Michael Smith, Et Ux. v. St. Landry Parish Solid Waste Disposal District
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Opinion
STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
11-946
MICHAEL SMITH, ET UX.
VERSUS
ST. LANDRY PARISH SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL DISTRICT, ET AL.
**********
APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 09-C-2222-D HONORABLE DONALD W. HEBERT, DISTRICT JUDGE
OSWALD A. DECUIR JUDGE
Court composed of Oswald A. Decuir, James T. Genovese, and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.
AFFIRMED.
Michael C. Palmintier Degravelles, Palmintier, Holthaus, & Frugé, L.L.P. 618 Main Street Baton Rouge, LA 70801-1910 (225) 344-3735 Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants: Michael Smith Ernesta Smith
James D. Hollier Jason T. Reed Laborde & Neuner P. O. Drawer 52828 Lafayette, LA 70505-2828 (337) 237-7000 Counsel for Defendants/Appellees: St. Landry Parish Solid Waste Disposal District Katry Martin DECUIR, Judge.
Michael and Ernesta Smith filed suit against the St. Landry Parish Solid
Waste Disposal District and its supervisor, Katry Martin, after their son, Martel
Smith, was killed while working at the St. Landry Sanitary Landfill. The trial
court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, finding the Smiths
failed in their burden of proving the intentional act exception to workers’
compensation immunity. The Smiths appealed, and for the following reasons, we
affirm.
On April 22, 2008, Martel Smith was working with fourteen other
employees at the landfill, a two-hundred acre site with restricted access to the
public. Martel was assigned to dump canisters that day and was working alone
using a Mack Econodyne roll off truck with a tilting bed operated by a hoist
mechanism. In the early afternoon, another employee found Martel crushed
between the hoist and the frame of the truck. Several workers freed Martel and
placed his body on the ground nearby. Efforts to resuscitate him were
unsuccessful.
A number of Martel’s co-employees were perplexed by the accident,
testifying by deposition that Martel could not have operated the controls himself in
the position in which he was discovered. Other employees thought it possible that
Martel might have climbed onto the frame to investigate something on the truck
and his leg could have accidentally engaged the controls. The plaintiffs’ expert
explained that the controls have to be held down continuously with constant
pressure or a spring mechanism will stop the movement of the hoist and return the
bed to its original position. The expert opined that a third party must have been
involved, as Martel could not have engaged the hoist on his own. All co-
employees testified by deposition or affidavit that they were not present at the time of Martel’s death and had no knowledge of any other person who may have
witnessed the events leading up to Martel’s death. The repair records in evidence
point to no malfunction in the truck, and it was put back into service at the landfill
after the accident.
The Smiths contend the defendants are responsible for an intentional act
which caused Martel’s death and serves as an exception to the workers’
compensation exclusive remedy provisions. Essentially, they suggest Martel was
murdered by an unnamed co-employee. That employee, identified only as John
Doe, must have lured Martel into a position between the hoist and the frame of the
truck, then held down the controls for nearly a minute while Martel remained in
position as the bed slowly came down on him. The trial court found the Smiths
failed to set forth specific facts demonstrating a genuine issue of material fact, and
summary judgment was granted in the defendants’ favor. The trial court
characterized the plaintiffs’ theory as the stringing of speculative possibilities
insufficient to meet the shifting burden of proof on summary judgment.
In order to establish the intentional act exception, a plaintiff must show that
the employer “either 1) consciously desires the physical result happening from his
conduct, or 2) knows that the result is substantially certain to follow from his
conduct.” Smith v. Tanner Heavy Equipment Co., Inc., 01-886, p. 1 (La. 6/15/01),
790 So.2d 615, 615. In support of their motion for summary judgment, the
defendants presented the testimony of Martel’s co-employees, each of whom stated
that he was not near Martel at the time of his death and did not cause or contribute
to his death in any way. By showing that no one employed by the landfill was near
Martel at the time of the accident, the defendants argue that the employer could not
have consciously desired his death or known that his death was substantially
certain to follow some undescribed conduct. This undisputed evidence
2 demonstrated no issue of material fact with regard to the actions of the co-
employees.
The burden of proof then shifted to the plaintiffs to set forth specific facts
which demonstrate a genuine issue for trial. The Smiths argue that each co-
employee’s statement fails to negate the possibility that another employee could
have caused the death. They also rely on their expert’s opinion that Martel, more
likely than not, could not have caused his own death. These are not specific facts.
Throughout the record, there are suggestions as to what might have caused
Martel’s death: a practical joke gone awry, murder by a co-employee, murder by a
member of the public in an unauthorized area, suicide, mechanical failure, or
Martel’s leg inadvertently engaging the controls while he examined something on
the truck. The Smiths have been unable to set forth any specific facts which would
prove one theory over another.
Accordingly, we find no error in the determination that summary judgment
was appropriate in this case. The plaintiffs cannot sustain their burden of proof
with mere possibilities. Even relying on the truth of the expert opinion that Martel
“more likely than not” could not have caused his own death does not establish a
genuine issue regarding the employer’s alleged intentional and conscious desire to
cause Martel’s death. This court addressed the plaintiff’s burden of proof in a
similar intentional act case:
Even if Plaintiffs succeed in demonstrating the presence of some remaining asbestos in the work area, which Constructors vehemently denies, the Plaintiffs have not presented any facts to raise a genuine dispute that Constructors intentionally and consciously desired that they be exposed to asbestos or that Constructors knew, that by requiring Plaintiffs to continue on the job, exposure to asbestos was inevitable or substantially certain to occur.
In support of its motion for summary judgment, Cleco offered the affidavits of its own representatives stating that Constructors was responsible for the renovation work and denying any intent on the part of Cleco to expose Plaintiffs to asbestos. The Plaintiffs did not offer 3 any evidence to refute the affidavits of Cleco. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the trial court granting Constructors and Cleco’s motion for summary judgment.
Vidrine v. Constructors, Inc. 06-544, p. 9 (La.App. 3 Cir. 3/21/07), 953 So.2d 193,
199, writs denied, 07-821, 07-883 (La. 6/15/07), 958 So.2d 1189, 958 So.2d 1196.
Additionally, we reject the plaintiffs’ suggestion that the doctrine of res ipsa
loquitur encompasses their allegations of an intentional act. To the contrary, res
ipsa loquitur, by definition, contemplates an inference of negligence on the part of
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Michael Smith, Et Ux. v. St. Landry Parish Solid Waste Disposal District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-smith-et-ux-v-st-landry-parish-solid-waste-disposal-district-lactapp-2011.