Brown v. Avoyelles Parish School Bd.

861 So. 2d 773, 2003 WL 22909237
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 2003
Docket03-796
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 861 So. 2d 773 (Brown v. Avoyelles Parish School Bd.) 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
Brown v. Avoyelles Parish School Bd., 861 So. 2d 773, 2003 WL 22909237 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

861 So.2d 773 (2003)

Mary L. BROWN, et al.
v.
AVOYELLES PARISH SCHOOL BOARD.

No. 03-796.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

December 10, 2003.

J. Isaac Funderburk, Funderburk & Herpin, Abbeville, LA, for Plaintiffs/Appellants: *774 Mary L. Brown, Walter M. Brown, Philip J. Coco, Samuel Curtis Conner, Adam Desselle, Estate of Irvin Dubroc, Lynn Fogleman, Willis Leo Fuqua, Billy R. Hendrix, Roosevelt Joshua, Linus M. Juneau, Burnell F. Lemoine, Ronald J. Lemoine, Lamar R. Marcotte, Jr., and George G. Voinche.

James T. Lee, Assistant District Attorney, Bunkie, LA for Defendant/Appellee: Avoyelles Parish School Board.

Court composed of BILLIE COLOMBARO WOODARD, GLENN B. GREMILLION, and ELIZABETH A. PICKETT, Judges.

WOODARD, Judge.

Former employees of the Avoyelles Parish School Board appeal the trial court's grant of an exception of prescription, dismissing their suit. We affirm.

* * *

Fifteen former employees of the Avoyelles Parish School Board (Board) filed an action individually and on behalf of other former employees similarly situated against the Board. The Board filed an exception of prescription before class certification.

The Plaintiffs claim entitlement to back wages and penalty wages. Specifically, they maintain that they are entitled to be compensated for accrued "annual leave" that they had not taken by the time they retired.

The trial court granted the Board's exception of prescription and dismissed the Plaintiffs' claims. They appeal this ruling.

* * *

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Where the parties introduce evidence to support or controvert an exception, the trial court's factual determinations based on such evidence are subject to the manifest error standard of review.[1] However, if the trial court made a legal error which interdicted the fact-finding process, we conduct an independent review of the record.[2]

We find that the trial court made a legal error which not only interdicted the fact-finding process but eliminated it, altogether. It determined that Wyatt v. Avoyelles Parish School Board[3] precluded its consideration of the doctrine of contra non valentum in the instant case. Specifically, it stated:

I disagree with the ruling of The Supreme Court in the Marcotte, Wyatt and Seiss [consolidated] cases, as to the issues that were reversed....
However it is the higher court, the court of last opinion, and I must follow their ruling.
ALSO, I must follow their ruling on the PRESCRIPTION ISSUE. The current state of the law, as announced by The Supreme Court, says it's a three (3) year date, which becomes exigible or due upon the date of retirement, period.

We agree that the facts in Wyatt were strikingly similar to the facts in the case at bar. However, the issues were not; therefore, Wyatt does not govern. In Wyatt, the plaintiffs, also, were former employees of Avoyelles Parish School Board. They, too, claimed back wages for unused and uncompensated "annual leave" *775 at the time of their retirements. The supreme court found that "the annual leave earned during the last year of employment was exigible or due upon the date of each plaintiff's retirement."[4]

Notwithstanding, the plaintiffs in Wyatt filed their suit within three years of their retirements. Thus, the supreme court did not have to address whether contra non valentum applied. The trial court erred in finding that Wyatt mandated that it grant the exception. Accordingly, we decide the prescription issue de novo.

PRESCRIPTIVE PERIOD

Normally, the party pleading the exception of prescription bears the burden of proving it.[5] However, when a claim is prescribed on its face, the burden shifts to the relator to show that the exception should not be maintained.[6]

Louisiana Civil Code Article 3494 provides a three-year prescriptive period for wages claims. The Plaintiffs retired between June 30, 1982 and June 30, 1995. Thus, the wages were due on the dates of their retirements, respectively.[7] They filed this claim on December 9, 2000, more than three years after their claimed wages became due. Accordingly, the Plaintiffs' claims are prescribed on the face of their petition, shifting the burden to them to show otherwise.[8]

At the trial on the exception, Plaintiffs' counsel attempted to introduce some of the Plaintiffs' affidavits in which each stated that s/he did not know s/he might have a claim against the board until April of 1998. The trial court admitted this evidence subject to the Board's counsel's objection. It questioned the admissibility of these affidavits through which the Plaintiffs sought to enter new evidence, since in their original petition, Plaintiffs did not make any assertions regarding the suspension of prescription or their inability to bring their claims within the prescriptive period. We need not determine the correctness of this admission, as we find below, that the application of contra non valentum cannot save Plaintiffs' claims from prescription. Thus, even with the benefit of this evidence, Plaintiffs did not adequately rebut the presumption that their claims had prescribed.

CONTRA NON VALENTUM

Contra non valentem agere nulla currit praescripto is a suspensive theory, meaning "prescription does not run against a party unable to act."[9] There are four general instances in which we apply the doctrine:

(1) when there is a legal cause that prevented courts or their officers from taking cognizance of or acting on the plaintiff's action;
(2) when there is a condition coupled with the contract or connected with the proceeding that prevent the creditor from suing or acting;
(3) when the debtor himself did some act that effectually prevented the creditor from availing himself of his cause of action; and
(4) when the cause of action is not known or reasonably knowable by the *776 plaintiff, even though his ignorance is not induced by the defendant.[10]

Plaintiffs urge that this last instance applies to them. Under this theory, prescription does not begin to run until a plaintiff has a reasonable basis to pursue a claim against a specific defendant.[11] Even though the Plaintiffs were aware that they had accrued annual leave, which they had yet to take when they retired, they assert that they had no reason to question the lawfulness of the Board's policy not to compensate them for such unused annual leave. However, in April of 1998, Forethought Consulting, Inc., issued a "policy alert," apprizing employers of a 1997 amendment to La.R.S. 23:631. This statute provides, in pertinent part:

A(1)(b) Upon the resignation of any laborer or other employee of any kind whatever, it shall be the duty of the person employing such laborer or other employee to pay the amount then due under the terms of employment, whether the employment is by the hour, day, week, or month, on or before the next regular payday or no later than fifteen days following the date of resignation, whichever occurs first.

(Emphasis added.)

The 1997 amendment added section (D) which states:

D(1) For purposes of this Section, vacation pay will be considered an amount then due

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Bluebook (online)
861 So. 2d 773, 2003 WL 22909237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-avoyelles-parish-school-bd-lactapp-2003.