Johnny Wimbley & Marie Wimbley v. McLiney Centers, L.L.C. D/B/A Sutherlands Home Base

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 2023
DocketCA-0023-0305
StatusUnknown

This text of Johnny Wimbley & Marie Wimbley v. McLiney Centers, L.L.C. D/B/A Sutherlands Home Base (Johnny Wimbley & Marie Wimbley v. McLiney Centers, L.L.C. D/B/A Sutherlands Home Base) 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
Johnny Wimbley & Marie Wimbley v. McLiney Centers, L.L.C. D/B/A Sutherlands Home Base, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

23-305

JOHNNY WIMBLEY & MARIE WIMBLEY

VERSUS

MCLINEY CENTERS, L.L.C., D/B/A

SUTHERLANDS HOME BASE, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 266,329 HONORABLE MONIQUE FREEMAN RAULS, DISTRICT JUDGE

CANDYCE G. PERRET JUDGE

Court composed of D. Kent Savoie, Candyce G. Perret, and Ledricka J. Thierry, Judges.

REVERSED AND REMANDED. Brian M. Caubarreaux Emily Gremillion Brian Caubarreaux & Associates Post Office Box 129 Marksville, LA 71351 (318) 253-0900 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLANTS: Johnny Wimbley Marie Wimbley

Brian T. Butler C. Reynolds LeBlanc Keogh, Cox & Wilson, Ltd. Post Office Box 1151 Baton Rouge, LA 70821 (225) 383-3796 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES: McLiney Centers, L.L.C. d/b/a Sutherlands Home Base Edward Acevedo Travelers Property Casualty Company of America The Travelers Indemnity Company PERRET, Judge.

In this personal injury suit, Johnny and Marie Wimbley (collectively,

“Plaintiffs”) seek review of the trial court’s granting of summary judgments in favor

of defendants, McLiney Centers, LLC, d/b/a/ Sutherlands Home Base (“Sutherlands

HomeBase”), Edward Acevedo, Travelers Property Casualty Company of America,

and The Travelers Indemnity Company (collectively, “the Defendants”). For the

following reasons, we reverse upon finding that there are genuine issues of material

fact as to whether Plaintiffs’ tort claims fall under the intentional act exclusion of

the Workers’ Compensation Act.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY:

On April 23, 2019, Johnny Wimbley (“Mr. Wimbley”), an employee of

Sutherlands HomeBase, was injured while in the course and scope of his

employment at the Sutherlands HomeBase facility in Alexandria, Louisiana. On the

date of the accident, Edward Acevedo (“Mr. Acevedo”), the assistant manager of

lawn and garden at Sutherlands HomeBase, was using a forklift, also known as a

“lift truck,” to put a tiller on the top of a shelf inside the receiving area of the facility.

According to Mr. Acevedo’s deposition, the top shelf was approximately eight to ten

feet off the ground and, as he tried to use the forklift to move the tiller to the back of

the shelf, the tiller tilted and leaned against the wall behind the shelf. Mr. Acevedo

testified that he then tried using the forklift to level the tiller on the shelf but was

unable to do so.

Thereafter, Mr. Acevedo had Mr. Wimbley climb onto the forks of the forklift

and raised him to the top shelf where the tiller was located. Once lifted to the top

shelf, Mr. Wimbley fell and sustained injuries. Specifically, Mr. Wimbley’s petition

states that he “was directed by his manager, [Mr. Acevedo], to work and/or ride on a platform being lifted to move equipment without safety equipment, when [h]e fell

off of the platform into a shelving unit.”

On September 26, 2019, Plaintiffs filed suit against Mr. Acevedo and

Sutherlands HomeBase, wherein they alleged that the accident was caused by the

fault of the Defendants in the following ways:

a. Ordering JOHNNY WIMBLEY to work and/or ride a platform without heeding proper safety equipment;

b. Failing to provide and/or post proper safety instructions on the equipment for the task being completed;

c. Failure to safely operate the subject equipment;

d. Intentionally placing JOHNNY WIMBLEY and other employees in a perilous and dangerous position;

e. Requiring its employees to work and/or ride the platform and continue working atop the platform without heeding proper safety procedures;

f. Failing to train and supervise its employees as to proper safety equipment, precautions and procedures;

g. Failing to provide and/or require proper safety equipment to be used by its employees;

h. Failing to require adherence to proper safety procedures by its employees; and

i. Failing to train its employees and perform adequate safety meetings.

Plaintiffs alleged that the Defendants “knew that they did not provide the

proper equipment and/or follow proper safety procedures to be used in connection

with the work being performed by JOHNNY WIMBLEY and intentionally failed to

correct known hazardous conditions which would cause great bodily harm[;]” that

they “were substantially certain that their actions and/or inactions would result in

severe personal injury or death and that their actions and/or inactions were extreme,

2 outrageous and ultrahazardous, resulting in the injuries of JOHNNY WIMBLEY[;]”

and that “the injuries to JOHNNY WIMBLEY were caused by an intentional tort as

contemplated by Louisiana Law.” On April 5, 2021, the petition was amended to

include, as defendants, Travelers Property Casualty Company of America and The

Travelers Indemnity Company.

On August 18, 2022, Sutherlands HomeBase filed a motion for summary

judgment on the issue of the intentional act exception, arguing that “Louisiana law

provides that under these facts, plaintiff’s exclusive remedy against Sutherlands is

in workers’ compensation.” Sutherlands HomeBase argued that Plaintiffs cannot

meet their high burden to produce evidence to show an intentional act exception to

the Workers’ Compensation Act, which requires the employer to consciously desire

to harm the employee or that it was certain and inevitable that the accident was going

to occur. In support of its motion, Sutherlands HomeBase attached: (1) the

Plaintiffs’ petition for damages; (2) the deposition of Mr. Acevedo; (3) the

deposition of Juan Cruz, Sutherlands HomeBase’s store manager; (4) the deposition

of Mr. Wimbley; (5) the affidavit of Juan Cruz; (6) the deposition of Elizabeth

Wilson (“Ms. Wilson”), an employee of Sutherlands HomeBase’s store; (7) the

deposition of Greg Armstead (“Mr. Armstead”), the assistant manager of

Sutherlands HomeBase’s store; and (8) the deposition of Frank Piper (“Mr. Piper”),

an employee of Sutherlands HomeBase’s store.

On September 20, 2022, the Plaintiffs filed a motion for spoliation of evidence

and requested for the trial court to grant their order “for spoliation of video evidence

thereby casting the defendants with an adverse presumption[.]” In their motion,

Plaintiffs allege that “Former Sutherland’s employee, Elizabeth Wilson, has

provided a detailed description of video surveillance capturing the [April 23, 2019]

3 incident from which this suit arises[;]” that “employees of Sutherland’s have

testified that they are not aware of any video surveillance of the subject incident[,]”

that “[o]pposing counsel asserts that the video was not saved due to the default

settings of the store’s video surveillance system” and that the “actions taken by

defendants on [April 23, 2019] prove they knew litigation was imminent as a result

of the incident.” Thus, the Plaintiffs prayed “for an adverse presumption against the

defendants . . . thereby establishing that defendant-manager, Edward Acevedo,

instructed the plaintiff to ride the forks of the forklift approximately ten (10) feet

without a safety harness and re-arrange merchandise.” In support of their motion

for spoliation, Plaintiffs attached the January 19, 2022 deposition of an employee of

Sutherlands HomeBase, Ms. Wilson, who testified that on April 23, 2019, around

5:00 p.m., she watched a video of Mr. Wimbley’s fall while standing in the store’s

camera room along with Mr. Armstead and Mr. Piper.

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Bluebook (online)
Johnny Wimbley & Marie Wimbley v. McLiney Centers, L.L.C. D/B/A Sutherlands Home Base, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnny-wimbley-marie-wimbley-v-mcliney-centers-llc-dba-sutherlands-lactapp-2023.