Zurich American Ins. Co. v. QUEEN'S MACHINERY CO., LTD.

8 So. 3d 91, 2009 WL 196214
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 2009
Docket08-CA-546
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 So. 3d 91 (Zurich American Ins. Co. v. QUEEN'S MACHINERY CO., LTD.) 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
Zurich American Ins. Co. v. QUEEN'S MACHINERY CO., LTD., 8 So. 3d 91, 2009 WL 196214 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

FREDERICKA HOMBERG WICKER, Judge.

|2This is a workers’ compensation subro-gation proceeding in which the employer’s workers’ compensation insurer seeks to recover from the manufacturer of an extruder the amounts it paid or may pay in workers’ compensation benefits as a result of an alleged workplace accident involving the extruder. The manufacturer filed a reconventional demand 1 against the insurer in which it alleged the following claims: (1) spoliation of evidence; (2) mishandling of the workers’ compensation claim; and, (3) quantum meruit. The trial judge granted the workers’ compensation insurer’s exception of no cause of action and dismissed the reconventional demand. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Proceedings Below

Zurich American insurance Company, plaintiff/appellee, (Zurich) filed a petition for damages in August 2004 against Queen’s Machinery Co., Ltd., defendant/appellee (Queen’s). Zurich alleged that on or about September 1, 2003 Nhut Nguyen, an Alpine Plastics, Inc. (Alpine) employee, suffered an accident for | -¡which Zurich, as Alpine’s workers’ compensation carrier, paid and may continue to pay workers’ compensation benefits. 2

Zurich alleged that Mr. Nguyen suffered an electrocution injury while working with the Queen’s extruder. It alleged that it would not have had to pay the workers’ compensation benefits had it not been for Queen’s negligence and/or fault.

Mr. Nguyen intervened in the suit in July 2005. He intervened individually and as the natural tutor of his wife and children. He sought damages from Queen’s for himself and loss of consortium for the other family members, alleging that he sustained serious and disabling injuries as a result of the accident.

A few weeks later, Queen’s filed a notice of removal to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. The following year, in September 2006, Queen’s filed a “counterclaim” to Zurich’s petition for damages. Among its defenses, Queen’s pleaded alternatively that Zurich had the right to require Alpine to preserve the evidence related to the accident but that instead Zurich allowed the evidence to be lost and/or destroyed at a time when Zurich was on notice of a potential subrogation claim against Queen’s.

In addition to the defense that Zurich failed to preserve the evidence, Queen’s pled as a “counterclaim” the independent tort of spoliation of the evidence. Queen’s alleged the following:

Zurich, as Alpine’s workers’ compensation insurer, operated under a contract of insurance that provided in the event of an injury to an Alpine employee, Zurich had the right to control Alpine in all matters related to that injury. Specifically, Alpine had an obligation to cooperate with and assist Zurich in the investigation of any claim. And Alpine had an obligation to do everything to | ¿preserve Zurich’s right to *94 assert subrogation rights against third parties. Also, that contract of insurance provided that in the event of an injury to an employee, Alpine had the obligation to give Zurich and/or Zurich’s agent the name and addresses of witnesses and other information that Zurich requested.

On September 1, 2003, Mr. Nguyen was allegedly injured while working in the course and scope of his employment with Alpine. One week later, Zurich received notice of the employee’s alleged injury. About two weeks after the alleged accident, Jack Scheinuk, Zurich’s agent, through his employee, contacted Zurich and requested information regarding Mr. Nguyen’s claim. Zurich appointed its employee Renee Marquez as the workers’ compensation adjuster (file handler), and Ms. Marquez communicated with Joseph B. Guilbeau, the workers’ compensation defense counsel.

Before this incident, Mr. Guilbeau had defended a spoliation of evidence claim asserted against Alpine. As a result, Zurich was on notice of the need to instruct Alpine to preserve all evidence associated with Mr. Nguyen’s alleged injuries.

Ms. Marquez contacted Alpine and received information regarding the incident. But Ms. Marquez gave Alpine no instructions regarding the preservation of evidence. On or before September 19, 2006, Mr. Scheinuk requested that Zurich’s legal personnel and Zurich’s engineering personnel investigate Mr. Nguyen’s alleged accident. Around that date, Mr. Scheinuk, acting on behalf of Zurich, inspected the extruder and took photographs. That date, Mr. Scheinuk provided the photographs of the extruder to Ms. Marquez and advised her to make a subrogation demand on behalf of Zurich against Queen’s. Later that date, Ms. Marquez forwarded the photographs to Daphne Hasten, a subrogation adjustor, and instructed her to call Mr. Scheinuk so that the subrogation could proceed. On the |fisame day, Zurich’s counsel communicated by letter with Ms. Hasten and Ms. Rhonda Kleinman, another subrogation adjustor. Therefore, before the end of September 2003 Zurich was developing its subrogation claim against Queen’s and had decided to file suit against Queen’s. At no time during this period did Zurich take custody of the evidence or instruct Alpine to preserve evidence relevant to the claim.

During the following month, Alpine contacted Mr. Scheinuk and inquired whether Zurich’s investigations would interfere with Alpine’s operations. Mr. Scheinuk told Alpine that there may be a need to shut down the machine. Mr. Scheinuk, however, gave Alpine no instructions regarding preserving the evidence nor did he request custody of the machine or any of its component parts. As a result, Alpine did not preserve and it did in fact discard crucial evidence related to Mr. Nguyen’s alleged accident, including but not limited to the configuration of the extruder and the heater bands and physical evidence of or the lack of physical evidence of the alleged accident. Also, although Alpine did locate component parts from other heater bands, Alpine could not produce the actual heater band or Allen wrench allegedly involved in Mr. Nguyen’s accident. Zurich’s failure to preserve or to direct its insured to preserve all evidence related to Mr. Nguyen’s alleged accident has harmed Queen’s. Accordingly, Queen’s requested that in the event it is found liable, in whole or in part, for Mr. Nguyen’s alleged injuries and ordered to pay damages on the principal demand to Zurich and/or to the Nguyens, then there be judgment holding Zurich liable to Queen’s on this “counterclaim” and that Zurich be ordered to pay damages to Queen’s in an amount commensurate with any amount that Queen’s *95 is ordered to pay on the principal demand.; Queen’s sought to have judgment in its favor dismissing Zurich’s petition for damages with prejudice or alternatively in the event that Queen’s is cast in judgment, that ^judgment also be entered in favor of Queen’s against Zurich on Queen’s’ “counterclaim” in an amount commensurate with any amount awarded to Zurich and the Nguyens.

Later, in 2006, The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana remanded the case to the 24th judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

The following year, Queen’s filed an unopposed motion for leave to amend its “counterclaim.” The trial judge granted the motion.

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8 So. 3d 91, 2009 WL 196214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zurich-american-ins-co-v-queens-machinery-co-ltd-lactapp-2009.