Coleman v. Fisher Lumber Corp.

677 So. 2d 678, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 1335, 1996 WL 348121
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 1996
Docket28446-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 677 So. 2d 678 (Coleman v. Fisher Lumber Corp.) 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
Coleman v. Fisher Lumber Corp., 677 So. 2d 678, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 1335, 1996 WL 348121 (La. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

677 So.2d 678 (1996)

Harry R. COLEMAN, Jr., Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
FISHER LUMBER CORPORATION, et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 28446-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

June 26, 1996.
Writ Denied September 3, 1996.

*679 Coenen & Cruse by William R. Coenen, Jr., Rayville, Samuel T. Singer, Winnsboro, Thomas E. Allen, Monroe, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

McGlinchy, Stafford & Lang by Frank Voelker, Jr., Thomas A. Roberts, Margaret Diamond, New Orleans, Adams & Reese, by J. Forrest Hinton, New Orleans, for Defendants-Appellants, Muirfield/Pitts, et al.

Stephen A. North, W. Craig Henry, Monroe, for Defendants-Appellees, Fisher Lumber Corp., et al.

Before MARVIN, C.J., and NORRIS and WILLIAMS, JJ.

MARVIN, Chief Judge.

The sole issue in this appeal is whether Franklin Parish is the proper venue for a damage action by a Mississippi real estate broker against the buyers and sellers of a 50,000-acre tract of farm- and timberland situated in the northeast Louisiana parishes of Tensas, Concordia, Catahoula and Franklin. The defendants are 13 individuals, partnerships and corporations who are generally aligned in two groups: four seller-defendants, the Fisher group, and nine buyer-defendants, the Muirfield group. Plaintiff Coleman has alleged a breach of contract claim against the Muirfield defendants, and tort claims against some or all defendants in both groups for conspiracy to interfere with contractual relationships, defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

One of the four Fisher defendants, a Michigan domiciliary, was dismissed from the action on an exception of improper venue in a judgment that is now final and is not before us in this appeal. The other three Fisher defendants did not except to venue.

The Muirfield defendants, none of whom are domiciled in Franklin Parish, appeal a judgment denying their exception of improper venue on findings that Franklin Parish is a proper venue for Coleman's claims against them under La.C.C.P. arts. 73, 76.1 and 78, notwithstanding the general venue provision of Art. 42 that the parish of a defendant's domicile is the proper venue.

With respect to one of the Muirfield defendants, Benny Street, a mere employee of those defendants who did not contract with Coleman, venue in Franklin Parish has not been shown to be proper on this record. The allegations against Street are in tort. We reverse as to Street and render judgment sustaining his venue exception. As to the remaining Muirfield defendants who excepted, we affirm the judgment.

LEGAL AND FACTUAL CONTEXT

The C.C.P. articles relied on by the trial court allow the plaintiff to bring

—an action on a contract in the parish where the contract was executed, or in the parish where any work or service was performed or was to be performed under the contract (Art. 76.1);

—an action against the partners of an existing partnership on a partnership obligation in any parish of proper venue as to the partnership (Art. 78); and

—an action against joint or solidary obligors in the parish of any defendant-obligor's domicile (Art. 73).

Coleman also sought to establish venue under Art. 74, which allows an action on an offense or a quasi offense to be brought in *680 the parish where the wrongful conduct occurred, or in the parish where the damages were sustained. The trial court found this article inapplicable, noting that Coleman did not assert or show that any of the alleged tortious conduct occurred or caused damage to him in Franklin Parish. Coleman did not appeal or answer the appeal to challenge this ruling.

Before discussing the venue articles further, we summarize the facts alleged in Coleman's pleadings and elicited at the hearing on the venue exception, which was tried at the same time as other exceptions which are not at issue in this appeal:

The land in question was owned for many years by Fisher Lumber Corporation, an affiliate of General Motors Corporation. Most of the land, about 54,000 of the 57,000 total acres, is located in the parishes of Tensas and Concordia. Of the remaining 3,000 acres, roughly 2,000 are in Franklin Parish and about 1,000 are in Catahoula Parish. In the late 1980s, more than half of the total acreage contained hardwood timber stands, which had been professionally managed for sustained income production over the years. Portions of the wooded areas had been leased to hunting clubs. The rest of the land, some 20,000 acres, was subject to farm and mineral leases.

In 1989, the three individual Muirfield defendants, Magalen Bryant, Michael Crane and Ray Pitts, considered purchasing the Fisher land for investment purposes. Coleman's petition alleged that the prospective purchasers hired Coleman to assess the feasibility and profitability of reselling the land to local buyers who would agree to place conservation servitudes or easements on much or all of the hardwood timberland contained in the tract.

Mrs. Bryant and her son, Crane, are domiciled in Virginia, and had used Coleman's services in other Louisiana land dealings. Pitts, a real estate investor residing in Concordia Parish, was an acquaintance, but not a client, of Coleman's before the Fisher transaction.

Fisher Lumber Corp., one of the Fisher defendants who is alleged to be a solidary tort obligor with the Muirfield defendants, is a Delaware corporation with an office in Wisner, Franklin Parish.

When purchasing land as a real estate investment, Mrs. Bryant and her family regard conservation of wildlife habitats as a priority of equal rank with monetary profit. Fisher Lumber Corp. and its parent company, General Motors, also had conservation goals for the hardwood timberland on the Fisher tract, and had refused prior offers to buy the land, including one made by Pitts, which did not take these goals into account.

Coleman alleged that Bryant, Crane and Pitts verbally agreed to compensate him for his services in "putting together a profitable real estate transaction that had conservation benefits to the land," and that this obligation was assumed by the Muirfield/Pitts partnership, a Mississippi general partnership later formed by the three individual investors, through their various corporations and limited partnerships, for purposes of acquiring the land. None of these entities were alleged or shown to be domiciled in Franklin Parish.

The remaining Muirfield defendant, Benny Street, was an employee of the Bryant family and an officer of one or more of the family's corporations, including two of the corporate Muirfield defendants. Street was not alleged or shown to have been a party to the contract with Coleman or a partner of the Muirfield/Pitts partnership, being initially named as a defendant only in Coleman's tort claims. Coleman's later allegation that Street was a "joint venturer" with the other Muirfield defendants with respect to the contract claim was refuted by evidence at the venue hearing that Street was involved in the Fisher transaction solely as a corporate officer and a salaried employee of one or more of the Bryant family's corporations, and not as a principal to any contract, partnership or joint venture involved in the family's dealings with Coleman.

Bryant, Crane, Pitts and Street testified by deposition at the hearing on the venue exception. Bryant and Crane generally admitted the existence of the verbal "agreement for services" alleged by Coleman, while disputing the amount of compensation they *681 agreed to pay him for his services.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
677 So. 2d 678, 1996 La. App. LEXIS 1335, 1996 WL 348121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-fisher-lumber-corp-lactapp-1996.