Tureaud v. Acadiana Nursing Home
This text of 696 So. 2d 15 (Tureaud v. Acadiana Nursing Home) 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.
Opinion
Mae Isabel Fenelon TUREAUD, PlaintiffAppellant,
v.
ACADIANA NURSING HOME, et al., DefendantsAppellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*16 Dean A. Doherty, Lafayette, for Mae Isabel Fenelon Tureaud.
Shepton F. Hunter, Lafayette, Timothy Reynolds, Crowley, Kym K. Keller, Gretna, for Acadiana Nursing Home, et al.
Before YELVERTON, THIBODEAUX and SAUNDERS, JJ.
THIBODEAUX, Judge.
Mae Isabel Fenelon Tureaud timely filed a wrongful death and survival action against the Acadiana Nursing Home to recover damages resulting from events which led up to the death of Isabella Fenelon, her mother, while in the care of the nursing home. James Aloysius Fenelon, Isabella's son, did not file a lawsuit. Jamie and John Eric Fenelon, children of James, grandchildren of the deceased, filed an amending petition asserting the same causes of action as Ms. Tureaud. The petition was filed more than one year after Isabella's death. The trial court granted an exception of no right of action finding that the prescriptive period had elapsed. It is from this judgment that the plaintiffs appeal arguing that Jamie and John Eric Fenelon may assert their father's right of action in their representative capacities.
We reverse the findings of the trial court for the following reasons.
I.
ISSUES
The three interrelated issues presented for review are whether the trial court erred in finding that (1) the prescriptive period for Ms. Tureaud's siblings passed; (2) Jamie and John Eric Fenelon's inheritance of their father's right of action in this suit would expand the prescriptive period in contravention of La.Civ.Code arts. 2315.1(C) and 2315.2(C); and, (3) Jamie and John Eric Fenelon's claim does not relate back to the original plaintiff's petition.
II.
FACTS
Isabella Fenelon died while in the care of the Acadiana Nursing Home on September 5, 1993. Six major children survived Ms. Fenelon: Mae Isabel Fenelon Tureaud, Ann Tanya Fenelon, Andrea Marie Fenelon, Emily Teresita Fenelon Henry, Frank Nicolas Fenelon, and James Aloysius Fenelon. All of the children were listed in the nursing home's records as children of the patient. On September 6, 1994, Mae Isabel Tureaud filed a petition for damages asserting wrongful death and survival actions.
James Aloysius Fenelon died on January 16, 1995. Jamie and John Eric Fenelon, his two children, survived him. James Aloysius Fenelon did not join his sister's wrongful death and survival action before his death. Jamie and John Eric Fenelon filed an amending petition for damages to Ms. Tureaud's claim. On January 23, 1996, Jamie and John Eric Fenelon amended the petition to the complaint stating that they were joining the suit in a representative capacity asserting the right of action inherited from James Aloysius Fenelon.
III.
LAW AND DISCUSSION
Prescription
Acadiana Nursing Home argues that Jamie and John Eric Fenelon rely on a fundamental misconception of the law regarding wrongful death and survival actions in forming *17 the basis of their argument. It asserts that wrongful death actions of children are separate causes of action and, as such, the prescriptive period for filing a claim in the case regarding Isabella Fenelon has already passed.
Articles 2315.1 (survival action) and 2315.2 (wrongful death action) of the Louisiana Civil Code provide that surviving children, among certain other specified individuals, have the right to recover damages for injury to a person caused by another within one year of the death of the deceased. On September 5, 1993, James Aloysius Fenelon's right to enforce La.Civ.Code arts. 2315.1 and 2315.2 as a surviving child of the deceased vested. The question becomes whether his right of action has prescribed such that Jamie and John Eric Fenelon cannot enforce it in their representative capacities.
Prescription is interrupted upon the filing of suit in a court of competent jurisdiction and venue. La.Civ.Code art. 3462. This interruption continues while the suit is pending. La.Civ.Code art. 3463. Once prescription is interrupted, the time that has already run is erased and prescription commences to run anew at the end of the interruption. La.Civ.Code art. 3466.
When several parties share material facts which form the basis of the right to bring an action, suit by one interrupts prescription as to all. Louviere v. Shell Oil Co., 440 So.2d 93 (La.1983). A widow and her children share the same wrongful death cause of action. Williams v. Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans, 611 So.2d 1383 (La.1993). All of the children of Isabella Fenelon shared the same basis for the right to bring wrongful death and survival actions against the Acadiana Nursing Home because they each satisfied the requirements under La.Civ.Code arts. 2315.1 and 2315.2. Once Ms. Tureaud filed suit, prescription was interrupted as to James Aloysius Fenelon along with all of her other siblings.
Acadiana Nursing Home's attempt to seek legal refuge by relying on Ryland v. Liberty Lloyds Ins. Co., 617 So.2d 583 (La.App. 3 Cir.1993), reversed on other grounds, 93-1712 (La.1/14/94); 630 So.2d 1289, is unavailing. In Ryland, a father and two children sued for the wrongful death of a wife and mother. The aggregate awards exceeded the $500,000.00 statutory cap on general damages against the State or its agencies. In deciding that this result was proper, the third circuit stated that "[e]ach party's demand for enforcement of a legal right against each defendant is regarded as a separate action which may be cumulated in a single suit ..." Id. at 590. Our reference was to rights of action, not causes of action. That language was used to emphasize that recovery of damages based on individual wrongful death and survival causes of action should not be affected or diminished by the joinder of those multiple plaintiffs in one lawsuit. The causes of action remain the same, i.e., wrongful death and survival actions.
In this case, the court should only focus on the basis of the potential plaintiffs' legal rights. If those rights are the same, then the action is not prescribed. In other words, children of the deceased who suffered injuries as a result of an offense share material facts which form the basis of a legal right of action because they each satisfy the requirements for beneficiaries of wrongful death and survival actions under the code. La.Civ.Code art. 2315.1; La.Civ.Code art. 2315.2. These children, however, may be treated differently in the consideration of damage awards because each individual person may have been affected differently by the death of the parent. This reasoning was also used by the First Circuit Court of Appeal in Ly v. State Through Department of Pub. Safety & Corrections, 633 So.2d 197 (La.App. 1 Cir.1993), which was also cited in support of Acadiana Nursing Home's position. Acadiana Nursing Home cannot take solace in Ly. The first circuit's use of the language, "separate cause of action," Ly,
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696 So. 2d 15, 1997 WL 226192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tureaud-v-acadiana-nursing-home-lactapp-1997.