Scott Hargrave, Et Ux. v. Cecil J. Delaughter

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 2009
DocketCA-0008-1168
StatusUnknown

This text of Scott Hargrave, Et Ux. v. Cecil J. Delaughter (Scott Hargrave, Et Ux. v. Cecil J. Delaughter) 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
Scott Hargrave, Et Ux. v. Cecil J. Delaughter, (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

CA 08-1168

SCOTT HARGRAVE, ET UX.

VERSUS

CECIL J. DELAUGHTER, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. C-20050867 HONORABLE KRISTIAN DENNIS EARLES, DISTRICT JUDGE

SHANNON J. GREMILLION JUDGE

********** Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, J. David Painter, and Shannon J. Gremillion, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Winston Thomas Angers Attorney at Law P. O. Box 53502 Lafayette, LA 70505 (337) 233-3268 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant: Scott and Vickie Hargrave

Paul Holliday Fleming Baker Attorney at Law 9100 Bluebonnet Central, #300 Baton Rouge, LA 70809 (225) 293-7272 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Cecil J. Delaughter Prudential General Ins. Co. Kenny Layne Oliver Oliver & Way P. O. Box 80655 Lafayette, LA 70598-0655 (337) 235-2112 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Louisiana Farm Bureau Casualty Ins. Co.

David Oliver Way Attorney at Law P. O. Box 80655 Lafayette, LA 70598-0655 (337) 235-2112 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Louisiana Farm Bureau Casualty Ins. Co.

Jean Ann Billeaud Daigle, Jamison & Rayburn, LLC P.O. Box 3667 Lafayette, LA 70502-3667 (337) 234-7000 Counsel for Defendant/Appellee: Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. Superior Energy Services, LLC Superior Energy Services, Inc. GREMILLION, Judge.

Mr. Scott Hargrave and his wife, Vicki Hargrave, appeal the trial court’s

judgment dismissing their demands against Superior Energy Services, Inc., Superior

Energy Services, L.L.C., and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (collectively

referred to hereafter as “Superior”). This dismissal was rendered pursuant to

Superior’s motion for summary judgment. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS

Mr. Hargrave was proceeding north on U.S. Highway 90 near Broussard,

Louisiana, on June 4, 2004, when a vehicle driven by Mr. Cecil Delaughter allegedly

pulled into his path from Bercegeay Road. Hargrave alleges that Delaughter’s

actions caused him to roll his vehicle into a ditch.

Initially, plaintiffs sued Delaughter and his liability insurer, Prudential General

Insurance Company, and Louisiana Farm Bureau Insurance Company, their uninsured

motorist carrier, in February 2005. In March 2007, plaintiffs filed a first

supplemental and amending petition adding Superior as the alleged master/employer

of Delaughter. Superior answered denying that Delaughter was in the course and

scope of his employment.

Superior filed a motion for summary judgment on November 2, 2007.

Plaintiffs filed their opposition on December 27, 2007. The judgment granting

summary judgment was signed on January 16, 2008. Plaintiffs filed a motion for new

trial on January 29, 2008. That motion was heard and denied on March 10, 2008. On

March 20, 2008, plaintiffs filed a motion for rehearing that was denied on April 14,

2008. Plaintiffs thereafter perfected the present appeal. Superior based its motion

for summary judgment on the depositions of Delaughter and the corporate deposition

1 of Superior, both noticed and taken by counsel for the Hargraves. Plaintiffs opposed

the motion for summary judgment by pointing out that Superior had terminated

Delaughter for cause for failing to protect company assets and interests. Plaintiffs

contended that Delaughter was engaged in theft from Superior; his credibility was

thus at issue and his testimony could not be considered. They further pointed out that

the two company representatives who testified in the corporate deposition relied

solely upon statements Delaughter made to them about his intended destination at the

time of the accident. This hearsay, plaintiffs asserted, could not be considered on

summary judgment. The trial court nonetheless granted judgment.

In their motion for new trial, plaintiffs submitted new evidence they contended

they had been unable to uncover despite due diligence, in the form of proof of prior

arrests of Delaughter in Terrebonne Parish that had not been disclosed in

Delaughter’s deposition. This evidence came in the form of an uncertified arrest

register from the Terrebonne Parish Sheriff’s Office. Plaintiffs also submitted

excerpts from Delaughter’s cellular phone records that showed three calls made to or

from the company-provided cell phone shortly after the subject accident. In addition

to a new trial, plaintiffs also sought to keep the record open to enable them to conduct

additional discovery in the hope of demonstrating that Delaughter was in fact en route

to a meeting with one of his superiors, Mr. Tom Slocum, a Vice President of Superior,

and to attempt to prove that Delaughter was in fact terminated because he was

involved in a scheme to steal fuel from Superior. Plaintiffs also sought in this motion

to compel discovery responses from Superior.

Plaintiffs filed a supplemental memorandum in support of their motion for new

trial. To this they attached the affidavit of Mr. Herbert Barnes, Terrebonne Parish

2 Assistant District Attorney, who prosecuted Delaughter in a forcible rape case and

who was handling other charges against him. The affidavit fails to indicate what

outcome Delaughter’s 2001 trial on the forcible rape charge produced. It did indicate

that several other charges were still outstanding, but had not been prosecuted because

of lack of victim cooperation.

A second supplemental memorandum attached an affidavit from Mr. Hargrave

attesting to a visit he paid to the scene of the accident and various measurements he

took of the distance Delaughter traveled from his workplace to the scene. The date

Hargrave took these measurements is not stated in the affidavit; however, the

affidavit itself is dated March 3, 2008. The measurement from the Superior pumping

and stimulation building parking area, Delaughter’s workplace, was measured by

Hargrave as 600 feet to the Bercegeay Road stop sign, and 698 feet from the driveway

of that building to the stop sign. Plaintiffs attached to all three memoranda

supporting their motion for new trial various discovery responses that they contended

provided insufficient responses. The last set of discovery responses plaintiffs

attached included Delaughter’s interrogatory responses disclosing that he had made

the three cell phone calls to his wife, a Superior engineer, which accounted for two

of the calls, and to Ronald Shea Barksdale, Delaughter’s son-in-law and also a

Superior employee.

On March 10, 2008, the trial court denied plaintiffs’ motion for new trial and

to compel discovery responses and to keep the record open. Plaintiffs applied for

rehearing on March 20, and in support attached records from a private investigator

indicating that Delaughter had not fully disclosed his previous places of residence.

These records consist of six pages of printed material purporting to show various

3 previous addresses of Delaughter. They are not accompanied by any affidavit, nor

were they presented to the court as exhibits to a deposition. Plaintiffs also attached

a copy of a 1997 traffic citation issued to Delaughter in Terrebonne Parish which had

not been disclosed in Delaughter’s deposition. Plaintiffs’ motion for rehearing was

denied by the trial court on April 16, 2008.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Plaintiffs urge eight assignments of error on appeal, but they can be

summarized as follows:

1) Finding that Delaughter was not in the course and scope of his

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