Sentilles v. Huntington Ingalls Incorporated

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 3, 2024
Docket2:21-cv-00958
StatusUnknown

This text of Sentilles v. Huntington Ingalls Incorporated (Sentilles v. Huntington Ingalls Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sentilles v. Huntington Ingalls Incorporated, (E.D. La. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

ROBERT STEPHEN SENTILLES CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO. 21-958

HUNTINGTON INGALLS SECTION M (3) INCORPORATED (f/k/a AVONDALE SHIPYARD), et al.

ORDER & REASONS Before the Court is a motion for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Rule 12(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure filed by defendant Huntington Ingalls Incorporated (“Avondale”).1 Plaintiff Robert Stephen Sentilles responds in opposition,2 and Avondale replies in further support of its motion.3 Also before the Court is a related motion for reconsideration filed by Sentilles,4 to which Avondale responds in opposition.5 And, thirdly, before the Court is Avondale’s motion in limine to preclude Sentilles from offering testimony at trial, live or by deposition, from Jennifer Pierce or Dr. Victor Roggli, who are expert witnesses hired by settling- defendant Pellerin Milnor (n/k/a Pelnor LLC) (“Pelnor”).6 Sentilles responds in opposition,7 and Avondale replies in further support of its motion.8 Having considered the parties’ memoranda, the record, and the applicable law, the Court issues this Order & Reasons granting Avondale’s Rule 12(c) motion, denying Sentilles’s motion

1 R. Doc. 328. 2 R. Doc. 344. 3 R. Doc. 351. 4 R. Doc. 329. 5 R. Doc. 347. 6 R. Doc. 331. 7 R. Doc. 342. 8 R. Doc. 350. for reconsideration, and granting Avondale’s motion in limine to preclude Sentilles from presenting testimony from Pierce or Roggli. I. BACKGROUND This case involves claims for asbestos exposure. On October 27, 2020, Sentilles was diagnosed with mesothelioma.9 Sentilles filed this suit asserting negligence and strict liability

claims against several defendants, alleging that his disease was caused by exposure to asbestos that occurred from the 1950s to the 1980s.10 More specifically, Sentilles alleges that from the 1950s to the 1970s, his father worked at Avondale where he encountered asbestos dust and brought it home on his person and clothing, which resulted in Sentilles’s exposure.11 Similarly, Sentilles alleges that from 1968 through approximately 1974, he was secondarily exposed to asbestos dust brought home by his brothers who were employed at Avondale.12 Further, Sentilles alleges that he was personally exposed to asbestos dust when he worked at Avondale from 1969 to 1972.13 Finally, Sentilles alleges that he was exposed to asbestos when he worked at Pelnor from July 31, 1974, through 1983.14

On March 23, 2022, Avondale filed three motions for partial summary judgment seeking dismissal of Sentilles’s claims related to alleged asbestos exposures stemming from (1) his employment at Avondale after June 23, 1969, when he moved to an office job;15 (2) his brother Clayton Sentilles, Jr.’s employment at Avondale;16 and (3) his father Clayton Sentilles, Sr.’s employment at Avondale.17 Avondale supported its summary-judgment motion regarding

9 R. Doc. 60 at 2-3. 10 Id. at 1-20. 11 Id. at 4. 12 Id. at 5. 13 Id. at 6. 14 Id. 15 R. Doc. 176. 16 R. Doc. 177. 17 R. Doc. 178. Sentilles’s post-June1969 employment with Sentilles’s own deposition testimony and that of Sentilles’s expert industrial hygienist, Chris DePasquale.18 Specifically, Sentilles testified that he was not exposed to asbestos while working as an office clerk at Avondale after June 23, 1969.19 And DePasquale similarly testified that, based on Sentilles’s testimony, he had no information to suggest that Sentilles was exposed to asbestos at Avondale after June 23, 1969.20

All three motions were set for submission on April 7, 2022.21 Local Rule 7.5 of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana requires that a memorandum in opposition to a motion be filed no later than eight days before the noticed submission date, which deadline in this instance was March 30, 2022. Sentilles, who is represented by counsel, failed to oppose the motions. Thus, on April 8, 2022, after reviewing the motions and finding that they had merit, the Court granted all three motions and dismissed the subject claims with prejudice.22 In particular, the Court noted that “[b]y failing to oppose Avondale’s three motions for summary judgment regarding … these exposures, Sentilles has admitted that he was not personally exposed to asbestos at Avondale after June 23, 1969, nor was he secondarily exposed to asbestos from his father’s or Clayton, Jr.’s employment at Avondale.”23

Almost two years later, on March 25, 2024, Sentilles filed his third amended, restated, and superseding complaint (“third complaint”), which included allegations related to the previously dismissed claims, namely, those pertaining to Sentilles’s employment at Avondale after June 23, 1969, and his brother Clayton Sentilles, Jr.’s and his father Clayton Sentilles, Sr.’s respective

18 R. Doc. 176-1 at 2-3, 5-8. 19 Id. at 5-6 (citing R. Doc. 176-5). 20 Id. at 6-7 (citing R. Doc. 176-6). 21 R. Docs. 176-3; 177-3; 178-3. 22 R. Doc. 214. 23 Id. at 2 n.5. periods of employment at Avondale.24 Avondale now moves for judgment on the pleadings dismissing these previously-dismissed claims from the third complaint.25 Sentilles agrees that his claims pertaining to his brother’s and father’s employment at Avondale should be dismissed.26 However, as to his own work at Avondale after June 23, 1969, Sentilles argues that Avondale’s Rule 12(c) motion should be denied, and the Court should grant

his parallel motion for reconsideration reinstating that claim, because Pelnor’s expert pathologist, Dr. Victor Roggli, testified at his deposition on April 30, 2024, that Sentilles would have been exposed to above-background concentrations of asbestos while working at Avondale after June 1969.27 Sentilles contends that Roggli’s testimony creates a genuine issue of material fact as to whether he was exposed to asbestos at Avondale from 1970 to 1972.28 In response, Avondale argues that its Rule 12(c) motion should be granted, and conversely, Sentilles’s motion for reconsideration denied, because the claim Sentilles seeks to revive was dismissed more than two years ago and there is no new evidence that warrants reinstatement.29 Avondale points out that, when Roggli issued his expert report on April 8, 2022, he knew the

allegations and facts pertaining to Sentilles’s employment at Avondale post-June 1969 and did not include in his report any opinions regarding Sentilles’s exposure to asbestos at Avondale after that date.30 Instead, Roggli opined at his April 30, 2024 deposition in response to a hypothetical posed by Sentilles’s counsel that Sentilles would have been exposed to above-background concentrations of asbestos “just by being in the [Avondale] shipyard in the late 1960s.”31 Avondale contends that,

24 R. Doc. 289. 25 R. Doc. 328. 26 R. Doc. 344 at 2. 27 R. Docs. 329; 344. 28 R. Docs. 329-1 at 4; 344 at 5-6. 29 R. Docs. 347; 351. 30 R. Doc. 347 at 5. 31 Id. at 5-6. if Roggli testifies at trial, he should be limited to the opinions expressed in his report as required by Rule 26 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.32 Avondale also filed a motion to preclude Sentilles from offering at trial testimony, live or by deposition, from Pelnor’s industrial hygiene expert, Pierce, and medical expert, Roggli.33 In 2022, Sentilles produced expert reports from his own industrial hygiene expert, DePasquale, and

medical expert, Dr.

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Sentilles v. Huntington Ingalls Incorporated, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sentilles-v-huntington-ingalls-incorporated-laed-2024.