The Rapides Parish School Board v. Zurich American Insurance Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 21, 2019
DocketCW-0019-0329
StatusUnknown

This text of The Rapides Parish School Board v. Zurich American Insurance Company (The Rapides Parish School Board v. Zurich American Insurance Company) 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
The Rapides Parish School Board v. Zurich American Insurance Company, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

19-312 Consolidated With 19-329

THE RAPIDES PARISH SCHOOL BOARD

VERSUS

ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY, ET AL

**********

ON APPLICATION FOR SUPERVISORY WRITS FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 254,644 F HONORABLE GEORGE C. METOYER, DISTRICT JUDGE

JOHN E. CONERY JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, John E. Conery, and Van H. Kyzar, Judges.

WRITS DENIED. Adrian G. Nadeau J. Weston Clark Long Law Firm, L.L.P. 1800 City Farm Drive, Building 6 Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70806 (225) 922-5110 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/RELATORS/RESPONDENTS: Alliance Design Group, LLC XL Specialty Insurance Company

Temple A. Stephens Comeaux, Stephens & Grace One Lakeway Center, Suite 1060 3900 North Causeway Boulevard Metairie, Louisiana 70002 (504) 219-2030 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/RELATORS/RESPONDENTS: Ratcliff Construction Company, LLC Zurich Insurance Company

James C. Downs Attorney At Law 1254 Dorchester Drive Alexandria, Louisiana 71303 (318) 448-3439 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/RELATOR/RESPONDENT: The Rapides Parish School Board CONERY, Judge.

This matter is before the court on the parties’ consolidated writ applications.

In writ application number 19-312, Relators Alliance Design Group, L.L.C.

(Alliance), Alliance’s Insurer, XL Specialty Insurance Company (XL Specialty

Insurance), Ratcliff Construction Company, L.L.C. (Ratcliff), and Ratcliff’s insurer,

Zurich American Insurance Company (Zurich) (collectively Defendants), seek

review of a trial court’s judgment denying its exception of peremption in part. In

writ application number 19-329, Relator is the plaintiff, Rapides Parish School

Board (RPSB), and via that writ application, RPSB seeks review of the trial court’s

decision to partially grant Defendants’ exception of peremption. For the following

reasons, we deny both writ applications.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case involves a claim for property damages originally sustained when a

fire sprinkler head discharged water at a junior high school in Woodworth, Louisiana.

On December 26, 2014, at 3:00 a.m., a fire alarm activated at Caroline Dormon

Junior High. When responding to the alarm, the local fire department did not find

any fire, smoke, or heat. However, the fire department observed that a fire-sprinkler

head in the principal’s office had activated and released water, causing flooding in

that office and a substantial part of the administrative wing of the school. Allegedly,

the sprinkler discharge was caused by a defect in the design and construction of the

school’s fire suppression system. Defendant Alliance was the architect for the

school, and Defendant Ratcliff was the general contractor for the construction of the

school. On August 17, 2012, RPSB signed a Certificate of Substantial Completion

and accepted Ratcliff’s construction of the school with a few limited reservations. As a result of the flooding on December 26, 2014, RPSB timely filed the

instant lawsuit on December 18, 2015, against Alliance and Ratcliff and their

insurers, XL Specialty Insurance and Zurich, respectively. In the original petition,

RPSB alleges that the design and construction of the fire suppression system caused

the sprinkler system to discharge, and RPSB seeks to recover for damages resulting

from the discharge of water from the sprinkler head. RPSB alleges that the water

throughout the sprinkler system pipe was able to freeze and expand due to below

freezing temperatures in the attic space above the ceiling and that this expansion

affected the sprinkler head’s internal mechanisms, thus causing water to leak. RPSB

also alleges that the temperature in the attic where the pipes are located dropped

below freezing because the walls in the attic were not sufficiently insulated and

because some ceiling panels in the principal’s office were covered with insulation

which prevented warmer air from the building from rising to the attic area. In its

original petition, RPSB alleges that it is entitled to recover for the costs of repairing

the water damage to the school and to recover for future school repairs which may

be necessary due to defective conditions in the school.

Because Defendants Alliance and Ratcliff made allegations that the

spontaneous discharge of the sprinkler system at the school was caused by third party

fault, RPSB filed a first amended petition on July 28, 2017, adding claims against

Tyco Fire and Building Products (Tyco), which is the manufacturer of the sprinkler

head, and Anderson Fire Protection of Alexandria, L.L.C. (Anderson Fire

Protection), which is the subcontractor that installed the fire suppression system.

However, Tyco was subsequently dismissed from the lawsuit on an unopposed

motion for summary judgment. Although Anderson Fire Protection remains a

2 defendant in the lawsuit, that defendant is not involved in the instant writ

applications.

In its first amended petition, RPSB also alleges that a post-incident inspection

of the fire suppression system revealed that the wrong sprinkler head had been

installed throughout the school and that many of the sprinkler heads were clogged

with a foreign material such that RPSB was required to replace the sprinkler heads

throughout the school. RPSB seeks to recover damages from Defendants due to

those defects.

On December 20, 2018, the trial court granted leave of court to allow RPSB

to file a second amended petition. In Paragraphs 34-35 of that petition, RPSB adds

allegations of the following deficiencies: 1) the failure to install a lower level of

insulation below the metal roof throughout the school; 2) the use of unfaced batt

insulation instead of foil-faced insulation throughout the school; 3) the failure to put

the proper vapor barrier behind the brick masonry; 4) the failure to properly

supervise the installation of an electric solar panel and electric conduit; 5) the use

of improper fan motors and circuit breakers in the heating, ventilation, and air

conditioning systems; 6) the failure to obtain a successful final electrical inspection

for the issuance of the certificate of occupancy; and 7) the making of false assurances

that the school would be built to higher than usual standards with regard to

environmental design and energy consumption. Given those deficiencies, RPSB

sought damages related both to property damage and to higher utility costs, plus

additional personnel costs resulting from monitoring the suspect systems.

Defendants filed an exception of peremption as to the second amended

petition, asserting that the newly-raised claims are barred by the five-year

peremptive periods set forth in La.R.S. 9:5607, which governs claims against

3 architects, and La.R.S. 9:2772, which governs claims against building contractors.

Following a hearing, the trial court signed a judgment granting Defendants’

exception of peremption in part and dismissing a list of some of the specific

allegations raised in RPSB’s second amended petition.

The trial court also denied the exception of peremption in part, holding that

any allegations/claims in RPSB’s second amended petition not included in the list

of dismissed claims would be allowed to proceed.1 All Relators now seek review of

the trial court’s ruling by their respective applications for supervisory writs. In writ

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