Ja'Quarrius Ignont v. Rick Breen DBA Breen's Rapid Lube

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 2025
Docket56,293-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Ja'Quarrius Ignont v. Rick Breen DBA Breen's Rapid Lube (Ja'Quarrius Ignont v. Rick Breen DBA Breen's Rapid Lube) 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
Ja'Quarrius Ignont v. Rick Breen DBA Breen's Rapid Lube, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Judgment rendered August 27, 2025. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 56,293-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

JA’QUARRIUS IGNONT Plaintiff-Appellee

versus

RICK BREEN D/B/A BREEN’S Defendant-Appellant RAPID LUBE

Appealed from the Monroe City Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court No. 2021CV00858

Honorable Tammy Deon Lee, Judge

NELSON, ZENTNER, SARTOR Counsel for Appellant & SNELLINGS, LLC By: Thomas G. Zentner, Jr.

OFFICE OF ANTHONY J. BRUSCATO Counsel for Appellee By: Anthony J. Bruscato

Before COX, STEPHENS, ROBINSON, HUNTER, and ELLENDER, JJ.

HUNTER, J., dissents with written reasons. ROBINSON, J.

Plaintiff, Ja’Quarrius Ignont (“Ignont”), filed suit in Monroe City

Court for damages against Defendant, Rick Breen D/B/A Breen’s Rapid

Lube (“Breen’s”), on July 12, 2021, for claims of negligence in connection

with an alleged faulty oil change resulting in damage to Ignont’s vehicle as

well as general damages for emotional distress resulting from the incident.

Following a trial on October 16, 2023, the trial court entered a judgment,

filed February 6, 2024, ruling in favor of Ignont and awarding $10,091.26 in

property damages, which included $3,341.26 for engine replacement, $6,750

for 90 days’ loss of use at $25 per day, and an additional $12,500 in general

damage for mental anguish and distress. Breen’s appeals.

For the following reasons, we REVERSE the trial court’s judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Ignont purchased a 2001 Chevrolet Silverado with approximately

260,000 miles for $4,300 on March 8, 2021. On June 1, 2021, Ignont

brought the vehicle to Breen’s for an oil change. Ignont testified that the

vehicle was running well when he purchased it, and from the time of

purchase to the oil change, it had run well. He had not observed any sign of

an oil leak, and he had not added any oil to the vehicle. However, Breen’s

service technician commented on the oil change invoice that there was an

“unusual engine noise” and a “small oil leak.”

According to Ignont, he and his brother were heading toward

Vicksburg, MS, immediately following the oil change and had traveled

approximately six or seven miles on I-20 when heavy smoke began coming

from under the hood and tailpipe. The engine made a loud noise and shut off. Immediately thereafter, the vehicle’s controls failed and the steering

wheel quit functioning properly. Ignont was on the inside lane driving

approximately 60 mph through moderate traffic, with an 18-wheeler to his

right and vehicles behind him. Because the 18-wheeler pulled ahead and the

vehicles behind him slowed, Ignont was able to regain control of the vehicle

with the help of his brother turning the steering wheel, and get to the

shoulder. Ignont and his brother jumped from the vehicle as soon as they

pulled over and ran a safe distance, fearing the vehicle would explode.

Ignont further testified that their father had burned to death in a car crash ten

years prior, and they feared the same was going to happen to them. The

smoke subsided with no fire.

Cody Breen (“Cody”) testified that Breen’s was contacted by Ignont’s

mother about an hour and a half after Ignont left the Breen’s facility to let

them know that Ignont’s vehicle was broken down on the I-20 shoulder near

Pecanland Mall. Cody testified he immediately went to that location,

inspected the truck, and concluded that the “engine came apart” from a

thrown rod, which he communicated to Ignont at the scene. Cody also stated

that the oil filter was “a hair bit loose,” and he believed someone other than

Breen’s personnel had tampered with the filter because it had indentions

inconsistent with the tools used at the Breen’s facility. Cody further stated

that there were four men at the location, not Ignont’s mother, as well as a

truck nearby with tools in the back.

Ignont testified that he, his brother, and their mother, were the only

people there, and no one touched or tampered with the oil filter between the

breakdown and Cody’s arrival on the scene. He further testified that Cody

2 came to the scene, removed the oil filter, and told Ignont he’d have it tested

and get back to Ignont in a couple of days, but that he never contacted

Ignont after he left messages. Cody testified that he removed the filter, took

it back to his place of business, tested it in house, and threw it away two

days after the incident, but that he never told Ignont he would contact him.

Cody stated that Ignont’s mother called him to say that if Breen’s refused to

repair the car, Ignont would seek legal counsel.

Breen’s video footage shows that the vehicle was not leaking oil when

it left Breen’s, and photos taken at the scene by Cody showed significant

amount of oil leaking in the area of the engine with the thrown rod, but not

much near the filter itself. Cody testified that had the filter been loose when

it left, oil would have already started to leak and the vehicle would have

broken down immediately instead of several miles down the road. Ignont

argued that although the video does show the vehicle’s oil getting changed

and that the mechanic was holding a wrench immediately before putting in

the new oil filter, it was not possible to see the mechanic’s hands in order to

determine whether the filter was adequately tightened. Cody also testified as

to the longevity of his family’s business, stating that it has never experienced

an incident like the one at hand after performing thousands of oil changes.

Frank Nettles (“Nettles”), who was qualified as an expert automotive

mechanic, testified on behalf of Breen’s. Nettles looked at pictures taken by

Cody of the vehicle and scene, as well as the video from the Breen’s facility,

but did not inspect the vehicle. Nettles testified that it was his opinion that

the vehicle’s engine locked up and threw a rod because the side of the

engine had a hole in it consistent with a rod being thrown, and the oil was

3 around the hole in the engine block rather than in the vicinity of the oil filter,

as it would have been had the vehicle been losing oil first. He also noted the

vehicle’s high mileage at the time of the oil change and that Breen’s service

invoice included a comment made by personnel that there was an “unusual

engine noise.” He further commented that the indentions on the oil filter

suggested tampering. Nettles stated that if the vehicle had an improperly

installed oil filter, then it would have leaked a large amount of oil at and/or

near the facility, which it did not, and the vehicle would not have made it

“two to three miles down the road” before experiencing significant

problems. Video footage was offered at trial showing that when an oil filter

was not properly tightened on a vehicle, oil would be gushing out of the

vehicle immediately upon starting the engine, as well as the standard oil

change procedures used by Breen’s, including a start engine test to ensure

there are no leaks.

The trial court found in favor of Ignont, stating, in part, the following

reasoning in its judgment:

Testimony elicited at the trial revealed that the Petitioner sought and selected Defendant’s place of business to properly provide an oil change service on his 2001 Chevy Silverado.

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