Blake v. Blake

103 So. 3d 683, 2012 WL 5377680
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2012
DocketNos. 2012-CA-0655, 2012-CA-0656
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 So. 3d 683 (Blake v. Blake) 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
Blake v. Blake, 103 So. 3d 683, 2012 WL 5377680 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

MADELEINE M. LANDRIEU, Judge.

| ¾Alicia DiMarco appeals the district court’s dismissal of her lesion claim upon the granting of exceptions of no cause of action and res judicata filed by her former spouse, Michael Blake. Mr. Blake has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the basis that the ruling Ms. DiMarco seeks to appeal is an interlocutory judgment that is not yet appealable. For the reasons that follow, we find that this court lacks jurisdiction to consider the merits of this appeal. We therefore grant Mr. Blake’s motion and dismiss the appeal.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

The parties were married in 2003. In March of 2005, Mr. Blake and Ms. DiMar-co each filed a petition in the Twenty-Fifth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Plaquemines seeking a divorce and a partition of their community. Their separate actions were consolidated in the district court. The divorce was granted in November of 2005. Thereafter, the parties entered into a “Consent Judgment for Partition of Community Property and Settlement of Claims” [“the Consent Judgment”], which was signed by the trial court on June 30, 2006. On October 12, |s2007, Ms. DiMarco filed a “Petition for Lesion” alleging that the Consent Judgment was disproportionately advantageous to Mr. Blake, and praying that it be rescinded. She also prayed for other ancillary relief, including that she be awarded one-half the community property. Specifically, Ms. Di-Marco alleged that Mr. Blake had misrepresented the value of a community asset, a jack-up oil rig, by testifying in his deposition that the rig had a negative value and then selling it for approximately twenty million dollars shortly after the company that owned the rig was partitioned to him under the Consent Judgment.

Mr. Blake raised exceptions of no cause of action and res judicata to Ms. DiMar-co’s petition for lesion. After hearing those exceptions as well as some discovery-related issues, the trial court rendered judgment on August 22, 2008 granting Mr. Blake’s exceptions.1 Ms. DiMarco filed a writ application in this court challenging the trial court’s ruling. This court denied her application on the basis that Ms. Di-Marco had not shown that “our exercise of supervisory jurisdiction [would] likely end this litigation.”2

Subsequent to the granting of Mr. Blake’s exceptions, Ms. DiMarco filed an “Amended Petition for Lesion” and a “Second Amended Petition for Lesion.”3 Then, on April 6, 2010, Ms. DiMarco filed her “Third Amended Petition for Lesion,” in which she alleged that Mr. Blake had [685]*685given deposition testimony intentionally concealing the true nature and value of his interest in certain ^community property, and she prayed that the Consent Judgment be annulled on account of this alleged fraud and/or ill practices.4 In response, Mr. Blake raised an exception of prescription and an exception of no cause of action on grounds of peremption.

Ms. DiMarco’s petition to annul the Consent Judgment and Mr. Blake’s exception of prescription were tried for six days in the district court in February and April of 2011. On October 31, 2011, the district court rendered a judgment which overruled the exception of prescription and annulled the Consent Judgment that had previously partitioned the community between the parties.5 Mr. Blake filed a Motion for New Trial, or alternatively, to have the court rule on his outstanding exception of no cause of action. On November 9, 2011, the trial court overruled Mr. Blake’s exception of no cause of action. On December 29, 2011, Mr. Blake filed a writ application in this court seeking review of the overruling of his exceptions of prescription and no cause of action.6

While that application was pending, Ms. DiMareo, on January 27, 2012, filed a Petition and Order for Appeal of the trial court’s August 22, 2008 ruling that had granted Mr. Blake’s exceptions to her petition for lesion.7 This court | ¡-.denied Mr. Blake’s writ application that had sought review of the overruling of his exceptions as to the October 31, 2011 judgment, and the Louisiana Supreme Court also denied his application for review.8 On June 12, 2012, Mr. Blake filed a Motion to Dismiss this appeal, which motion was referred to the appellate panel. Considering the motion and the opposition to it filed by Ms. DiMareo, we conclude, for the following reasons, that dismissal of the appeal is warranted.

DISCUSSION

Mr. Blake argues that this court lacks jurisdiction to consider Ms. DiMarco’s appeal of the August 22, 2008 judgment because that ruling is an interlocutory judgment that is not yet appealable. He maintains that this court cannot consider an appeal of the 2008 judgment until after the trial court renders a final judgment that fully determines the merits of the case between the two parties. We agree.

La. C.C.P. art. 2083 provides, in pertinent part:

A. A final judgment is appealable in all causes in which appeals are given by [686]*686law, whether rendered after hearing, by default, or by reformation under Article 1814.
⅝ ⅝ ⅜ ⅜ ⅝ #
C. An interlocutory judgment is ap-pealable only when expressly provided by law.

La. C.C.P. art. 1841 defines a final judgment as “[a] judgment that determines the merits in whole or in part” and an interlocutory judgment as “[a] judgment that does not determine the merits but only preliminary matters in the course of action.”

With regard to interlocutory judgments, the Supreme Court has stated:

[¿The general rule undoubtedly is, as stated from time to time by this court, that an interlocutory judgment which does not cause irreparable injury is not appealable. (See also Article 2083 of the Code of Civil Procedure.) But this does not mean that such judgments are never subject to appellate review. It merely means that they are not independently and immediately appealable, and that appellate review thereof must await rendition of an appealable judgment in the cause.... [Wjhen a judgment is rendered in the case which is appealable, the reviewing court can then consider the correctness of the prior interlocutory judgment.

People of Living God v. Chantilly Corp., 251 La. 943, 947-48, 207 So.2d 752, 753 (1968).

It is axiomatic that a judgment which disposes of all the issues between the parties is final and appealable. See Bossier’s Heirs v. Hollingsworth & Jackson, 117 La. 221, 41 So. 553 (1906). The Louisiana Supreme Court described such a judgment thus:

We therefore usually understand by the term ‘final judgment’ that judgment which, disposing of all the issues not previously disposed of by interlocutory judgments, is the last judgment which the court renders.

Id., p. 226, 41 So. at 555. A judgment that addresses the merits of certain issues or claims but does not resolve all the issues between the parties is termed a “partial judgment” or a “partial final judgment.” The appeal of such a judgment is governed by La. C.C.P. art. 1915, which provides:

A.

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103 So. 3d 683, 2012 WL 5377680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-blake-lactapp-2012.