St. Charles-Guillot Investment, LLC v. One Source Roofing, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 10, 2025
Docket2:23-cv-00030
StatusUnknown

This text of St. Charles-Guillot Investment, LLC v. One Source Roofing, Inc. (St. Charles-Guillot Investment, LLC v. One Source Roofing, Inc.) 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
St. Charles-Guillot Investment, LLC v. One Source Roofing, Inc., (E.D. La. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA ST. CHARLES–GUILLOT CIVIL ACTION INVESTMENT, LLC, ET AL. VERSUS NO. 23-30 ONE SOURCE ROOFING, INC., ET AL. SECTION “O” ORDER AND REASONS

Before the Court in this Hurricane Ida property-damage case removed from state court based on diversity jurisdiction is Defendant GAF Materials, LLC’s motion1 for summary judgment dismissing the Louisiana-law negligence claim that Plaintiffs St. Charles–Guillot Investment, LLC and Luling Living Center, LLC (together, “Luling”) assert against it. That claim stems from losses Luling suffered after Hurricane Ida’s winds pulled off the GAF-manufactured roof that One Source

Roofing, Inc. installed on a nursing home Luling owned and operated. Luling’s theory is that GAF assumed—and breached—a duty to inspect the roof and warn Luling of defects in One Source’s installation of it. Chiefly at issue is whether GAF—a roofing manufacturer that did not supervise the roof’s installation—affirmatively undertook that inspection duty by sending a representative to conduct a surface inspection of the installed roof for GAF’s benefit and for the limited purpose of deciding if GAF would issue a leak-proof guarantee. GAF says the answer is “no.” It thus moves for

summary judgment on the grounds it did not undertake any duty that it breached. Luling rejoins that fact disputes preclude summary judgment on duty and breach.

1 ECF No. 145. GAF has the better argument on this record under the Court’s reading of Louisiana law. The Court has not located, and the parties have not cited, Louisiana authority imposing a duty like the one Luling proposes—a duty on the part of a

product manufacturer to conduct a beyond-surface-level inspection of a contractor’s installation of the manufacturer’s product to ensure the installation was done in conformity with the manufacturer’s specifications. This is a diversity case, and “[a]s an Erie court[,] . . . it is not [the Court’s] job to lay down broad new rules of state law.” Harmon v. Grande Tire Co., 821 F.2d 252, 259 (5th Cir. 1987). Instead, the Court’s “role in the system” is “simply to apply” Louisiana law “as it currently exists.” Galindo v. Precision Am. Corp., 754 F.2d 1212, 1217 (5th Cir. 1985). Doing so, and viewing the

facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in Luling’s favor, the Court holds that Luling has not pointed to evidence creating a genuine dispute as to whether GAF affirmatively undertook a duty to conduct a reasonable post-installation inspection of the nursing home’s roof, for Luling’s benefit and beyond the mere surface inspection contemplated by GAF’s guarantee. Accordingly, for these reasons and those that follow, GAF’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.

I. BACKGROUND St. Charles–Guillot Investment owns a building in Luling, Louisiana.2 Luling Living Center operates that building as a nursing home under a lease with St. Charles–Guillot Investment.3 GAF manufactures and sells roofing materials; it is not

2 ECF No. 145-2 at ¶¶ 1–2; ECF No. 149-1 at ¶¶ 1–2. 3 ECF No. 145-2 at ¶¶ 1–2; ECF No. 149-1 at ¶¶ 1–2. a design professional and does not practice architecture or engineering.4 GAF manufactured a single-ply thermoplastic polyolefin (“TPO”) roof membrane that One Source Roofing installed on the nursing home.5 Portions of the nursing home’s roof

were pulled off during Hurricane Ida by sustained winds of 62 or fewer miles per hour.6 The nursing home was “destroyed” as a result.7 Luling later sued GAF, One Source Roofing, and others involved in installing the roof.8 The details follow. In April 2021, about four-and-a-half months before Hurricane Ida made landfall in Louisiana, Luling contracted with One Source Roofing to install a mechanically fastened TPO roofing system on the nursing home.9 The scope-of-work for the job explained that “the manufacturer’s representative” would “inspect and

certify the new roof system and will then present a NDL (no dollar limit) total system warranty to the building owner.”10 Before One Source Roofing installed the roofing system, Luling’s representatives met with representatives of One Source Roofing to discuss the installation.11 During that meeting, One Source Roofing’s representatives assured Luling’s representatives that the proposed TPO roofing system would “[a]bsolutely” be “sustainable for hurricanes and codes in south Louisiana.”12 GAF

products were brought to the meeting, but no one from GAF attended the meeting.13

4 ECF No. 145-12 at 12:20–24, 14:1–3. 5 ECF No. 145-2 at ¶ 3; ECF No. 149-1 at ¶ 3. 6 ECF No. 149-13 at 1–3; ECF No. 149-14 at 2–5. 7 ECF No. 149-2 at 10:19. 8 ECF No. 1-1 at 1–9. 9 ECF No. 145-7 at 1–4. 10 Id. at 3 (boldface deleted). 11 ECF No. 145-3 at 15:5–25, 16:1–13. 12 ECF No. 149-2 at 13:11–17. 13 Id. at 7:10–19. One Source Roofing finished installing the roof in April 2021, about four months before Hurricane Ida made landfall in Louisiana.14 No one from GAF helped One Source Roofing install the roof.15 GAF did not control how the installation was

performed; nor did GAF instruct One Source Roofing how to install the roof.16 There is no record evidence that supports a finding that anyone from GAF was on site during the roof’s installation. The record instead reflects that no GAF representative visited the property until One Source Roofing had completed the installation and requested that GAF perform a surface inspection required for issuance of a warranty.17 After One Source Roofing installed the roof, GAF field-service representative Bobby Whitman inspected it.18 Whitman’s inspection was performed at the behest of

One Source Roofing; consistent with custom, One Source Roofing asked GAF to do a post-installation inspection so that GAF could issue the Guarantee, which One Source Roofing could in turn give Luling.19 The purpose of the inspection was limited: It was done “to review the roof to see if it would be acceptable for a GAF warranty”20—known as GAF’s “EverGuard Diamond Pledge NDL Roof Guarantee” (the “Guarantee”).21

14 ECF No. 149-2 at 14:22–25–15:1–4. 15 ECF No. 145-4 at 14:3–4. 16 Id. at 14:9–15. 17 Id. at 15:1–22. 18 ECF No. 149-9 at 1–2. 19 ECF No. 145-13 at 17:14–16; id. at 20:25; id. at 20:25–21:2. 20 ECF No. 149-6 at 15:13–15. 21 ECF No. 145-11 at 1–2. Broadly, the Guarantee gave St. Charles–Guillot Investment a 20-year warranty that GAF would “repair[ ] leaks through” certain “GAF Roofing Materials”: GAF guarantees to you, the owner of the building described above, that GAF will provide “Edge to Edge” protection by repairing leaks through the GAF roofing membrane, liquid-applied membrane or coating, base flashing, high wall waterproofing flashing, insulation, expansion joint covers, preflashed accessories, and metal flashings used by the contractor of record that meet SMACNA standards (the “GAF Roofing Materials”) resulting from a manufacturing defect, ordinary wear and tear, or workmanship in applying the GAF Roofing Materials. There is no dollar limit on covered repairs. Leaks caused by non-GAF materials, such as the roof deck or non-GAF insulation, are not covered.22 The Guarantee “does not cover conditions other than leaks,” including “[d]amage to the roof constructed of the GAF materials due to . . .

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