Brad Joseph Daigle v. Integra Insurance Services, L.L.C. and Bobby W. Adams, Jr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 21, 2024
Docket2024CA0026, 2024CA0027
StatusUnknown

This text of Brad Joseph Daigle v. Integra Insurance Services, L.L.C. and Bobby W. Adams, Jr. (Brad Joseph Daigle v. Integra Insurance Services, L.L.C. and Bobby W. Adams, Jr.) 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
Brad Joseph Daigle v. Integra Insurance Services, L.L.C. and Bobby W. Adams, Jr., (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL FIRST CIRCUIT

2024 CA 0026 BRAD JOSEPH DAIGLE VERSUS

INTEGRA INSURANCE SERVICES, LLC, AND BOBBY W. ADAMS, JR.

( ~CONSOLIDATED WITH~ \ 7 yx 2024 CA 0027

INTEGRA INSURANCE SERVICES, LLC, PREFERRED AGENCY NETWORK, LLC, AND BOBBY W. ADAMS, JR., INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF INTEGRA INSURANCE SERVICES, LLC AND PREFERRED AGENCY NETWORK, LLC

VERSUS

DEREK BABCOCK AUG 2 1 2024

Judgment Rendered:

%* oe Ok Ok

Appealed from the 19th Judicial District Court Parish of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana Nos. 651959 c/w 652022

The Honorable Ronald R. Johnson, Judge Presiding

kK KK Stephen C. Carleton Attorneys for Appellant, Baton Rouge, Louisiana Integra Insurance Services, LLC

and

Michael R. D. Adams Monica G. Moton Baton Rouge, Louisiana Shelton Dennis Blunt Attorneys for Appellees, A. Paul LeBlanc, Jr. Louisiana Health Service & Kevin W. Walsh Indemnity Company d/b/a Blue Monica M. Vela-Vick Cross and BlueShield of Louisiana, Michael B. Victorian Brian Keller, Greg Cross, Greg Baton Rouge, Louisiana Hanley, and Dan Wagner

and Richard A. Sherburne, Jr. Douglas M. Chapoton Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Ah eek RS Lvehs

BEFORE: WELCH, WOLFE, AND STROMBERG, JJ. Cores Without neesens

~ WOLFE, J.

This is an appeal of a judgment that sustained exceptions and dismissed claims

asserted in an amended petition. We affirm. FACTS!

These suits, which were filed in 2016 and consolidated in 2017, arose from the failed business relationship between individuals and entities involved in selling insurance policies. One contested issue involved the rights to commissions from Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) for the sale of private health insurance policies. BCBS was not initially a party to the litigation, but was appointed as the keeper of funds disputed as commissions, which were seized pursuant to a writ of sequestration. On November 25, 2019, the trial court signed a stipulated judgment that ordered disbursement of the seized funds and terminated BCBS’s appointment.

Thereafter, in 2020, Integra Insurance Services, LLC (“Integra”) and other plaintiffs were granted leave of court and filed a third amended and supplemental petition, which added as defendants BCBS and several individuals identified as BCBS employees, including Brian Keller, Greg Cross, Greg Hanly, and Dan Wagner (collectively, “the BCBS defendants”).? In response to the third amended petition, the BCBS defendants filed exceptions of vagueness or ambiguity of the petition, nonconformity of the petition, and no cause of action. On September 30, 2021, the trial court held a hearing on the exceptions filed by the BCBS defendants and those filed by some of the other forty-two defendants named in the third amended petition.

At its conclusion, the trial court sustained the various defendants’ exceptions of

' The record before us was designated by the appellant pursuant to La. Code Civ. P. art. 2128;

therefore, our overview of the facts and procedural history is based on only limited portions of the lower court record.

* The other plaintiffs—Preferred Agency Network, LLC, Bobby W. Adams, Jr, and John Howard-—-were also named in the judgment at issue sub judice and were included in the order granting this appeal. However, the appellant brief was filed on behalf of Integra alone, representing that the other plaintiffs had decided not to purse this appeal. Thus, we refer to the claims and arguments relevant to this appeal as having been made by Integra, without reference to the other plaintiffs. vagueness or ambiguity of the petition, and allowed Integra the opportunity to amend its petition to remove the grounds of the objections to the civil conspiracy and defamation claims. The trial court deferred ruling on the exception of no cause of action until it decided pending motions for summary judgment on issues of insurance coverage.

Integra then filed a fourth amended and supplemental petition, which asserted claims against the BCBS defendants for breach of contract, negligence, and interference with a contractual relationship. The BCBS defendants filed a motion to dismiss, or alternatively strike the fourth amended petition, arguing that the fourth amended petition was untimely filed and failed to cure the deficiencies that were the basis of the exceptions previously sustained. After a hearing, the trial court signed a judgment on May 13, 2022, which denied the motion to dismiss, or alternatively strike the fourth amended petition, but also dismissed Integra’s conspiracy and defamation claims against the BCBS defendants.

The BCBS defendants filed exceptions to the fourth amended petition, including exceptions of no right of action, no cause of action, vagueness or ambiguity of the petition, and nonconformity of the petition. In addition to arguing the merits of the exceptions, the BCBS defendants again argued that the fourth amended petition was untimely filed. They further argued that instead of curing the deficiencies previously identified, Integra’s fourth amended petition asserted entirely new claims based on an entirely new set of facts, which exceeded the scope of the amendment allowed by the trial court.

The trial court held a hearing on the exceptions, during which the procedural history of the case was discussed. Counsel for Integra protested the BCBS

defendants raising the same issues that formed the basis of their motion to dismiss

3 Other rulings contained in the judgment are not relevant to this appeal. or strike, contending that the trial court had allowed the filing of the fourth amended petition. In response, the trial court observed that the filing was allowed “to the extent that you [were] to correct the deficiencies[,] not to assert new claims or allegations.” Counsel for Integra responded, “Correct.” The trial court then pointed out that Integra did not seek leave of court to assert new claims. Counsel for Integra then argued that the fourth amended petition cured the defects previously identified, contending “there were no limitations on how that cure should be presented to the Court.”

At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court took the matter under advisement, indicating it would consider whether the fourth amended petition complied with its order allowing the amendment. The trial court additionally ordered the filing of post-hearing memoranda.

On February 13, 2023, the trial court signed a judgment that sustained the exceptions and dismissed Integra’s claims against the BCBS defendants asserted in the fourth amended petition. This appeal followed.

DISCUSSION

Integra contends that the trial court erred in dismissing its claims against the BCBS defendants asserted in the fourth amended petition because the petition clearly articulated claims for breach of contract, negligence, and interference with a contractual relationship, which it did not need court permission to file. Neither the trial court’s ruling that sustained the exceptions as to the third amended petition nor the dismissal of the conspiracy and defamation claims asserted against the BCBS

defendants in the fourth amended petition are at issue herein. Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 933(B) addresses the effect of sustaining a dilatory exception, such as an exception of vagueness or ambiguity of the petition,’ providing:

When the grounds of the ... objection[] pleaded in the dilatory

exception may be removed by amendment of the petition or other action

by plaintiff, the judgment sustaining the exception shall order plaintiff

to remove them within the delay allowed by the court; and the action,

claim, demand, issue or theory subject to the exception shall be

dismissed only for a noncompliance with this order.

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Related

Malin v. Andrus Homes, Inc.
610 So. 2d 223 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1992)
McCoy v. Stalder
770 So. 2d 447 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2000)

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Brad Joseph Daigle v. Integra Insurance Services, L.L.C. and Bobby W. Adams, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brad-joseph-daigle-v-integra-insurance-services-llc-and-bobby-w-lactapp-2024.