Antoine v. McDonald's Restaurant
This text of 734 So. 2d 1257 (Antoine v. McDonald's Restaurant) 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
Tamira ANTOINE, et al., Plaintiffs Appellants,
v.
McDONALD'S RESTAURANT, DefendantAppellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*1258 Valerie Gotch Garrett, Lafayette, for Tamira Antoine, et al.
Michael Edward Parker, Lafayette, for McDonald's Restaurant.
BEFORE: YELVERTON, THIBODEAUX, and SULLIVAN, Judges.
YELVERTON, J.
The issue before this court is whether the failure to file the original signed petition and pay a $5.00 transmission fee for a facsimile filing within five days after transmission as required by La.R.S. 13:850 is prescriptively fatal to plaintiff's cause of action. The trial judgment maintained a plea of prescription. We affirm.[1]
Facts
Tamira Antoine and her child were allegedly injured in a slip-and-fall accident that occurred at a McDonald's restaurant in Lafayette on March 17, 1996. On a Monday following the anniversary date of the alleged injury, Ms. Antoine filed suit by facsimile (fax) transmission on her behalf and on behalf of her minor son against Mac-Laff, Inc. (improperly designated McDonald's Restaurant of La., Inc.). She faxed the suit at 10:52 p.m. on March 17, 1997. The fax filing was stamped received *1259 by the Lafayette Parish Clerk of Court's office the next morning, March 18, 1997.
On July 25, 1997, Ms. Antoine filed a hard copy of the petition with the clerk's office. This filing was given a separate docket number and later consolidated with the faxed suit. A pauper affidavit and application accompanied Ms. Antoine's July 1997 filing, and the trial court granted the plaintiff pauper status at that time.
On April 23, 1998, Mac-Laff filed an exception of prescription based on Antoine's failure to timely file her petition within one year of the date of the alleged injury and her failure to meet the requirements of La.R.S. 13:850 regarding facsimile filings. The trial court granted Mac-Laff's exception and dismissed the suit finding that the fax filing at 10 p.m. on March 17, 1997, after the close of the clerk's office, did not interrupt prescription. He also found that Ms. Antoine failed to submit the $5.00 transmission fee within five days of the date of the facsimile filing required by La.R.S. 13:850(B) thereby rendering the fax filing ineffective. Ms. Antoine appeals.
Law
Facsimile filing is authorized by La.R.S. 13:850 which states in part:
A. Any paper filed in a civil action may be filed with the court by facsimile transmission. All clerks of court shall make available for their use equipment to accommodate facsimile filing in civil actions. Filing shall be deemed complete at the time that the facsimile transmission is received and a receipt of transmission has been transmitted to the sender by the clerk of court. The facsimile when filed has the same force and effect as the original.
B. Within five days, exclusive of legal holidays, after the clerk of court has received the transmission, the party filing the document shall forward the following to the clerk:
(1) The original signed document.
(2) The applicable filing fee, if any.
(3) A transmission fee of five dollars.
C. If the party fails to comply with the requirements of Subsection B, the facsimile filing shall have no force or effect.
The initial faxed petition was received by the Lafayette Parish Clerk of Court's office, but the transmission itself was not dated and did not contain a time stamp. It was not recorded as filed by the office of the Clerk of Court until the next business day, March 18, 1997. The deputy clerk, Ms. Janet Guidry, testified that if the petition had contained a time and date, it would have been recorded as filed at that time and date. However, since the fax did not contain a time or date, Ms. Guidry could not verify whether the petition had been faxed on the seventeenth or the eighteenth. The trial court found that the petition was indeed filed by facsimile on March 17, 1997, at "ten o'clock or somewhere around that time, which was past the filing hours of the clerk's office," and that this would not act to interrupt prescription.
We disagree to some extent with this interpretation of La.R.S. 13:850(A), because the statute states that the filing shall be deemed complete at the time the facsimile is received and a receipt of transmission is issued by the clerk of court. The statute does not require that the transmission be received during the regular office hours of the clerk's office. Prescription did not act to extinguish Ms. Antoine's claim until midnight of March 17, 1997. La.Civ.Code arts. 3456, 3492; Ruello-Nicaud v. Allstate Insurance Co., 98-0610 (La.App. 4 Cir. 4/15/98); 714 So.2d 55, writ denied, 98-1308 (La.6/26/98); 719 So.2d 1062. Therefore, the fax transmission could have interrupted prescription if all of the other requirements of La.R.S. 13:850 had been followed by the plaintiff. This is consistent with the principle that prescriptive statutes are to be strictly construed against prescription and in favor of the obligation sought to be extinguished. Ruello-Nicaud, 714 So.2d 55. The record *1260 does not contain evidence of a transmission receipt issued by the clerk of court. Nevertheless, the jurisprudence supports the position that failure to issue a transmission receipt on the date of filing does not affect the date of filing. Id. Issuance of a transmission receipt will always be after the transmission, albeit usually only a short time after the fax transmission itself. Therefore, La.R.S. 13:850(A) cannot mean literally that the fax filing is complete on the happening of both receipt by the clerk of the transmission and the clerk's verification of this receipt by his transmission of a receipt to the sender. The statute does not require that the receipt of the transmission itself be transmitted as a mandatory duty within a certain time, and the provisions of Subsection C apply only when a party fails to comply with the statutory requirements. The purpose of the statute is carried out by looking to the fax filing as complete for prescription purposes upon receipt of the transmission by the clerk's office, while the filing of a receipt by the clerk of court serves only as an acknowledgment and proof of the time of the fax filing.
Here, the fact is that the clerk's office received Ms. Antoine's petition by fax on March 17, 1997, at around 10:00 p.m. The absence of a transmission receipt by the clerk's office to Ms. Antoine does not change this fact. Therefore, Ms. Antoine's filing by fax on March 17, 1997, could have interrupted prescription on her cause of action had the remaining mandatory statutory requirements for fax filings been met.
However, like the trial judge, we find that Ms. Antoine failed to meet the mandatory requirements of La.R.S. 13:850 following the fax filing. Louisiana Revised Statute 13:850(B)(3) requires that a transmission fee of $5.00 be forwarded to the clerk of court within five days after the fax of the petition. At the hearing on the exception, Ms. Guidry, deputy clerk, stated that the $5.00 transmission fee is marked as paid on all faxes on the date that the fax is received. However, she explained that the fee is actually collected later, when the original hard copy is presented within the five-day period provided by La.R.S. 13:850(B). In the instant case, the $5.00 transmission fee was marked as paid on March 18, 1997, the day the fax transmission was recorded as received by the clerk's office.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
734 So. 2d 1257, 98 La.App. 3 Cir. 1736, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 1269, 1999 WL 274296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antoine-v-mcdonalds-restaurant-lactapp-1999.