Bayou Estates Development, Inc. v. Burton

175 So. 3d 1152, 15 La.App. 3 Cir. 348, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1990, 2015 WL 5834054
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 2015
DocketNo. 15-348
StatusPublished

This text of 175 So. 3d 1152 (Bayou Estates Development, Inc. v. Burton) 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
Bayou Estates Development, Inc. v. Burton, 175 So. 3d 1152, 15 La.App. 3 Cir. 348, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1990, 2015 WL 5834054 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

GENOVESE, Judge.

hln this matter arising from a lease of immovable property, Defendants/Lessees, Clarence Burton, Sr.1 and Burton Trucking Service,- Inc., appeal the trial court’s judgment in favor of Plaintiff/Lessor, Bayou Estates Development, Inc., in the amount of $59,116.43 add. .the award of ownership of a 2001 Tank/Vacuum Trailer. For the reasons that follow,, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff, Bayou Estates Development, Inc. (Bayou), instituted this litigation by filing a Petition for Damages, Past Due Rent, and for Writ of Sequestration, naming Clarence Burton and Burton Trucking Service, Inc. (Burton Trucking) as Defendants. Bayou, as lessor of certain immovable property located in St. Martin Parish, sought a judgment against Mr. Burton and Burton. Trucking, lessees, for past due rent, damage to the property, legal interest and costs, and for recognition of its [1154]*1154writ of sequestration relative to a 2001 Tank/Vacuum Trailer. Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking reconvened against Bayou and Larry Doiron, Sr., individually and as the owner/principal in Bayou, asserting therein an illegal seizure of property and requesting that the trial court vacate the order of sequestration and award damages and attorney fees.

Following a trial on the merits, The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Bayou against Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking for $59,116.43, plus interest and costs, and granted the writ of sequestration and awarded ownership of the 2001 Tank/Vacuum Trailer to Bayou. On the reconven-tional demand, the trial court [gheld that Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking failed in their burden of proving entitlement to the relief sought, and their claims were dismissed.

ISSUES ON APPEAL2

Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking present the following Issues on Appeal for our review:

1. Did the 16th Judicial District Court err in not conducting an evidentiary hearing to determine whether or not Appellant’s (business) vaccum [sic] truck was illegally seized by [Bayou]?
2. Does the record support the conclusion that Burton Trucking Company and/or Clarence Burton owed rental payments to [Bayou] beyond April 2008?
3. Does the record support the conclusion that Burton Trucking Company and/or Clarence Burton owed renal [sic] payments in the amount of $510[.00]?
4. Did the District Court Judgment improperly “grandfather” Appellant’s work vaccum [sic] truck into a writ of sequestration in that Appellant’s truck was taken and seized without judicial authority?
5. District Court Judge erred in admitting financial records to support past due verbal rental payments on behalf of [Bayou].
6. Judgment null and void awarding [Bayou] back rent and money for property damage, no record of “Resolution” authorizing challenged law suit, no record of contractual obligation to [Bayou] from Clarence Burton, Sr. and/or Burton Trucking Company. .
7. District Court committed reversible error in finding that a contract existed, thereafter, that[] pursuant to that contract Appellant is liable for property damage.
8. District Court committed reversible error where the court sustained a claim for property damage where no clear contract | ¡¡established, [n]o theory of when the loss began or the extent of loss.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Although the Issues on Appeal do not all correspond to the law and argument presented in the pro se brief, Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking argue to this court as follows:

Appellants^] appeal centers on whether or not Burton Trucking Company and/or Clarence Burton owed a continued [sic] legal obligation for an alleged verbal contract for rental property beyond the [1155]*1155period ending sometime in 2008, and further, whether or not the record supports a rental and damage award for the amount adjudged by the district court in the amount of $59,116.43[.] [Additionally, whether the district court erred in not conducting an evidentiary- hearing to determine [the], legality of the seizure of Appellant’s work vacuum truck by [Bayou] without a court order or authority to seize Appelant’s [sic] truck.

At the outset, we note that in Issue on Appeal number six, Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking assert that the judgment rendered by the district court is “null and void” since the record does not contain a “ ‘Resolution’ authorizing [the] challenged [lawsuit,]” for the recovery of unpaid rent and property damage.3 On this purported error, Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking argue that “there is nothing in the record of the [lawsuit] nor trial which supports [the] authority of [Bayou] to bring [the lawsuit]” against them, citing in support of their contention La.R.S. 12:1-128, the Business Corporation Act. We find that the cited authority is wholly irrelevant to the issue raised herein and, consequently, without merit.

RP AST DUE RENT

In 1998, Bayou, through its President, Larry Doiron, Sr., entered into a verbal contract with Mr. Burton, individually and on behalf of Burton Trucking, for the lease of property located in Morgan City, Louisiana, which was owned by Bayou. Pursuant to the' agreement, Mr. Burton made monthly rental payments to Bayou until April 2008. In its original demand filed October 2009, Bayou sought back due rent allegedly owed by Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking.

For the reasons identified in Issues on Appeal numbers two, three, and five, Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking contest the amount and duration of the past due rent award. Generally, they argue that “there was only a verbal agreement that money in the amount of (at most) $275[.00] at most $310[.00] would be paid for rental of [the] old building that [Mr. Doiron] owned.”4 Further, they contend that any rental obligations ceased “sometime in 2008” when they vacated the premises. Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking also contend that Mr. Doiron subsequently permitted two other individuals to do business on the property, and it is they who are responsible for any unpaid rent after 2008.

The evidence establishes a verbal lease agreement5 between Mr. Doiron, on behalf of Bayou, and Mr. Burton, individually and on behalf of Burton Trucking, beginning in 1998. Originally, the monthly rental was $275.00 per month. It was later increased to $385.00, and subsequently to $510.00 per month. According to Mr. Burton’s own testimony, he abandoned the premises in May or June 2008, and Rhe did not make any rental payments thereafter. Although Mr. Burton testified that after he vacated the premises, two other individuals were to assume the lease, Bayou had no notice of [1156]*1156this alleged agreement, and it did not consent to it.' The evidence established that the last rental payment received by Bayou was a payment made April 19, 2008, hi the amount of $1,070.00, which was payment for February and March 2008.

We note that Mr. Burton and Burton Trucking argue that in;reaching its determination on the amount of past due rent owed, the trial court “erred in admitting financial records to support past due verbal rental payments[.]” The purported error of the trial court is unclear; however, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 3d 1152, 15 La.App. 3 Cir. 348, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1990, 2015 WL 5834054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayou-estates-development-inc-v-burton-lactapp-2015.