Laurie B. Hebert, Individually and Kevin Hebert v. Louisiana State University System Board of Supervisors

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 2025
Docket2025 CA 0246
StatusUnknown

This text of Laurie B. Hebert, Individually and Kevin Hebert v. Louisiana State University System Board of Supervisors (Laurie B. Hebert, Individually and Kevin Hebert v. Louisiana State University System Board of Supervisors) 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
Laurie B. Hebert, Individually and Kevin Hebert v. Louisiana State University System Board of Supervisors, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

NO. 2025 CA 0246 I\—

LAURIE B. HEBERT,, INDIVIDUALLY AND KEVIN HEBERT, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF HIS MINOR SON,

VERSUS 17

LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM BOARD OF SUPERVISORS THROUGH LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY AND TRAVELERS INDEMNITY COMPANY OF CONNECTICUT

Judgment Rendered:

On Appeal from the 19th Judicial District Court Parish of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana Trial Court No. 653161

The Honorable Kelly Balfour, Judge Presiding

Kevin L. Camel Attorneys for Plaintiffs -Appellants, Tyler S. Rasbeary Laurie B. Hebert, Individually, and Lake Charles, Louisiana Kevin Hebert, Individually and on Behalf of his Minor Son, Robert Seth Hebert

Brian T. Butler Attorneys for Defendants -Appellees, C. Reynolds LeBlanc Louisiana State University System Board Baton Rouge, Louisiana of Supervisors Through Louisiana State University and Travelers Indemnity Company of Connecticut

BEFORE: LAMER, WOLFE, AND RESTER, JJ. WOLFE, J.

The plaintiffs, Laurie B. Hebert, individually, and Kevin Hebert, individually

and on behalf of his minor son, Robert Seth Hebert, appeal a summary judgment

granted in favor of the defendants, Louisiana State University System Board of

Supervisors through Louisiana State University (" LSU") and Travelers Indemnity

Company of Connecticut (" Travelers"), dismissing the plaintiffs' claims against

LSU and Travelers with prejudice. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On April 2, 2016, Ms. Hebert was attending her nephew' s wedding at the LSU

Hilltop Arboretum facility on Highland Road in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Before

the wedding, Ms. Hebert went to the ladies' restroom located in the outdoor pavilion

area. The door to the restroom is controlled by an automatic door closer. As Ms.

Hebert pushed the door open to exit the restroom, the door began to close

unexpectedly with what Ms. Hebert perceived to be an excessive force, as if someone

was pushing back against the door. Ms. Hebert attempted to hold the door open, but

her right index finger slid near the hinge. Her finger was severed near the first joint

when the door shut suddenly. The plaintiffs filed a petition seeking damages for

personal injuries against LSU, Friends of Hilltop Arboretum, LLC (" Friends"), and

insurer, Travelers, alleging that the automatic door closer installed on the restroom

door was not adjusted properly and was therefore defective at the time of the

accident.

The primary purpose of the Hilltop Arboretum is educational. LSU owns the

fourteen -acre Hilltop Arboretum and leases exclusive use of the gift shop and office

to Friends, a non-profit organization whose mission is to provide a natural sanctuary

for students and visitors to learn about trees and plants native to Louisiana. Friends

operates the Hilltop Arboretum and is entitled to non-exclusive use of the entire

facility. LSU provides utilities, maintenance, and general custodial services for the

Hilltop Arboretum, and has priority for use of the facility for various programs,

2 classes, schools, and colleges at LSU. Management of the Hilltop Arboretum is

provided by the LSU School of Landscape Architecture and an LSU

employee/ director, Peggy Coates. The Hilltop Arboretum facility is open to the

public and is available to rent for special events, such as weddings, receptions, and

parties, which Friends provides event workers for and coordinates. An

administrative assistant for Friends, Amy Hughes, booked the wedding that Ms.

Hebert was attending on April. 2, 2016.

The associate director for LSU facilities maintenance department, Robert H.

Benton, Jr., Ms. Coates, and Ms. Hughes all attested in affidavits and depositions

that, prior to Ms. Hebert' s injury, they were not aware of any other incidents or

complaints about the ladies' restroom door closing too fast. Additionally, they all

three verified that Friends was not responsible for inspection or maintenance at the

Hilltop Arboretum; rather, that was the responsibility of the LSU maintenance

department. Mr. Benton explained that LSU did not have a schedule for checking

the automatic door closers at the Hilltop Arboretum and that LSU maintenance made

door adjustments only in response to requests for an adjustment or a report that a

door was not closing properly. Ms. Coates was notified ofthe incident, and, on April

5, 2016, the next business day after Ms. Hebert was injured, she generated a work

order for maintenance to adjust the door closer. According to Mr. Benton, the work

order was completed on April 6, 2016, by adjusting the door to close slower even

though the door was closing within the door closer manufacturer' s acceptable

parameters on that date.

All of the plaintiffs' claims against Friends were dismissed pursuant to a

partial summary judgment signed by the trial court on March 4, 2021. That judgment

was not appealed. On August 5, 2021, Travelers filed a motion for summary

judgment seeking the dismissal of the plaintiffs' claims against it, maintaining that

it did not directly insure LSU because its commercial insurance policy was issued to

Friends. The plaintiffs and LSU opposed Travelers' motion, contending that the 3 policy of insurance afforded coverage to LSU as an additional insured under the

policy issued to Friends.' The trial court granted Travelers' motion for summary

judgment and dismissed all of the plaintiffs' claims against Travelers on June 29,

2022. The plaintiffs and LSU appealed and this court reversed that summary

judgment, finding that the Travelers' policy provided coverage to LSU for the

plaintiffs' claims. See Hebert v. Louisiana State University System Board of

Supervisors, 2022- 0942 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 2/ 24/ 23), 361 So. 3d 517, 527- 528.

After more discovery, LSU and Travelers filed a joint motion for summary

judgment on July 12, 2024, seeking to dismiss all of the plaintiffs' claims because

the plaintiffs possessed no evidence to prove that the door or any of its component

parts were defective, or that the alleged defect presented an unreasonable risk of

harm at the time of the accident. LSU and Travelers further claimed that the

plaintiffs could not meet their burden of proving that LSU had actual or constructive

notice of the condition that allegedly caused Ms. Hebert' s injury. LSU also argued

that it was entitled to discretionary immunity under La. R.S. 9: 2798. 1 and

recreational use immunity pursuant to La. R.S. 9: 2795. 2

The plaintiffs opposed the motion for summary judgment, maintaining that

material issues of fact exist surrounding LSD' s duty to maintain and adjust automatic

1 LSU also filed a motion for summary judgment, which was denied by the trial court on June 28, 2022. This court denied LSU' s application for a supervisory writ in connection with that motion. The designated record does not contain more information about LSU' s first motion for summary judgment. The plaintiffs argue, however, that LSD' s second motion for summary judgment is the same as the first motion and that the second motion should have been denied as well, pursuant to the law of the case doctrine. We find no merit to this argument since the denial of an initial motion for summary judgment is interlocutory and does not bar a second motion for summary judgment.

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Laurie B. Hebert, Individually and Kevin Hebert v. Louisiana State University System Board of Supervisors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurie-b-hebert-individually-and-kevin-hebert-v-louisiana-state-lactapp-2025.