Toyonicka Cormier v. Boys Town Louisiana, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 2024
DocketCA-0023-0664
StatusUnknown

This text of Toyonicka Cormier v. Boys Town Louisiana, Inc. (Toyonicka Cormier v. Boys Town Louisiana, Inc.) 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
Toyonicka Cormier v. Boys Town Louisiana, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

23-664

TOYONICKA CORMIER

VERSUS

BOYS TOWN LOUISIANA, INC.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ACADIA, NO. 2021-10242 HONORABLE MICHELE BILLEAUD, DISTRICT JUDGE

WILBUR L. STILES JUDGE

Court composed of D. Kent Savoie, Guy E. Bradberry, and Wilbur L. Stiles, Judges.

AFFIRMED. James R. Morris Sudduth & Associates, LLC 1109 Pithon Street Lake Charles, LA 70601 (337) 480-0101 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Toyonicka Cormier

Shelton Dennis Blunt Brittany Alexander Phelps Dunbar LLP 400 Convention Street, Suite 1100 Baton Rouge, LA 70802 (225) 346-0285 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Boys Town Louisiana, Inc. STILES, Judge.

Plaintiff/Appellant Toyonicka Cormier’s minor son was shot to death after he

left a residential facility owned by Defendant Boys Town Louisiana, Inc. Plaintiff

maintained that Defendant was negligent in failing to restrain her son from leaving

the facility and pursued damages associated with his death. Defendant sought

summary judgment, alleging that Plaintiff would be unable to establish it owed a

duty to physically restrain Plaintiff’s son or that the risk he encountered after his

departure from the facility was within the scope of the duty owed. The trial court

entered summary judgment in favor of Defendant. Plaintiff appeals. For the

following reasons, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff explained in her Petition for Damages that her minor son Emori1 was

convicted of a criminal offense in February 2020. Although Emori was initially

incarcerated in the Lafayette Parish Correctional Center for Youth, he was later

transferred to Defendant’s facility in Gretna, Louisiana. Plaintiff alleged that

although Defendant had a duty to detain Emori at the facility, it “negligently allowed”

him “to leave the compound and return to Acadia Parish.” Plaintiff asserted that adult

gang members thereafter shot Emori to death when he refused to join their gang. In

addition to damages for Emori’s wrongful death, Plaintiff advanced a survival action.

Defendant explained in its answer that Emori left its facility “on his own

volition” but rejected Plaintiff’s allegations of negligence. Defendant instead filed a

motion for summary judgment, asking the trial court to dismiss Plaintiff’s claims,

with prejudice, and maintained that she would be unable to prove that Defendant

1 Emori was seventeen years of age at the time of the pertinent events. breached any duty owed or that Emori’s death, which occurred in a different parish

at the hands of a third party, was within the scope of any duty owed.

Defendant supported its motion with Plaintiff’s petition, Plaintiff’s Answers

to its First Set of Interrogatories and Responses to Requests for Production of

Documents, and affidavits from its Executive Director and its Supervisor of

Intervention and Assessment Program. Defendant maintained that its facility is

residential in nature and that it did not have a duty to physically restrain Emori from

leaving the facility. Moreover, Defendant noted that Emori left its Gretna facility on

April 5, 2020, and that he died in Acadia Parish from a gunshot wound more than a

month later, on May 15, 2020. Given those circumstances, Defendant asserted, any

duty owed to Emori would not include protection from the risk encountered.

In opposition, Plaintiff attempted to introduce an excerpt of a “Request for

Proposals for Non-Medical Group Home” issued by the State of Louisiana, Office

of Juvenile Justice and an excerpt from OJJ’s “Standard Operating Procedures for

Contract Providers.” Plaintiff maintained that the documents demonstrate that Boys

Town personnel were expressly permitted to use appropriate physical force to

prevent a youth resident from “absconding from custody.”

At the hearing on the April 17, 2023 motion for summary judgment,

Defendant objected to the form of Plaintiff’s evidentiary submission. The trial court

excluded Plaintiff’s exhibits, finding that the documents were not in proper form as

they were not certified, sworn, or verified. See La.Code Civ.P. art. 966(A)(4).

On the merits, the trial court found in favor of Defendant, explaining that:

I find that there is no genuine issue of material fact that Boys Town had a duty to physically restrain plaintiff or that the risk that Mr. Carter would be murdered 40 days later more than 100 miles from Boys Town, a boy’s home, would fall within the scope of that duty. I find that the plaintiff had not proven either a duty or proximate cause of any

2 damages. I find that the plaintiff had not proven either a duty or proximate cause of any damages. In evaluating the duty element, the inquiry is whether the plaintiff had any loss, statutory or jurisprudential, to support her claim that a duty exists. Plaintiff has shown no legal authority to impose a duty on a non-secure, residential facility to physically detain its residents to prevent them from leaving. In support of their motion, Defendant has submitted two sworn affidavits for consideration, as well as the petition and discovery, and according to those affidavits, the boys’ home is a community-based program, a non- secure facility, that provides services to youth aimed at promoting social and emotional adjustment, independent living skills, and eliminating negative behavior. Boys Town operates in part through social services contracts with OJJ where they reserve six beds at the boys’ home for male youths between the ages of 12 and 18 who are in OJJ custody. It is not the policy of Boys Town to lock doors from the inside. Boys Town is classified as a residential home, Type 4.

....

Further, even if there was a duty, the lack of any evidence showing a bre[a]ch of duty which then shifts the burden to the plaintiff to provide factual support sufficient to establish a genuine issue of material fact, and that the mover is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and that plaintiff has not done that in this case. Plaintiff has submitted no evidence to establish that Boys Town, in any way, violated any of their own policies or were in any way negligent. In looking at proximate cause, Plaintiff must show that the risk of harm was within the scope of the protection afforded by the duty bre[a]ched. Plaintiff’s son was murdered by a third party 40 days after he voluntarily walked out of the facility, and 100 miles away from the facility. In this case, even if there was a duty, the reason for the duty would not be to protect Carter from a murder 40 days later, 100 miles away. For those reasons, the motion for summary judgment is granted.

The trial court subsequently entered a summary judgment in favor of Defendant and

dismissed Plaintiff’s claim against it.2

Plaintiff appeals, questioning: 1) whether the trial court erred in refusing to

accept the Request for Procedure and Standard Operating Procedure excerpts in

opposition to the motion for summary judgment; and (2) whether the trial court erred

in finding no genuine issues of material fact.

2 The trial court granted Plaintiff leave to file a Supplemental and Amending Petition naming OJJ as a defendant. Those proceedings are not before this court.

3 DISCUSSION

Summary Judgment

Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Article 966(A)(2) provides that the

summary judgment procedure is favored and is designed to secure the just, speedy,

and inexpensive determination of every action other than those specifically

disallowed.

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Related

Lazard v. Foti
859 So. 2d 656 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2003)
Roberts v. Benoit
605 So. 2d 1032 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1992)
Nettle v. Succession of Nettle
212 So. 3d 1180 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016)

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