. 2d 204 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)
Touchard v. Williams
617 So. 2d 885 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1993)
Hutchinson v. Patel
637 So. 2d 415 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1994)
In Re Succession of Smith
29 So. 3d 723 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2010)
Billiot v. BP Oil Co.
645 So. 2d 604 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1994)
Mallett v. McNeal
939 So. 2d 1254 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2006)
Borel v. Young
989 So. 2d 42 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2008)
Dugas v. Durr
707 So. 2d 1368 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1998)
Horil v. Scheinhorn
663 So. 2d 697 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ida Peralez v. Hdi Global Specialty Se, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ida-peralez-v-hdi-global-specialty-se-lactapp-2022.