Narda Matos and Altagracia Matos, on Behalf of Lidia Matos Versus Edward White, Jr., Blair Logistics, LLC and P & S Insurance Risk Retention Group, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 2022
Docket21-CA-313
StatusUnknown

This text of Narda Matos and Altagracia Matos, on Behalf of Lidia Matos Versus Edward White, Jr., Blair Logistics, LLC and P & S Insurance Risk Retention Group, Inc. (Narda Matos and Altagracia Matos, on Behalf of Lidia Matos Versus Edward White, Jr., Blair Logistics, LLC and P & S Insurance Risk Retention Group, Inc.) 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
Narda Matos and Altagracia Matos, on Behalf of Lidia Matos Versus Edward White, Jr., Blair Logistics, LLC and P & S Insurance Risk Retention Group, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NARDA MATOS AND ALTAGRACIA MATOS, NO. 21-CA-313 ON BEHALF OF LIDIA MATOS FIFTH CIRCUIT VERSUS COURT OF APPEAL EDWARD WHITE, JR., BLAIR LOGISTICS, LLC AND P & S INSURANCE RISK STATE OF LOUISIANA RETENTION GROUP, INC.

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 811-955, DIVISION "F" HONORABLE MICHAEL P. MENTZ, JUDGE PRESIDING

February 23, 2022

MARC E. JOHNSON JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Susan M. Chehardy, Fredericka Homberg Wicker, and Marc E. Johnson

AFFIRMED MEJ SMC FHW COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, NARDA MATOS AND ALTAGRACIA MATOS, ON BEHALF OF LIDIA MATOS Miguel A. Elias Paula J. Ferreira

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, BLAIR LOGISTICS, LLC, P&S INSURANCE RISK RETENTION GROUP, INC., AND EDWARD WHITE Julie Steed Kammer David C. Bernard JOHNSON, J.

Appellants, Narda Matos and Altagracia Matos, on behalf of Lidia Matos

(hereinafter, “Plaintiffs”), appeal the Twenty Fourth Judicial District Court’s

February 18, 2021 judgment sustaining Appellees’, Edward White, Jr., Blair

Logistics, LLC, and P & S Insurance Risk Retention Group, Inc. (hereinafter,

“Defendants”), Peremptory Exception of Prescription, dismissing with prejudice

the lawsuit arising out of a February 17, 2019 car accident that resulted in three

fatalities. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

At approximately 6:30 am on February 17, 2019, Leandro Gonzales and

Michael Medrano were severely injured when the vehicle they were passengers in

collided with a semi-truck and attached black box trailer. The truck was illegally

parked by Appellee, Edward White, Jr., a few days earlier, on the shoulder of

Airline Highway near its intersection with North Atlanta Street in Metairie. The

state trooper investigating the accident found the driver and Mr. Medrano dead

inside the vehicle at the scene of the accident. Mr. Gonzales was alive and trapped

inside of the vehicle, and a fourth passenger was receiving medical treatment from

paramedics. Mr. Gonzales was pronounced dead the next day, on February 18,

2019.

On February 7, 2020, Narda Matos, Michael Medrano’s mother, and

Altagracia Matos, on behalf of Lidia Matos, Leandro Gonzales’ mother, as her

power of attorney and also as Independent Administrator of the succession of

Gonzales, filed wrongful death and survival actions in Orleans Parish Civil District

Court, against the operator of the semi-truck, Edward White, Jr. (“White”), his

employer Blair Logistics, LLC (“Blair”) and P&S Insurance Risk Retention Group

(“P&S”), White and Blair’s liability insurers. On February 18, 2020, Plaintiffs

21-CA-313 1 requested service on Blair and P&S via Louisiana Long Arm Statute. On February

19, 2020, Appellants requested service on White at 3405 Pine Street, Apt. A, New

Orleans, LA 70125. Service of process was perfected on Blair on March 13, 2020.

Defendants filed a Declinatory Exception of Improper Venue on May 19,

2020. After the exception hearing, the court sustained Defendants’ exception on

August 13, 2020. The case was transferred to the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District

Court for the Parish of Jefferson on November 10, 2020. On December 3, 2020,

Defendants filed a motion for extension of time to file responsive pleadings, which

the district court granted. On December 28, 2020, Defendants filed a Peremptory

Exception of Prescription alleging that the suit was initially filed in an improper

venue and neither Blair, P&S, nor White were served the petition within the one-

year prescriptive period. A rule to show cause was set for February 3, 2021.

At the trial on the exception, Defendants averred that the suit was timely

filed, but because it was filed in an improper venue, service upon them within one

year of the accident was required. Defendants further argued that “where contra

non valentem applies, the application is when an individual cannot file suit within

the prescriptive period for some reason that may -- that's either not the defendant's

fault or at least not his own fault. Here, suit was filed; it just wasn't served.”

Defendants urged that Plaintiffs possessed the constructive knowledge of their

cause of action from the day of the accident on February 17, 2019. However,

Defendants acknowledged that the police report, which identified White and Blair,

was released a month after the accident, and Plaintiffs did not have the entire

police report. Defendants entered the following into evidence at the trial on the

peremptory exception of prescription: Exhibit 1, the petition for damages filed

February 7, 2020 in Orleans Parish Civil District Court; Exhibit 2, the case

pleadings docket which shows when service and citation were requested; Exhibit 3,

case details which revealed more information regarding the status of service upon

21-CA-313 2 the defendants; Exhibit 4, the Civil District Court notice of signing of judgment

and the judgment with reasons granting the exception of improper venue; Exhibit

5, the complete accident report from Louisiana State Police (“LSP”); and Exhibit

6, the detailed narrative compiled by LSP about the accident included in the report.

Plaintiffs contended that contra non valentem applied in this matter to

extend the prescription period by three months. The following exhibits were

entered into evidence by Plaintiffs: Exhibit A – the affidavit of Miguel Elias (their

counsel); Exhibit B – the May 20, 2019 letter from Staines & Eppling (counsel for

appellees) advising that they represented White and Blair in the matter; Exhibit C –

the police report Plaintiffs received from LSP on May 6, 2019; and Exhibit D – an

Affidavit of Service upon Blair. Plaintiffs also objected to Defendants’ reply

memorandum, faxed after the deadline. The district court sustained that objection

pursuant to Local Rule 9.9(d).

Plaintiffs further argued that the prescriptive period begins to toll once the

plaintiffs have a reasonable basis to pursue a claim against a specific defendant.

Noting that this matter was a wrongful death case and the deceased were unable to

provide information, Plaintiffs averred that the earliest they were able to determine

“who they had a reasonable cause of action against, at the earliest, once this police

report was created, which was March 17, 2019. Blair was served via long-arm

statute on March 13, 2020, which is within one year of that prescriptive date.” In

support of their argument, Plaintiffs cited Jordan v. Employee Transfer Corp., 509

So.2d 420, 424 (La. 1987)1.

At the end of the hearing, the district court, after reviewing the law and

memoranda, sustained Defendants’ exception of prescription. The court found that

the accident occurred in Jefferson Parish, the lawsuit could have easily been filed

1 “When prescription begins to run depends on the reasonableness of a plaintiff's action or inaction. . . . However, prescription did not begin to run until they had a reasonable basis to pursue a claim against a specific defendant.”

21-CA-313 3 there within the one-year prescriptive period, and because the lawsuit was initially

filed in Orleans Parish, which was not the proper venue, and none of the

defendants had been served within the prescriptive period, prescription had tolled

on Plaintiffs’ cause of action. On February 22, 2021, the district court issued its

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