City of Gretna v. Morice

167 So. 3d 823, 2014 WL 7499384
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2014
DocketNo. 14-CA-301
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 167 So. 3d 823 (City of Gretna v. Morice) 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
City of Gretna v. Morice, 167 So. 3d 823, 2014 WL 7499384 (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

MARC E. JOHNSON, Judge.

| ;>Plaintiff/Appellant, the City of Gretna (hereinafter referred to as “Gretna”), appeals a judgment concerning the erection of a fence that granted the mandamus relief requested in the reconventional demand of Defendant/Appellee, Mark Mor-ice, filed in the 24th Judicial District Court, Division “P”. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This is the second appeal between the parties on this issue. This case arises from a dispute between Gretna and Mr. Morice over the construction of a residential fence at 175 Willow Drive in Gretna, Louisiana. On October 12, 2010, Mr. Mor-ice submitted an application to Gretna for a building permit to erect a fence. On October 22, 2010, Gretna issued a building permit to Mr. Morice, and he commenced the erection of the fence on October 29, 2010.

| .¡After receiving anonymous complaints regarding the height of the fence, Gretna inspected Mr. Morice’s fence on February 18, 2011, and found it did not comply with the building permit because it was more than six feet in height when measured [825]*825from the lowest point of the immediately adjacent grade. Gretna issued a stop-work order on February 23, 2011. Thereafter, Mr. Morice and Gretna had meetings to discuss the height of the fence without any resolution.

Consequently, Gretna prosecuted Mr. Morice in municipal court, and Mr. Morice was found guilty on April 14, 2011 of violating Gretna City Ordinance § 18-7 (hereinafter referred to as “GCO § 18-7”) and was fined $300.00. Mr. Morice appealed the decision of the municipal court. While the appeal was pending, Gretna removed Mr. Morice’s fence. Gretna placed a lien on Mr. Morice’s property for the costs of the removal of the fence.

After appealing the municipal court’s decision to the 24th Judicial District Court, Mr. Morice was found not guilty of violating GCO § 18-7 on August 24, 2011. On August 25, 2011, Mr. Morice applied for a building permit to reconstruct the fence that was removed by Gretna. The application was neither denied nor approved.

The following facts concerning the procedural history of the case are taken from the first appeal, The City of Gretna v. Morice, 13-85 (La.App. 5 Cir. 10/30/13); 128 So.3d 468, 469-70:

On January 13, 2012, Gretna filed a Petition for Declaratory Judgment, that was allotted to Division “P” of the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court, praying inter alia: (1) that defendant, Mr. Morice, be “duly cited to appear and answer the allegations contained in” the Petition for Declaratory Judgment; (2) that “after due proceedings are had, there be a judgment in favor of [Gretna] declaring that [Gretna] shall issue a construction permit to” Mr. Morice in á manner that is consistent with Gretna Code of Ordinance[ ] § 18-7 as amended in 2011; and (3) that all prior actions taken by Gretna relative to the fence are valid and reasonable and that |4no amounts are owed by Gretna to Mr. Morice in connection to the fence.
On March 30, 2012, Mr. Morice recon-ventionally petitioned for a writ of mandamus ordering Gretna to issue the building permit at the height, manner, and location previously determined by the district court in Division “H” on August 24, 2011, when Mr. Morice was found not guilty of violating pre-amend-ed GCO § 18-7. Mr. Morice argued that a judicial determination existed that his fence did not exceed the height limit pursuant to the pre-amended GCO § 18-7 in effect at the time the fence was constructed. Mr. Morice also filed Peremptory Exceptions of No Right or Cause of Action and Res Judicata. These exceptions were denied in a separate judgment and Gretna was allowed to pursue a declaratory judgment with the exception of declaratory relief that no amounts are owed by the city of Gretna to Mr. Morice in connection with the fence.
On September 21, 2012, the district court issued a judgment granting declaratory relief.

[Emphasis in original].

The September 21, 2012 judgment decreed in Mr. Morice’s favor that GCO § 18-7 was silent as to the methodology that should have been used to ensure that fences were not more than six feet in height, and that any amendment to the Section did not have a retroactive effect. Additionally, the judgment decreed that the restrictive covenants of the Garden Park Estates Homeowner’s Association (hereinafter referred to as “GPEHA”) controlled as to the methodology in erecting a fence in the Garden Park Estates subdivision, and that the side fences erected between the front building line and the rear property line could not exceed six feet in [826]*826height measured from the highest adjacent ground elevation. Gretna appealed that judgment in Morice, supra.

On appeal, Gretna sought to have the declaratory relief in favor of Mr. Morice reviewed. However, this Court found that it lacked the jurisdiction to review the merits of Gretna’s appeal because the judgment in question was not a final, ap-pealable judgment as it resolved Gretna’s claims in its petition but was silent as to Mr. Morice’s claims in his reconventional demand. Consequently, the appeal was dismissed and remanded to the trial court.

Morice at 471.

|sOn remand, the trial court rendered a second judgment on November 19, 2013. The judgment granted Gretna’s petition, ordered that Mr. Morice be permitted to erect a fence in accordance with the methodology set forth in the GPEHA restrictive covenant, and reiterated the findings of the September 21, 2012 judgment. The trial court also granted Mr. Morice’s re-conventional demand for mandamus and ordered Gretna to issue a permit to Mr. Morice to construct a fence in the manner set forth in GPEHA’s restrictive covenant in the size, manner and location as it was prior to the original fence’s removal. Gretna filed a Motion for New Trial, which was denied on January 21, 2014. The instant appeal followed.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

On appeal, Gretna alleges the trial court erred in 1) failing to enforce GCO § 18-7 using the plain and 'general prevailing meaning according to Gretna’s interpretation; 2) determining that GCO § 18-7 is silent as to the methodology for determining fence height; 3) failing to give appropriate weight and deference to the interpretation given the ordinance by the municipality that enacted it; 4) deciding the fence-height restrictions of the GPEHA restrictive covenant should be used instead of the GCO § 18-7, which is more restrictive than the restriction of the restrictive covenant; 5) failing to specify the principles which should apply to the back fence at the Morice property; and 6) ordering Gretna to issue a building permit to Mr. Morice, which allows a private fence to be built on Gretna’s property, thereby excluding city property from public use.

LAW AND ANALYSIS1

Interpretation of Gretna Ordinance, Section 18-7

Gretna alleges the trial court was erroneous in applying GPEHA’s restrictive covenants instead of applying GCO § 18-7.

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Bluebook (online)
167 So. 3d 823, 2014 WL 7499384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-gretna-v-morice-lactapp-2014.