Opel P. Teasley v. Charles K. Ates

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 2003
DocketCA-0003-0824
StatusUnknown

This text of Opel P. Teasley v. Charles K. Ates (Opel P. Teasley v. Charles K. Ates) 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
Opel P. Teasley v. Charles K. Ates, (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

CA 03-824

OPEL P. TEASLEY

VERSUS

CHARLES K. ATES

**********

APPEAL FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 194,540, HONORABLE HARRY F. RANDOW, DISTRICT JUDGE

JIMMIE C. PETERS JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Oswald A. Decuir, and Jimmie C. Peters, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Kenneth A. Doggett P. O. Box 13498 Alexandria, LA 71315-3498 (318) 487-4251 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: Opel P. Teasley

J. Albert Ellis Louisiana Department of Justice, AAG P. O. Box 1710 Alexandria, LA 71309 (318) 487-5944 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Charles K. Ates PETERS, J.

This litigation arises from a November 19, 1996 automobile accident involving

vehicles driven by the plaintiff, Opel P. Teasley, and the defendant, Charles K. Ates.

Mr. Ates has appealed a judgment rendered against him, claiming that he was

statutorily immune from suit in tort by Ms. Teasley. Ms. Teasley has answered Mr.

Ates’s appeal, seeking additional damages. For the following reasons, we affirm the

district court judgment.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

On November 19, 1996, at approximately 5:30 a.m., Ms. Teasley, an employee

of the State of Louisiana, was attempting to park her vehicle at her place of

employment, the Work Training Facility North Correctional Institution, located on the

premises of Camp Beauregard in Rapides Parish, Louisiana. At the same time, Mr.

Ates, employed by the State of Louisiana as a security guard at Camp Beauregard, was

attempting to back a state-owned vehicle past the parking area onto the highway in

order to transport an inmate to a work location. In the process, Mr. Ates collided with

Ms. Teasley.

Ms. Teasley initially filed suit against Mr. Ates in Pineville City Court on

March 14, 1997, seeking to recover the damages she sustained in the accident. Mr.

Ates responded to that suit by filing declinatory exceptions of lack of subject matter

jurisdiction, lack of personal jurisdiction, and improper venue. He alleged therein that

(1) both he and Ms. Teasley were state employees acting in the course and scope of

their employment such that jurisdiction was proper only in the Office of Workers’

Compensation Administration; (2) the city court also did not have jurisdiction because

the state was a defendant;1 and, (3) concomitantly, venue was not proper because the

1 We note that, despite the assertions in Mr. Ates’s exceptions, Ms. Teasley did not name the state as a defendant in these proceedings. city court did not have jurisdiction. The record does not contain a minute entry or a

transcript of any hearing on the exceptions nor does it contain any evidence presented

in support of the exceptions. The city court denied the exceptions by a judgment

rendered on March 26, 1998, and signed on April 16, 1998. Thereafter, on May 11,

1998, Mr. Ates filed a general denial answer to Ms. Teasley’s suit and raised as an

alternative defense the affirmative defense of comparative fault.

Subsequently, on joint motion of the parties, the city court transferred the case

to the Ninth Judicial District Court in Rapides Parish. The city court executed the

transfer order on October 26, 1998. Neither party amended the pleadings prior to the

January 15, 2003 trial.

At trial, Ms. Teasley offered evidence in support of her claim. Immediately

after resting her case, Mr. Ates filed a peremptory exception of no cause of action,

asserting the exclusive remedy provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act, namely

La.R.S. 23:1032 and 23:1034. Ms. Teasley objected to the filing of the exception, and

the district court denied the exception on the record. Mr. Ates then proceeded to

present evidence in his defense. After completion of the evidence, the district court

issued its ruling finding that the accident was caused by Mr. Ates’s negligence. The

district court then awarded Ms. Teasley $5,000.00 in general damages, $2,038.77 in

property damages, $1,438.79 in medical expenses, and $689.08 in lost wages. The

district court signed a written judgment on January 31, 2003. Mr. Ates filed a motion

for new trial, which the district court denied.

Mr. Ates has timely filed this appeal, asserting four assignments of error:

1. The Pineville City Court erred in denying the Exception of Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction, Lack of Jurisdiction over the Person, and Improper Venue. 2. The District Court erred in denying the State’s Exception of No Cause of Action.

2 3. The District Court erred in finding the plaintiff was a “statutory employee.” 4. The District Court erred in finding the Exclusive Remedy Defense was unfair surprise.

Ms. Teasley answered the appeal, seeking an increase in the award of general

damages.

OPINION

Mr. Ates’s Appeal

Louisiana Revised Statutes 23:1032(A)(1)(a) provides in part: “Except for

intentional acts . . ., the rights and remedies herein granted to an employee or his

dependent on account of an injury, or compensable sickness or disease for which he

is entitled to compensation under this Chapter, shall be exclusive of all other rights,

remedies, and claims for damages . . . .” Additionally, La.R.S. 23:1034(A) provides

in part: “[F]or [a state] employee and employer the payment of compensation

according to and under the terms, conditions, and provisions set out in this Chapter

shall be exclusive, compulsory, and obligatory . . . .”

Nevertheless, when construing the pleadings in a given case, “[t]he answer shall

set forth affirmatively . . . any . . . matter constituting an affirmative defense.”

La.Code Civ.P. art. 1005. “[T]ort immunity provided by the Act operates as an

affirmative defense; it is not a law evaluating conditions of legality of defendant’s

conduct but, rather, serves as a vehicle for asserting a substantive defense that defeats

an otherwise viable claim.” Brown v. Adair, 02-2028, p. 5 (La. 4/9/03), 846 So.2d

687, 690.

Mr. Ates never asserted the tort immunity as an affirmative defense. Instead,

he improperly asserted it in city court via exceptions of lack of subject matter

jurisdiction and/or personal jurisdiction. However, even were we to construe the

3 exceptions as effectively presenting the affirmative defense, the record contains no

evidence presented on the city court exceptions that we may review.

Not until the close of Ms. Teasley’s presentation of evidence at the trial on the

merits of the tort action, or almost six years after Ms. Teasley filed her original

petition, did Mr. Ates reassert the immunity, this time via an exception of no cause of

action. In Everything on Wheels, Subaru, Inc. v. Subaru South, Inc., 616 So.2d 1234,

1235 (La.1993), the supreme court instructed:

The function of an exception of no cause of action is to test the legal sufficiency of the petition by determining whether the law affords a remedy on the facts alleged in the pleading. No evidence may be introduced to support or controvert the objection that the petition fails to state a cause of action. Therefore, the court reviews the petition and accepts well pleaded allegations of fact as true, and the issue at the trial of the exception is whether, on the face of the petition, the plaintiff is legally entitled to the relief sought.

(Citations omitted.)

In the instant case, the law clearly affords Ms. Teasley a remedy in tort. The fact that

the law also affords Mr.

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