Wilbert S. Porche v. Sutherlands Lumber and Home Center, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 13, 2019
DocketCA-0018-0551
StatusUnknown

This text of Wilbert S. Porche v. Sutherlands Lumber and Home Center, Inc. (Wilbert S. Porche v. Sutherlands Lumber and Home Center, 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
Wilbert S. Porche v. Sutherlands Lumber and Home Center, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

18-551

WILBERT S. PORCHE

VERSUS

SUTHERLANDS LUMBER AND HOME CENTER, INC., ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF RAPIDES, NO. 236,156 HONORABLE MONIQUE F. RAULS, DISTRICT JUDGE

PHYLLIS M. KEATY JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Shannon J. Gremillion, and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.

Christopher J. Roy, Sr. Chris J. Roy, Sr. Law Office, L.L.C. 1920 Jackson Street Alexandria, Louisiana 71301 (318) 767-1114 Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants: Rosana Scott Vanburen Blanche P. Wallace Kimberly Yvonne Guidy George C. Gaiennie, III Gaiennie Law Firm, L.L.C. 1920 Jackson Street Alexandria, Louisiana 71301 (318) 767-1114 Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants: Rosana Scott Vanburen Blanche P. Wallace Kimberly Yvonne Guidy

Mark F. Vilar Aaron L. Green Paul Boudreaux, Jr. Vilar & Green, L.L.C. 1450 Dorchester Drive Alexandria, Louisiana 71301 (318) 442-9533 Counsel for Defendants/Appellees: Sutherland Building Material Centers, L.P. Wesco Insurance Company KEATY, Judge.

Substituted party plaintiffs appeal a trial court judgment granting defendants’

exception of prescription and dismissing their wrongful death claims as prescribed.

For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Wilbert Porche was injured on September 8, 2008, when he fell at a lumber

store after tripping on the fork portion of a forklift that was partially obstructing an

aisle. He filed suit against Sutherland Building Material Centers, L.P., and its

liability insurer, Wesco Insurance Company on September 4, 2009, to recover for

the damages he sustained a result of the accident.1 Porche died on May 23, 2012,

and in January 2013, his mother, Blanche Smith; two sisters, Rosana Vanburen and

Blanche Wallace; and niece, Kimberly Guidry, filed a motion to be substituted as

parties plaintiff in Porche’s personal injury lawsuit. The trial court allowed the

substitution by order dated January 9, 2013. The substituted plaintiffs (hereafter

referred to as “Plaintiffs”) 2 filed an Amending and Supplemental Petition in

September 2013 wherein they disclosed that Porche had no children and was not

married at the time of his death. In that pleading, Plaintiffs further alleged that Smith

had assigned to the remaining Plaintiffs:

[A] one fourth undivided interest each in her cause of action for the damages incurred by the deceased as a result of the accident alleged in the original petition, and each of the petitioners now owns a one fourth undivided interest in the cause of action set forth in the original petition.

By order dated September 9, 2013, the trial court allowed the Amending and

Supplemental Petition to be filed and granted Plaintiffs’ request to strike from their

1 Sutherland Lumber and Home Center, Inc. was improperly named as an original defendant but was later removed by supplemental and amending petition. 2 We will use the term “Plaintiffs” to refer to the substituted plaintiffs despite the fact that Smith died during the pendency of this action. motion to substitute parties the allegation that Porche died “from natural causes

unrelated to the injuries for which he claimed damages in his Petition.”

In November 2017, Defendants filed peremptory exceptions of peremption

and prescription in which they asserted that any potential wrongful death cause of

action arising in favor of Plaintiffs with regard to Porche had prescribed, as no such

claim had been brought within one year of his May 2012 death. In response,

Plaintiffs filed a Third Amending and Supplemental Petition in which they alleged

that the injuries Porche suffered in the accident made subject of this lawsuit “caused

or contributed to” his death and that Porche’s mother, Smith, suffered damages and

incurred expenses as a result of Porche’s death. Therein, Plaintiffs disclosed that

Smith died testate in 2014 and that by a judgment rendered in her succession, they

were sent into possession of Smith’s “right, title, and interest in the survival action

and the wrongful death action which Blanche Scott Smith had arising out of the

injuries sustained by Wilbert S. Porche at the Sutherland store on or about September

8, 2008.” Plaintiffs also filed a memorandum in opposition to Defendants’

exceptions wherein they alleged that they had amended and supplemented their

petition to set forth a wrongful death claim that was not prescribed because it arose

from the accident that served as the basis for Porche’s timely filed original petition.

At the conclusion of a March 5, 2018 contradictory hearing, the trial court

granted Defendants’ exception of prescription in open court and dismissed Plaintiffs’

wrongful death claim.3 Plaintiffs appeal, arguing in their sole assignment of error

that the trial court erred in sustaining the exception of prescription as to their

wrongful death claim.

3 The trial court designated the ruling as a final judgment per La.Code Civ.P. art. 1915(B). 2 DISCUSSION

Prescription statutes are intended to protect defendants against stale claims and the lack of notification of a formal claim within the prescriptive period. Ordinarily, the burden of proof is on the party pleading prescription; however, if on the face of the petition it appears prescription has run, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to prove a suspension or interruption of the prescriptive period. . . . The prescriptive period for a wrongful death action is controlled by La.C.C. art. 3492, the one-year liberative period applicable to delictual actions.

Brown v. Our Lady of The Lake Reg’l Med. Ctr., 00-2548, p. 3 (La.App. 1 Cir.

12/28/01), 803 So.2d 1135, 1137 (citations omitted). “When prescription is raised

by peremptory exception, with evidence being introduced at the hearing on the

exception, the trial court’s findings of fact on the issue of prescription are subject to

the manifest error-clearly wrong standard of review.” Specialized Loan Servicing,

L.L.C. v. January, 12-2668, pp. 3-4 (La. 6/28/13), 119 So.3d 582, 584.

Survival actions are governed by La.Civ.Code art. 2315.1(A), which provides,

in pertinent part, that:

If a person who has been injured by an offense or quasi offense dies, the right to recover all damages for injury to that person, his property or otherwise, caused by the offense or quasi offense, shall survive for a period of one year from the death of the deceased.

Wrongful death actions are governed by La.Civ.Code art. 2315.2, which provides,

If a person dies due to the fault of another, suit may be brought by the following [later enumerated] persons to recover damages which they sustained as a result of the death[; however, t]he right of action granted by this Article prescribes one year from the death of the deceased.

La.Civ.Code art. 2315.2(A) and (B) (emphasis added).

Both survival and wrongful death rights of action are “heritable, but the

inheritance of it neither interrupts nor prolongs the prescriptive period.”

La.Civ.Code arts. 2315.1(C) and 2315.2(C). Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure

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