Picone v. Lyons
This text of 593 So. 2d 829 (Picone v. Lyons) 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.
Opinion
Earl H. PICONE
v.
Bernard LYONS, et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
William F. Bologna, Habans, Bologna & Carriere, New Orleans, for Pauli & Griffin, Inc.
Susan Stagg Robinson, LaBorde & Neuner, Lafayette, for Sandair Corp.
Lawrence J. Centola, Jr., Carrie A. Jourdan, Hoffman, Sutterfield, Ensenat & Bankston, New Orleans, for Mine Safety Appliances Co.
Gary M. Zwain, Elizabeth D. Mackay, Duplass, Witman, Zwain & Williams, Metairie, *830 for Pulmosan Safety Equipment Corp.
Patrick H. Hanna, Rebecca F. Doherty, Onebane, Donohoe, Bernard, Torian, Diaz, McNamara & Abell, Lafayette, for Lone Star Industries.
W. Gregory Merritt, Scott E. Silbert, Lombard & Silbert, Metairie, for Mud & Chemical Co. and Mayrone Enterprises, Inc.
John E. Galloway, John J. Erny, III, Milton L. LeBlanc, Jr., Galloway, Johnson, Tompkins & Burr, New Orleans, for Mississippi Valley Silica.
Herbert W. Barnes, Samanie, Barnes & Allen, Houma, for Earl H. Picone.
Craig R. Nelson, Christina P. Fay, Hulse, Nelson & Wanek, New Orleans, for Clemco Industries, Inc.
Before KLEES and WARD, JJ., and HUFFT, J. Pro Tem.
WARD, Judge.
Earl H. Picone appeals a decision of the trial court that sustained a peremptory exception of prescription filed by nine defendants. Those defendants were named as parties to this lawsuit in an amended petition almost 12 years after the first petition was filed by Picone, and the trial court held that the amended petition was not timely filed.
On September 28, 1976, Earl H. Picone filed his first petition in the Civil District Court, alleging he contracted silicosis as a result of his employment as a sandblaster. The petition named sixty-two individuals, alleging each was an executive officer of one of Picone's sixteen former employers. Picone claimed the executive officers had negligently failed to provide him with a safe place to work. Additionally, a fictitious defendant, ABC Manufacturing Company, was named in the original petition as the manufacturer and producer of allegedly defective safety equipment Picone used during his employment. On May 4, 1988, Picone filed an amended complaint substituting Clemco Industries, Inc., Sardair Corporation, Pauli & Griffin and six other manufacturers of protective devices which Picone's various employers used between 1968 and 1975. The newly added defendants of Picone's amended petition moved to dismiss his suit pursuant to Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Article 561, the five year abandonment provisions.
The trial court denied this motion, and on November 9, 1988 the Fourth Circuit Court of appeal affirmed the trial court's denial of the motion to declare the case abandoned, stating that the matter was one of liberative prescription. The various new defendants filed exceptions of prescription and in January of 1990, after conducting two hearings, the trial court sustained the newly added defendants' plea of prescription.
To summarize Picone's argument, he contends that the original defendants are solidary obligors with the newly added defendants, and that his timely filed original suit continuously interrupts prescription against all defendants who are solidarily obligated to him, even those who may be named in the future, as long as his timely filed suit is pending against one defendant.
We agree with Picone; prescription has not accrued. We nonetheless affirm, because we believe that these defendants will be denied due process if Picone is permitted to institute a lawsuit against them more than 12 years after the alleged cause of action arose.
Before discussing prescription or due process we must consider several collateral issues. At first glance Picone's suit against executive officers does not state a cause of action against those defendants who are executive officers of his former employers. And if there is no cause of action against them, then there is no solidary obligation, and if no solidary obligation, then there is no questionthe case has prescribed. But Picone has apparently alleged a cause of action because although Louisiana amended its worker's compensation laws to grant executive officers immunity from tort claims, Picone alleges his silicosis was caused by negligent acts of executive officers before the amendment. The amendment does not apply retroactively, *831 so at this time we must consider Picone's first petition states a cause of action.
Additionally, the first petition sufficiently alleges a solidary obligation of the executive officers and the fictitious manufacturer of protective equipment. Thus Picone timely filed a petition that permissibly names executive officers and fictitious manufacturers as solidary obligors.
We also hold that the naming of a fictitious defendant will not interrupt prescription. Scales v. State, 411 So.2d 658 (La.App. 4th Cir., 1982).
This Court has already considered whether this case has been abandoned because of five year lack of action. In writ No. 88-C-2015 this Court upheld the trial court ruling that the case had not been abandoned, and that issue cannot now be questioned. In that writ disposition not only did this court uphold the trial court ruling of abandonment, it also directed the parties and the trial court to the issue of prescription. However, we conclude that the case has not prescribed.
Louisiana Civil Code Article 3492 (formerly Article 3536) is applicable to decide if Picone's cause of action has prescribed. It provides that delictual actions "are subject to a liberative prescription of one year" and that such prescription "commences to run from the day injury or damage is sustained." Although in some cases the question of when prescription begins to run is uncertain, in this case that is not an issue. Prescription at least began to run more than 12 years ago when the first suit was filed, and there is no question but that prescription has run unless it has been interrupted,an interruption that would permit suit to be filed twelve years later.
The in tandem application of articles of the Civil Code produces unforeseen consequence under the circumstances of this case. When articles 3472, 3462, 3463 3503 and 1797 are taken together then the unlikely and unacceptable result is that some tort claims never prescribe. This result occurs even though tort claims are ordinarily barred by liberative prescription of one year, and even if prescription commences to run from the date of injury or the discovery of that injury, because the running of prescription is interrupted by the filing of a petition for damages in a competent court. (Art. 3462). "Interrupted" here means suspended because interruption continues as long as suit is pending. (Art. 3463). The "interruption" as to one solidary obligor is "continuous" and it will prevent prescription from running as to all solidary obligors, even as to those who have not been named in the first timely filed petitionfor as long as the suit is pending. (Art. 1799 and Art. 3503). Acting together then, these articles do indeed permit amendments to plaintiff's petitions to add defendants, now and in the future, for as long as the lawsuit is pending against one solidary obligor, and this includes even defendants who may be complete strangers, and neither the Code not the jurisprudence now restricts amendments.
As an alternative, the defendants believe Ray v. Alexandria Mall, 434 So.2d 1083 (La.1983), which interpreted La.C.C.P. Art. 1153, supports their position.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
593 So. 2d 829, 1992 WL 5578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picone-v-lyons-lactapp-1992.