Van Winkle v. Rogers

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 18, 2024
Docket6:19-cv-01264
StatusUnknown

This text of Van Winkle v. Rogers (Van Winkle v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Winkle v. Rogers, (W.D. La. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA LAFAYETTE DIVISION

BILLY VAN WINKLE, JR. CASE NO. 6:19-CV-01264

VERSUS JUDGE ROBERT R. SUMMERHAYS

JAMES ARTHUR ROGERS, ET AL. MAGISTRATE JUDGE WHITEHURST

RULING and ORDER Before the Court is a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment filed by Plaintiff, Billy Van Winkle Jr. [ECF Nos. 157, 159]. Pursuant to his motion, Plaintiff seeks judgment in his favor finding Defendants “liable to Plaintiff for the defective manufacturing of the tire that blew out and struck his vehicle, causing his injuries.”1 Defendants, James Arthur Roberts, Ace American Insurance Company, and New Prime Inc. (d/b/a Prime, Inc.), oppose the motion, and Plaintiff has filed a reply.2 Oral argument is not necessary. After careful consideration of the law, the facts in the record, and the arguments and submissions of the parties, Plaintiff’s motion is DENIED. Plaintiff contends that a judgment finding Defendants liable for the accident sued upon is warranted, because he “has ruled out all other potential causes [of the accident,] leaving only a manufacturing defect as the most probable cause of the tire failure.”3 In support of this position, Plaintiff argues Defendant Rogers’ testimony that he hit a “sizable bump” on the highway immediately before the tire failed is too speculative to defeat Plaintiff’s argument that only a manufacturing defect could have caused the tire failure.4 Plaintiff further argues Defendants cannot rely on the defense of “sudden emergency” to show something other than a manufacturing defect

1 ECF No. 159 at 1. 2 ECF Nos. 163, 175. 3 ECF No. 157 at 20. 4 Id. caused the accident, because this “affirmative defense” is insufficiently pleaded. Alternatively, Plaintiff contends Defendants have failed to carry their burden on this defense by “clear and convincing evidence.”5 Defendants respond that: (1) Plaintiff’s motion is untimely; (2) the relief Plaintiff seeks would violate the law of the case doctrine; and (3) the defense of “sudden emergency” was properly and adequately pleaded.6

The Court finds Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment is untimely. After issuance of the Fifth Circuit’s mandate, the Court referred this matter to the Magistrate Judge to reset the trial date and to issue a case-specific scheduling order.7 At the subsequent October 19, 2023 conference, in accordance with the parties’ agreement, the Magistrate Judge reset the trial for February 5, 2024 and issued a new scheduling order that did not include a new deadline for the filing of dispositive motions.8 Nevertheless, Plaintiff filed his Memorandum in Support of this motion on November 22, 2023, and filed the actual Motion on November 27, 2023.9 Plaintiff neither sought, nor was he granted, leave to modify the scheduling order.10 Plaintiff contends that because this is a “Re-Urged Motion for Partial Summary Judgment”

that is “nearly identical” to his original, timely motion (filed prior to the appeal of this matter), it is not a “new motion,” and therefore “no new scheduling order entry for dispositive motions was required for this pleading, as it had already been timely filed.”11 Plaintiff further asserts Defendants

5 Id. at 14. 6 ECF No. 163 at 13, 14, 17-20. 7 ECF No. 151. 8 ECF No. 154; see also ECF No. 155. In its brief, Defendants state that all counsel represented to the Magistrate Judge at the conference that no additional dispositive motions were anticipated. [ECF No. 163 at 13]. While Defendants provide no evidence in support of this statement, it would appear to comply with the custom in the Lafayette Division. Had there been disagreement on that issue, the minutes of the conference would have so noted. 9 ECF No. 157, 159. 10 See Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b)(4). Further, even if no scheduling order had issued, the default deadline for the filing of motions for summary judgment set forth in Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(b) has long passed, and Plaintiff did not seek leave to file an out-of-time motion. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(b). 11 ECF No. 167-2 at 5. have suffered no prejudice by the untimeliness of the filing.12 Alternatively, if the Court deems the motion untimely, Plaintiff contends “that the motion is nonetheless timely and appropriate under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b).”13 First, this is not a “re-urged” motion. Plaintiff’s original motion sought dismissal of two

defenses asserted by Defendants—third-party/non-party fault, and sudden emergency/unforeseen act.14 The present motion seeks a judgment finding Defendants “liable to Plaintiff for the defective manufacturing of the tire that blew out and struck his vehicle, causing his injuries.”15 While some of the issues raised in the original motion are relevant to the instant motion, clearly the motions are not “nearly identical” as they do not seek the same relief. Plaintiff’s original motion would not have resulted in a finding that Defendants are liable for a manufacturing defect, as other defenses asserted by Defendants that were not addressed in Plaintiff’s original motion would prevent such a finding.16 Second, the Court declines to convert the present motion for judgment on liability into a Rule 60 motion for relief from judgment. Reconsideration of the Court’s prior decision would not

provide Plaintiff the relief he now seeks—a finding that Defendants are liable for Plaintiff’s products liability claim. At best, reconsideration would result in an Order that Defendants are prohibited from arguing the defenses of sudden emergency and/or unforeseen act at trial. Such a result would not provide Plaintiff the relief he seeks as there are other issues at play which preclude summary judgment (e.g., whether Plaintiff was comparatively at fault in causing the accident).

12 Id. 13 Id. 14 See ECF No. 80; see also ECF No. 130 at 1-2. 15 ECF No. 159 at 1. 16 See e.g., ECF No. 70 at 4 (“Sixth Defense”). Further, a finding in Plaintiff’s favor on the present motion would violate the law of the case doctrine, because it would necessarily require the Court to reexamine the Fifth Circuit’s decision affirming the undersigned’s judgment on the defenses of sudden emergency and/or unforeseen act. Plaintiff asserts that the Court must reconsider its decision on these defenses,

because the Fifth Circuit’s reversal of the Court’s decision on the defense of third-party fault “precludes the Defendants from using the ‘road defect’ or sudden emergency excuse at trial.”17 Under the law-of-the case doctrine, “the district court on remand, or the appellate court on a subsequent appeal, abstains from reexamining an issue of fact or law that has already been decided on appeal.”18 A corollary of that doctrine is the mandate rule which, absent exceptional circumstances, “compels compliance on remand with the dictates of a superior court and forecloses relitigation of issues expressly or impliedly decided by the appellate court.”19 Further, the rule “bars litigation of issues decided by the district court but foregone on appeal or otherwise waived.”20 Thus, district courts generally may not reconsider their own rulings “made before appeal and not raised on appeal.”21

Prior to the appeal of this case, the Court denied Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment which sought dismissal of two defenses asserted by Defendants—namely, third-party fault and sudden emergency.22 Plaintiff appealed this Ruling. On appeal, the Fifth Circuit reversed

17 ECF No. 167-2 at 8.

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Van Winkle v. Rogers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-winkle-v-rogers-lawd-2024.