Stonetrust Commercial Insurance Company v. Wayne Dennis Stevenson

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 2022
Docket2021CA0721, 2021CA0722
StatusUnknown

This text of Stonetrust Commercial Insurance Company v. Wayne Dennis Stevenson (Stonetrust Commercial Insurance Company v. Wayne Dennis Stevenson) 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
Stonetrust Commercial Insurance Company v. Wayne Dennis Stevenson, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

NUMBER 2021 CA 0721

STONETRUST COMMERCIAL INSURANCE COMPANY

VERSUS

WAYNE DENNIS STEVENSON, ET AL.

Consolidated with

Number 2021 CA 0722

TODD COLLINS AND CARLETRIA WHEELER, ON BEHALF OF THE MINOR CHILD, CARLEIGH TODD COLLINS

ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES INSURANCE INC., HARVEST HAUL, INC., HARVEST HAUL TRUCKING, LLC, WAYNE DENNIS STEVENSON, HUB INTERNATIONAL MIDWEST, LTD D/ B/ A HUB INTERNATIONAL GULF SOUTH, XYZ INSURANCE COMPANY, AND 123 INSURANCE COMPANY

Judgment Rendered: MAR 0 3 2022

Appealed from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana Suit Number C647910 c/ w 647939

Honorable William A. Morvant, Presiding

Lewis O. Unglesby Counsel for Plaintiffs/ Appellants Lance C. Unglesby Todd Collins and Carletria Wheeler Jordan L. Bollinger on behalf of the minor child, Carleigh Adrian M. Simm, Jr. Todd Collins Jamie F. Gontarek Baton Rouge, LA

Phillip E. Foco Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant Colin P. O' Rourke Stonetrust Commercial Insurance Anthony J. Lascaro Company Baton Rouge, LA Andre C. Gaudin Counsel for Defendants/ Appellees Scott O. Gaspard Harvest Haul, Inc. and Harvest Haul Metairie, LA Trucking, LLC

BEFORE: GUIDRY, HOLDRIDGE, AND CHUTZ, JJ.

2 GUIDRY, J.

Plaintiffs, Todd Collins and Carletria Wheeler, on behalf of the minor child,

Carleigh Todd Collins, and Stonetrust Commercial Insurance Company ( Stonetrust)

each appeal from the trial court' s judgment granting summary judgment in favor of

defendants, Harvest Haul, Inc., and Harvest Haul Trucking, L.L.C., and dismissing

their claims against defendants with prejudice. For the reasons that follow, we

affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On April 30, 2015, Todd Collins was operating a log truck for his employer,

R& S Excavation and Dirt Service, delivering a load of logs to Georgia Pacific' s

paper mill in Port Hudson, Louisiana. While waiting in line with a number of other

trucks to deliver his load of logs, Collins noticed that a truck ahead of him in line,

which was operated by Wayne Stevenson, was not moving. After some time had

passed, a gap formed between Stevenson' s truck and the other trucks ahead of

Stevenson in line. When Stevenson failed to move forward, Collins drove his truck

around Stevenson' s truck and proceeded forward in line. As Collins passed

Stevenson' s truck, he noticed Stevenson appeared to be asleep and Collins sounded

his horn in an effort to wake Stevenson, but to no avail. Several other trucks

followed Collins and passed Stevenson.

Thereafter, Stevenson awoke and, upon noticing that he had been passed up

in the line, drove his truck to where Collins was stopped at the front of the line and

parked next to Collins. Stevenson demanded over the CB radio for Collins to allow

him to resume his place in line, but Collins refused. Stevenson proceeded to back

his truck up in line, and parked approximately five truck -lengths behind Collins.

Stevenson then exited his truck with a metal pipe, walked to the front of the line, and

approached Collins' s truck, whereupon Stevenson started to argue with Collins. At

first, Collins refused to exit his truck, but after Stevenson opened the truck door and

C spit on Collins, Collins exited the truck and Stevenson struck Collins with the metal

pipe.

On April 28, 2016, Stonetrust, the workers compensation carrier for Collins' s

employer, filed a petition for damages in subrogation, naming Stevenson and his

employer, Harvest Haul, Inc., and Harvest Haul Trucking, L.L.C. ( sometimes

collectively Harvest Haul) as defendants. Stonetrust asserted that Harvest Haul

employed Stevenson and had assigned him to perform the work he was doing, that

his work was the reason Stevenson was at the Georgia Pacific paper mill at the time

of the incident, that the incident was rooted in Stevenson' s employment for Harvest

Haul, and that the incident arose out of Stevenson' s desire to expeditiously and

efficiently perform his work for Harvest Haul. As such, Stonetrust asserted that

Harvest Haul was vicariously liable for the intentional actions of Stevenson. In

addition, Stonetrust asserted that Harvest Haul was negligent in hiring and training

Stevenson. Accordingly, Stonetrust sought payment for medical expenses and

indemnity benefits it had paid or would become obligated to pay to Collins or on his

behalf in connection with or as a result of the alleged incident.

On May 2, 2016, Todd Collins and Carletria Wheeler, on behalf of the minor

child, Carleigh Todd Collins, also filed a petition for damages as a result of the

alleged incident, naming Harvest Haul, Inc. and Harvest Haul Trucking, L.L.C. and

their insurer, Associated Industries Insurance, Inc. as defendants.' The Collins

plaintiffs asserted the same allegations of negligence raised by Stonetrust in its

petition, including Harvest Haul' s vicarious liability for the intentional actions of

Stevenson as well as Harvest Haul' s negligent hiring and training of Stevenson. The

Collins plaintiffs' suit was subsequently consolidated with the Stonetrust suit for

trial pursuant to a consent judgment signed on November 16, 2016.

The Collins plaintiffs also named Stevenson and several additional insurers as defendants; however, these parties are not at issue in the instant appeal. 4 Thereafter, on May 5, 2020, Harvest Haul filed a motion for summary

judgment asserting that there is no proof that Harvest Haul, Inc. failed to properly

hire and train Stevenson. Harvest Haul further asserted that the alleged physical

assault attributed to Stevenson took place outside of the scope of his employment

with Harvest Haul, Inc. and therefore, Harvest Haul, Inc. should not be vicariously

liable for such activity. Finally, Harvest Haul asserted that Harvest Haul Trucking,

L.L.C. was not the employer of Stevenson and was not associated with the alleged

incident in any way; therefore, no liability should lie against it. Harvest Haul

attached the deposition of Todd Collins and the affidavit of Francisco Montalvo, the

owner of Harvest Haul, to its motion. The motion was set for hearing on September

14, 2020.

Stonetrust and the Collins plaintiffs filed oppositions to the motion for

summary judgment on August 28, 2020, asserting that genuine issues of material

fact existed as to whether the tortious acts were employment rooted and whether the

acts were reasonably incidental to the performance of Stevenson' s job duties. As

such, plaintiffs asserted that the existence of these issues of fact precluded the

granting of summary judgment in favor of Harvest Haul.

Thereafter, on September 10, 2020, the Collins plaintiffs filed an unopposed

motion for leave to supplement their opposition with the deposition testimony of Mr.

Montalvo. According to the motion, the deposition was scheduled but had not been

taken at the time of the filing of their opposition. Harvest Haul also filed an

unopposed motion for leave to supplement its memorandum in support of its motion

for summary judgment with the same deposition testimony.

Following the hearing on Harvest Haul' s motion for summary judgment, the

trial court signed a judgment: denying the Collins plaintiffs' unopposed motion for

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