CEASOR v. State

30 So. 3d 1184, 2010 WL 1529580
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 26, 2010
Docket2009 CA 1584
StatusPublished

This text of 30 So. 3d 1184 (CEASOR v. State) 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
CEASOR v. State, 30 So. 3d 1184, 2010 WL 1529580 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

GERALD CEASOR,
v.
STATE OF LOUISIANA, ET AL.

No. 2009 CA 1584.

Court of Appeals of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 26, 2010.
Not Designated for Publication

DORWAN G. VIZZIER, Alexandria, LA, Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant Gerald Ceasor.

MICHAEL A. PATTERSON, SEBASTIAN C. ASHTON, Baton Rouge, LA, Attorneys for Defendant-Appellee State of Louisiana, et al.

Before: WHIPPLE, HUGHES, and WELCH, JJ.

WELCH, J.

Plaintiff, Gerald Ceasor, appeals a judgment granting a peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription filed by defendant, State of Louisiana through the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance. We reverse, overrule the peremptory exception, and remand.[1]

BACKGROUND

Some of the facts forming the basis of the prescription objection urged by the State were stipulated to by the parties and can also be gleaned from a prior decision from this court involving the same parties, Ceasor v. State of Louisiana, 99-0324 (La. App. 1st Cir. 3/31/00)(unpublished), writ denied, XXXX-XXXX (La. 6/16/00), 765 So.2d 337. (See R72-75). On or about July 21, 1983, Mr. Ceasor purchased a single premium annuity policy from Mid America Assurance Company of Louisiana (Mid America) for $100,000.00. The parties stipulated that the policy issued to Mr. Ceasor is a registered policy under the terms of La. R.S. 22:1029 and includes Certificate of Deposit No. 101 signed by then Commissioner of Insurance, Sherman Bernard. In Certificate of Deposit No. 101, the Insurance Commissioner certified that Mid America invested and maintained stipulated securities required by Louisiana law and that Mid America had on deposit with the Commissioner of Insurance such stipulated securities equal in amount to the net cash value of all outstanding policies as shown in its last annual statement.

Pursuant to the terms of the policy, Mid America was to pay Mr. Ceasor monthly annuity payments of $1,000.00 for 240 months. Payments were made by Mid America to Mr. Ceasor based on the annuity policy through February 9, 1988. On April 20, 1988, by order of the 19th Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Mid America was placed into liquidation and the Commissioner of Insurance was appointed as Liquidator. The liquidation order remained in effect at least through the date of the stipulation, April 1, 1996.

On August 4, 1988, the trial court granted the request to liquidate Mid America. A notice of the liquidation was issued to all policyholders, including Mr. Ceasor, on August 31, 1988. Therein, the policyholders were advised that the Commissioner of Insurance had been directed to take possession and control of Mid America's assets and to determine all claims against Mid America. The notice further set forth a deadline of February 3, 1989, for filing claims against Mid America.

On November 2, 1988, Mr. Ceasor timely asserted a claim against Mid America in the liquidation proceeding. On August 17, 1990, Mr. Ceasor was notified that his "allowable benefits" in the liquidation proceeding was $101,451.64, reflecting the amount the Liquidator believed would have been payable by Mid America if the company had not been placed in liquidation and the amount the Liquidator would recommend that the court approve as an allowed claim to participate pro-rata with other claimants of the same priority.

During the course of the liquidation proceedings, Mr. Ceasor sought information as to when he could expect to receive payment. In February of 1992, Mr. Ceasor sought information in the liquidation proceeding as to whether the Liquidator had recovered funds being held by the State on his registered policy and what steps he should take to recover those funds; alternatively, Mr. Ceasor inquired as to what steps the Liquidator had taken to recover those funds and what was the State's position regarding the return of those funds to him.

On September 14, 1992, Mr. Ceasor filed this lawsuit against the State of Louisiana and the State of Louisiana through the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance (collectively referred to as the "State"), asserting that based on the Certificate of Deposit issued in connection with his annuity, the State had on deposit stipulated securities equal to the amount of net cash value of his policy, which had been held in trust for the deferred payments due under the provisions of the annuity policy, and sought to recover the remaining sums due under the policy or the net cash value of the policy from the State. Alternatively, Mr. Ceasor alleged, if Mid America did not have the statutorily required deposit necessary to fund his annuity as indicated in Certificate of Deposit No. 101, the failure of the Commissioner of Insurance to enforce the provisions of La. R.S. 22:1029[2] relative to registered policies constituted fault and negligence under La. C.C. art. 2315, and that he relied, to his detriment, upon the assertions and representations of the State in purchasing the annuity policy. In a supplemental petition, Mr. Ceasor asserted an additional contract cause of action against the State.

Mr. Ceasor's lawsuit was consolidated with the three similar cases pending in the 19th Judicial District Court. The State filed a peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription as to all of the lawsuits, asserting they were prescribed on their face because the annuity contracts purchased by all of the plaintiffs ceased to perform no later than 1988 and all of the lawsuits were filed more than a year beyond the date on which the annuity contracts ceased to perform. The State also filed a motion for summary judgment against some of the plaintiffs, including Mr. Ceasor, insisting that it had no liability as a matter of law in contract. The State further argued that because the cause of action asserted by Mr. Ceasor and the other annuitants was delictual in nature and governed by a liberative prescription of one year, the annuitants' claims, filed more than one year after the date the annuity contracts ceased to perform, had prescribed.

The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment, dismissing Mr. Ceasor's contract and tort claims against the State. Mr. Ceasor appealed that ruling to this court, arguing that the doctrine of contra non valentem suspended the running of prescription on his tort claim against the State. Before this court, on the prescription issue, the State argued that Mr. Ceasor knew he had a cause of action against the State after Mid America stopped making payments on the annuity policy in February of 1988. Mr. Ceasor claimed he did not know he would not be paid in full on his claim until he received the State's June 24, 1994 responses to his discovery requests, in which the State denied having the stipulated securities on deposit. Ceasor, XXXX-XXXX, at p. 9. This court reversed the summary judgment, concluding that there was a factual dispute on the issue of when Mr. Ceasor's delictual cause of action against the State was known or reasonably knowable so as to trigger the running of the one-year prescriptive period. Id.

Following the remand by this court, the State filed another peremptory exception of prescription, urging that because the annuity ceased to perform in early 1988, a reasonable person would have, at that time, made an inquiry into alternative sources of reimbursement. This information, the State contended, was sufficient to start the running of prescription. Mr. Ceasor claimed he did not have knowledge that the State did not perform as required by the registered policy law until after the instant lawsuit had been filed in September of 1992.

At the outset of the hearing on the exception of prescription, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
30 So. 3d 1184, 2010 WL 1529580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ceasor-v-state-lactapp-2010.