Baton Rouge Credit, LLC v. Jessica Gauthier and Rodney Lynn LeFeaux

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 2021
Docket2019CA1660
StatusUnknown

This text of Baton Rouge Credit, LLC v. Jessica Gauthier and Rodney Lynn LeFeaux (Baton Rouge Credit, LLC v. Jessica Gauthier and Rodney Lynn LeFeaux) 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
Baton Rouge Credit, LLC v. Jessica Gauthier and Rodney Lynn LeFeaux, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

NUMBER 2019 CA 1660

BATON ROUGE CREDIT, LLC

VERSUS

JESSICA GAUTHIER AND RODNEY LYNN LEFEAUX

MAR 1 0 2021 Judgment Rendered:

Appealed from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana Docket Number C680461

Honorable Wilson E. Fields, Judge Presiding

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Richard D. Bankston Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee, Baton Rouge, LA Baton Rouge Credit, LLC

Daniel J. McGlynn Counsel for Defendant/Appellant, Allison J. Sabine, Jr. Greenworks, LLC Baton Rouge, LA

Kelly E. Balfour Baton Rouge, LA

BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C.J., HOLDRIDGE, AND PENZATO, JJ. WHIPPLE, C.J.

This matter is before us on appeal by Greenworks, LLC, from a judgment of

the district court affirming a city court judgment pro confesso granted in favor of

plaintiff, Baton Rouge Credit, LLC. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the

judgments of the district court and city court and remand with instructions.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Defendants, Rodney Lynn Lefeaux and his girlfriend, Jessica Gauthier, the

debtors in this matter, purportedly defaulted on a promissory note executed by

them in favor of Baton Rouge Credit, LLC (" Baton Rouge Credit"), to secure the

purchase of a vehicle for Gauthier.' Baton Rouge Credit, as a holder in due course

of the promissory note, filed suit in the City Court of Baton Rouge against

Gauthier and Lefeaux, seeking judgment in the amount of $5, 012.90 together with

interest, costs, and attorney' s fees. Thereafter, judgment was rendered against

Lefeaux as prayed for.'

Baton Rouge Credit subsequently filed a petition for garnishment against

Greenworks, LLC (" Greenworks"), Lefeaux' s employer,3 through its registered

agent for service of process, Hakan Sumer, requesting that Greenworks be made a

garnishee and answer the accompanying interrogatories. On November 8, 2017,

the city court signed an order, citing Greenworks as garnishee and ordering

Greenworks to answer the annexed interrogatories within fifteen days from service

of process. After several months passed, Baton Rouge Credit filed a motion for

judgment pro confesso on April 18, 201.8, contending that Greenworks was served

with the garnishment interrogatories on November 28, 2017, and failed to file

Gauthier executed the note as the " Borrower," and Lefeaux signed as " Co -Borrower."

Following the entry of a judgment against Lefeaux, Baton Rouge Credit also obtained a judgment against Gauthier in the amount: of $5, 012. 90 with interest, costs, and attorney' s fees. However, the only garnishment action at issue in this appeal relates to Lefeaux.

Lefeaux was employed as a mechanic for Hi -Tech Car Care, which was owned by Greenworks.

2 proper answers. Baton Rouge Credit thus sought to enforce the LSA-C. C. P. art.

2413 presumption that Greenworks' failure to answer served as prima facie proof

that it is indebted to the judgment debtor, Lefeaux, to the extent of the amount of

the judgment rendered against Lefeaux, plus interest, and costs.

In response, Greenworks filed a memorandum in opposition to the motion,

challenging service of the garnishment proceedings as improper. Greenworks also

contended that the interrogatories were properly answered by Greenworks'

certified public accountant (" CPA"), that Lefeaux was employed by Greenworks

from December 1, 2017 to April 20, 2018, and that Lefeaux was indebted to

Greenworks for payment advances factored into his salary over the course of his

employment. Greenworks further averred that these payment advances constituted

a loan by Lefeaux, which served to reduce or offset Baton Rouge Credit' s claim for 4 garnishment pursuant to LSA-R.S. 13: 3925.

The motion was set for hearing on November 14, 2018. At the conclusion of

the hearing, the city court granted Baton Rouge Credit' s motion for judgment pro

confesso as prayed for and signed a judgment in favor of Baton Rouge Credit and

against Greenworks, for the full sum of $5, 012. 90, with interest from the date of

judicial demand, February 10, 2017, at the rate of 29. 89% per year until April 10,

2018, and 18% thereafter until paid in full, with 25% of the aggregate of principal

4Louisiana Revised Statute 13: 3925 sets forth the provisions governing the answering of garnishment interrogatories when an employer pleads that his employee is indebted to him for amounts due and owing. In particular, the statute requires that:

T] he employer shall make a full and complete disclosure of the status of such account to the creditor, in writing by certified mail, showing the time that the debt was incurred, the exact amount of the debt, the credits applied to the debt, the manner in which the debt is being liquidated as of the time of the service of the interrogatories, and all other pertinent facts.

LSA-R.S. 13: 3925( A).

3 and interest due as attorney' s fees, plus costs, and an additional attorney' s fee of

250.00 for the motion, pursuant to LSA-C. C. P. art. 2413( C).'

Greenworks then filed a suspensive appeal of the city court judgment to the

Nineteenth Judicial District Court, pursuant to LSA-C. C. P. art. 5001( B). On

September 18, 2019, the district court signed a judgment sustaining the city court

judgment pro confesso in favor of Baton Rouge Credit and against Greenworks.

Greenworks then filed the instant suspensive appeal of the judgment of the district

court.

DISCUSSION

Motion to Dismiss Appeal

At the outset, we note that Baton Rouge Credit filed a motion to dismiss the

instant appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the basis that LSA-C. C. P.

art. 5001( B) confers appellate jurisdiction over the Baton Rouge City Court with

the Nineteenth Judicial District Court. Baton Rouge Credit contends that where

this court only has supervisory jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to LSA -Const.

art. V, § 10( A), and Greenworks did not file an application for supervisory writs,

this appeal should be dismissed.

Greenworks opposed the motion, contending that since its motion for

suspensive appeal was filed within the thirty -day delay for filing an application for

supervisory writs, this appeal should be converted to a writ application and the

September 18, 2019 judgment should be reviewed under this court' s supervisory

jurisdiction.' We agree.

Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 5001( B) provides that an appeal

from a judgment " rendered by a city court located in the Nineteenth Judicial

Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 2413( C) provides that regardless of the decision on the contradictory motion, the court shall render judgment against the garnishee for the costs and a reasonable attorney fee for the motion.

Greenworks' motion for suspensive appeal was filed on September 27, 2019.

2 District shall be taken to the district court of the parish in which the court of

original jurisdiction is located." By mandating that such appeals be filed in the

Nineteenth Judicial District Court, the legislature granted appellate jurisdiction

over the specified city court judgments to the district court and, likewise, divested

this court of appellate jurisdiction. See LSA -Const. art. V, § 16( B); Miazza v.

City of Mandeville, 2010- 0304 ( La.

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Baton Rouge Credit, LLC v. Jessica Gauthier and Rodney Lynn LeFeaux, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baton-rouge-credit-llc-v-jessica-gauthier-and-rodney-lynn-lefeaux-lactapp-2021.