Jonathan Edwards Versus Dg Ecommerce, LLC D/B/A Dollar General and Xyz Insurance Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 2024
Docket23-CA-189
StatusUnknown

This text of Jonathan Edwards Versus Dg Ecommerce, LLC D/B/A Dollar General and Xyz Insurance Company (Jonathan Edwards Versus Dg Ecommerce, LLC D/B/A Dollar General and Xyz 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
Jonathan Edwards Versus Dg Ecommerce, LLC D/B/A Dollar General and Xyz Insurance Company, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

JONATHAN EDWARDS NO. 23-CA-189

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

DG ECOMMERCE, LLC D/B/A DOLLAR COURT OF APPEAL GENERAL AND XYZ INSURANCE COMPANY STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE FORTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 78,378, DIVISION "C" HONORABLE J. STERLING SNOWDY, JUDGE PRESIDING

January 31, 2024

STEPHEN J. WINDHORST JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Stephen J. Windhorst, and Timothy S. Marcel

AFFIRMED SJW JGG TSM COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, JONATHAN EDWARDS Pius A. Obioha Joseph R. Barbie, Sr. WINDHORST, J.

Plaintiff/appellant, Jonathan Edwards, appeals the trial court’s January 6,

2023 judgment sustaining the peremptory exception of prescription filed by

defendant/appellee, DG Louisiana, LLC (incorrectly named DG Ecommerce, LLC),

dismissing plaintiff’s claim against defendant with prejudice. For the following

reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTS and PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On August 17, 2022, Mr. Edwards filed a petition for damages against DG

Ecommerce, LLC d/b/a Dollar General, alleging that he suffered injuries when he

slipped in a puddle of water and fell at a Dollar Tree store in LaPlace, Louisiana on

October 10, 2020. In a letter attached to this petition, plaintiff’s counsel stated that

he was refiling this petition, which was originally e-filed in the Fortieth Judicial

District Court on September 28, 2021 via the court’s e-filing software, Clerk

Connect. Counsel enclosed an e-mail confirmation from Clerk Connect and asserted

that the e-mail confirmed that the e-filing process for the petition for damages for

this case had been completed and the case had been assigned #105788.1 Counsel

also enclosed a copy of a screenshot of the civil e-filing portal allegedly showing the

submission number and the date of the e-filing of the petition for damages. In the

letter, counsel asserted that he did not receive notice from the Fortieth Judicial

District Clerk of Court’s Office that the e-filing of the petition had been rejected.

With regard to plaintiff’s counsel learning the petition had been rejected, he

stated the following:

Recently we contacted the clerk’s office to inquire about service and gave the submission number. Ms. Andrenese Thomas of your office, after checking the records, informed us that the submission number showed that the petition for damages was filed on September 28, 2021. However, there was a rejection which was never sent to our office so that we could promptly rectify the issue. If the rejection

1 The September 28, 2021 e-mail was sent to Pius Obioha, counsel for plaintiff/appellant, from clerkConnect@softwareservices.net. The subject of the e-mail is “Clerk Connect E-Filing.” It states “E- Filing Submission#105788” and “Documents Filed.”

23-CA-189 1 notification was never sent to our office or brought to our attention, there was no way of us knowing about any rejection of the e-filing of the petition for damages Lawsuit. As a result of the lack of notice of any rejection, Plaintiff’s counsel truly and strongly believed that the petition for damages as well as the Lawsuit was processed, and service on the defendants was perfected, as was requested when the petition for damages was timely filed on September 28, 2021.

In response to the August 17, 2022 petition, defendant filed a peremptory

exception of prescription, asserting that plaintiff’s claim had prescribed because the

petition was filed more than one year after the alleged October 10, 2020 incident

occurred. Plaintiff opposed the exception of prescription, arguing that he had timely

e-filed his petition on September 28, 2021 via the Fortieth Judicial District Court’s

electronic filing system, Clerk Connect, and that an error in the electronic filing

system required him to refile the petition. Plaintiff argued that the error in the

electronic filing was not something he could prevent and that it may have been

attributable to Hurricane Ida damage, which had occurred the previous month in

August 2021. Plaintiff attached to his opposition the same documents he had

enclosed with his petition relative to the alleged electronic filing of the petition (i.e.,

the e-mail confirming the electronic filing of the petition for damages and the

screenshot of the civil filing portal showing case number and date e-filed).

At a hearing on December 20, 2022, defendant argued that plaintiff’s exhibits

did not show that he had previously e-filed his petition for damages on September

28, 2021. Specifically, defendant pointed out that the e-mail allegedly confirming

the e-filing of plaintiff’s petition did not reference this or any specific case by name

or docket number, and thus, did not support the claim that a petition for damages had

been e-filed on plaintiff’s behalf on September 28, 2021. Consequently, defendant

argued that plaintiff’s petition for damages filed on August 17, 2022 was prescribed.

In response, plaintiff’s counsel argued that he had timely e-filed a petition, but

that it was not e-filed on September 28, 2021 due to a malfunction in the electronic

filing system and/or in the clerk of court’s office. Counsel asserted that in fairness,

23-CA-189 2 the alleged malfunction should not prevent plaintiff from having his day in court.

Plaintiff submitted his exhibits into evidence, and the court accepted them.

At the hearing, the trial court stated that plaintiff needed at least some baseline

proof of a malfunction to prevent it from sustaining defendant’s exception of

prescription. The trial court informed plaintiff’s counsel that the evidence admitted

was insufficient to meet the standard required to show that he had attempted to

timely file the petition, and that a malfunction in the electronic filing system

prevented plaintiff’s September 28, 2021 petition from being e-filed. As a result, the

trial court sustained defendant’s exception of prescription at the hearing and rendered

a written judgment on January 6, 2023.

Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial and/or motion for reconsideration of the

judgment of prescription (“motion for new trial”), requesting that the court vacate

its judgment sustaining the exception of prescription. Plaintiff argued that since the

judgment was rendered, he had contacted Software & Services, the entity

responsible for accepting e-filings for the Fortieth Judicial District Court, and

learned that it had no record of sending an automatic rejection notice to plaintiff’s

counsel relative to the September 28, 2021 e-filing. Plaintiff attached to his motion

for new trial self-serving unsworn “declarations” from Pius Obioha and Chris

Fontenot, the attorneys involved in handling this case. In his “declaration,” Pius

Obioha claimed that on September 28, 2021, his office e-filed a petition for damages

on plaintiff’s behalf through the Fortieth Judicial District Court’s electronic filing

system, Clerk Connect; that his office received an e-mail confirmation of the e-filing

with submission #105788; that his office never received a rejection notice regarding

the e-filing; that the Clerk of Court’s Office for the Fortieth Judicial District Court

does not have any evidence of the issuance of an automatic rejection notice; and that

equipment failure may have played a major role in the breakdown of the electronic

filing system. Chris Fontenot’s “declaration” claimed that Software & Services

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Jonathan Edwards Versus Dg Ecommerce, LLC D/B/A Dollar General and Xyz Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonathan-edwards-versus-dg-ecommerce-llc-dba-dollar-general-and-xyz-lactapp-2024.