Nancy J. Ducoulombier v. Ford Motor Company

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 13, 2021
DocketWD83430
StatusPublished

This text of Nancy J. Ducoulombier v. Ford Motor Company (Nancy J. Ducoulombier v. Ford Motor Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nancy J. Ducoulombier v. Ford Motor Company, (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

 NANCY J. DUCOULOMBIER,   Appellant,  WD83430 v.  OPINION FILED:  FORD MOTOR COMPANY,  APRIL 13, 2021  Respondent.   

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Clay County, Missouri The Honorable David Chamberlain, Judge

Before Division Three: Karen King Mitchell, Presiding Judge, Gary D. Witt, Judge, Anthony Rex Gabbert, Judge

Nancy J. Ducoulombier (“Appellant”) appeals the circuit court’s Judgment granting Ford

Motor Company’s (“Ford”) motion for summary judgment on Appellant’s Petition for Medical

Malpractice and Wrongful Death. Appellant contends the circuit court erred in determining that

the Division of Workers’ Compensation had exclusive jurisdiction over her claim against Ford.

We affirm.

Background and Procedural Information

On February 20, 2019, Appellant filed a Petition against Ford and other defendants. The

petition alleged that on February 25, 2016, Appellant’s husband, Emil Albert Ducoulombier, Jr., was found unresponsive on a work platform at Ford by fellow employee, Jackson Stubbs. Stubbs

performed chest compressions. Daniel B. Goodman was the second person to reach the side of

Mr. Ducoulombier, and he performed mouth-to-mouth ventilation while Stubbs performed chest

compressions. Shawn Newman and Mike Davis, members of the Ford Emergency Response

Team, were next to arrive at the scene with an AED device which they utilized on Mr.

Ducoulombier twice. At 11:30 a.m., a call was dispatched to Claycomo Fire Department.

While en route, Claycomo Fire Department EMT-Paramedic, Eric Miles, requested mutual

aid from Pleasant Valley Fire. Upon arrival at the Ford Plant, Claycomo Fire was met by Ford

security and directed to a rendezvous point where they waited for the Ford Emergency Response

Team to bring Mr. Ducoulombier to them. When the Emergency Response Team arrived at the

rendezvous point, it was several minutes before the Claycomo Fire Department EMT-Paramedics

began treatment on Mr. Ducoulombier. EMT-Paramedic Miles and FF/EMT William Wesley Pulse

attempted to establish an airway. Thereafter, Pleasant Valley FF/EMT-Paramedic, Steve Winfrey,

arrived on the scene with Marc Wachter, CPE, at which point EMT-Paramedic Miles assigned

EMT-Paramedic Winfrey the task of establishing an airway.

Paramedic Winfrey performed oral suctioning on Mr. Ducoulombier, revealing several

tobacco packets in Mr. Ducoulombier’s oropharynx. At the hospital, Mr. Ducoulombier was

declared brain dead. Life support was withdrawn and Mr. Ducoulombier died on February 29,

2016.

In Count I of Appellant’s petition which alleged “negligence” by Ford, Appellant alleged

that Ford employed or utilized Jackson Stubbs, Douglas Skidmore, Daniel Goodman, Shawn

Newman, Mike Davis, and other unknown members of their Emergency Response Team. Further,

those individuals were at all relevant times agents, servants, and/or employees of Ford directly, or

2 via the doctrine of “apparent agency,” and, as such, Ford was vicariously liable for the negligent

acts of these individuals.

Appellant further alleged that Ford failed to have properly trained responders for on-site

medical emergencies, and failed to ensure that its employees were trained or properly trained in

CPR. Also, that Ford failed to equip its employees and Emergency Response Team members with

proper equipment and devices to be used in cardiac life support. Additionally, Ford failed to plan

for interfacing with community EMS responders for on-site emergencies and, in fact, hindered

EMS responders by: 1) Having locked gates preventing emergency responders and vehicles from

entering the Ford plant premises, 2) Having slow security clearance for EMS responders and not

allowing them to access Mr. Ducoulombier in the plant, 3) Preventing EMS responders from

having direct access to Mr. Ducoulombier, and 4) Requiring the EMS responders to wait for an

Emergency Response unit/vehicle to carry Mr. Ducoulombier from within the plant to a

rendezvous point.

Appellant’s petition further alleged that Ford did not provide enough Emergency Response

Team members within various areas of the plant, and did not provide the Emergency Response

Team members they had with appropriate vehicles to transport injured/ill employees, such as Mr.

Ducoulombier, to a rendezvous point. It was additionally alleged that Ford failed to timely notify

community EMS responders of the medical emergency and request their assistance in rendering

care. Finally, that Ford was “further negligent in various and sundry other respects that are

presently unknown to Plaintiff but that Plaintiff verily believes will be revealed during the

discovery process.” Appellant alleged that, as a direct and proximate result of the carelessness and

negligence of Ford, Mr. Ducoulombier died on February 29, 2016.

3 Approximately two years prior to filing this petition, Appellant had filed a claim for

workers’ compensation benefits with the Division of Workers’ Compensation. Therein she alleged

that Mr. Ducoulombier, “during the course and scope of his employment, suffered an injury by

accident at work that resulted in Employee’s death, whereby the workplace event was the

prevailing factor in causing Employee’s death.” On December 28, 2016, Ford filed an “Answer

to Claim for Compensation.” Therein, Ford admitted “that it was operating under and subject to

Missouri workers’ compensation law on 2/25/16,” admitted that Mr. Ducoulombier was Ford’s

employee on that date, but denied “each and every other allegation in the Claim for

Compensation.” This claim remained pending at the time Appellant filed her petition in the circuit

court alleging negligence against Ford.

On April 17, 2019, Ford answered Appellant’s petition, generally denying the allegations

of negligence. Ford also raised several affirmative defenses, including that “[t]his civil court lacks

statutory authority to proceed with this case because Mr. Ducoulombier has a pending case before

the Missouri Division of Workers’ Compensation.” Ford simultaneously filed a Motion for

Summary Judgment on Count I of Appellant’s petition on this ground. Ford argued that,

Appellant’s workers’ compensation claim was still pending with the Commission, and the

Commission had yet to resolve the “sole remaining issue” of whether Mr. Ducoulombier’s death

arose out of and in the course of his employment. Ford contended that the Commission’s

determination could make Appellant’s claim subject only to the workers’ compensation law and

disallow the civil action. Because the Commission had not yet decided the issue, the circuit court

was prohibited from proceeding with Appellant’s civil action pursuant to both the primary

jurisdiction doctrine and the doctrine of exhaustion of remedies.

4 On May 29, 2019, Appellant filed a “Voluntary Dismissal with Prejudice” of her workers’

compensation claim. The Commission subsequently entered an order dismissing the workers’

compensation claim, with prejudice, on June 13, 2019.1

On August 30, 2019, Appellant then filed a response to Ford’s Motion for Summary

Judgment. Therein she argued that Ford’s Motion for Summary Judgment was moot because,

while it had been filed at a time when Appellant did have a concurrent workers’ compensation

claim pending before the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission, such claim no longer

existed.

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