Delano Plantation v. June Lowrey

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 2009
DocketCA-0008-1180
StatusUnknown

This text of Delano Plantation v. June Lowrey (Delano Plantation v. June Lowrey) 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
Delano Plantation v. June Lowrey, (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

CA 08-1180

DELANO PLANTATION, ET AL.

VERSUS

JUNE LOWREY, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 90-C-0377-B HONORABLE ELLIS J. DAIGLE, DISTRICT JUDGE

SHANNON J. GREMILLION JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, J. David Painter, and Shannon J. Gremillion, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Stanford B. Gauthier II Attorney at Law 1405 West Pinhook Rd, Ste 105 Lafayette, La 70503 (337) 234-0099 Counsel for Other Appellant: Alice Ann Lowrey Robinson

Douglas C. Longman Jr. Longman Russo, APLC P. O. Drawer 3408 Lafayette, LA 70502-3408 (337) 261-1200 Counsel for Other Appellee: Charles A. Going, CPA G. Frederick Seemann Attorney at Law 401 Audubon, Suite 103A Lafayette, LA 70503 (337) 234-3766 Counsel for Defendant Appellee: Brandon Lowrey Lainnie Lowrey Capouya Alice Lowrey Angel

Jonathan D. Mayeux Attorney at Law 1405 W. Pinhook Rd, Ste 105 Lafayette, LA 70503 (337) 234-0099 Counsel for Other Appellant: Alice Ann Lowrey Robinson

Nichole LaBorde Romero Attorney at Law 1405 W. Pinhook Rd, Ste 105 Lafayette, LA 70503 (337) 234-0099 Counsel for Other Appellant: Alice Ann Lowrey Robinson

Alice Ann Lowrey Robinson In Proper Person 104 Donald Drive Lafayette, LA 70503 (000) 000-0000 Counsel for Other Appellant: Alice Ann Lowrey Robinson

Kristi D. Husher Attorney at Law 1405 W. Pinhook Rd., Suite 105 Lafayette, LA 70503 (337) 234-0099 Counsel for Other Appellant: Alice Ann Lowrey Robinson 1 GREMILLION, Judge.

2 Before the court is another skirmish in an eighteen-year-long war between the

3 shareholders of Delano Plantation, Inc. In 1990, Anne Robinson and her mother,

4 Clementine Lowrey, now deceased, brought this derivative suit against defendants,

5 Brandon Lowrey, Lainnie Lowrey Capouya, Amy Lowrey Angel, and June Lowrey,

6 whom we will collective refer to as the Lowrey defendants, alleging mismanagement

7 of the corporation throughout the 1980s. In 1996, Charles Going, a certified public

8 accountant, was named temporary receiver. Going was named permanent receiver in

9 1999. That appointment was appealed and this court affirmed his appointment in In

10 re: Delano Plantation, Inc. v. Lowrey, 99-1752 (La.App. 3 Cir. 6/7/00), 770 So.2d

11 798, writ denied, 00-2564 (La. 11/13/00), 774 So.2d 149.

12 Going prepared a restatement of the corporation’s assets to revalue the

13 corporation had the mismanagement not occurred. With revisions, the restatement

14 was adopted as a judgment of the trial court. Again, the matter came before this

15 court. In Delano Plantation v. Lowrey, 05-1337 (La.App. 3 Cir. 4/5/06), 926 So.2d

16 728, we affirmed the trial court’s judgment that added back to the corporation’s assets

17 the following charges: $1,028,332.00 in excess farming expenses; $272,015.00 in

18 excess officers’ salaries; $16,984.00 in legal fees unrelated to the corporation; a

19 $136,848.00 judgment paid to Anne Robinson with interest of $13,146.00; and loans

20 to shareholders totaling $78,603.00 with interest of $88,642.00. Additionally, the

21 value of the corporation was to reflect a “tax effect” of $627,225.00, to be subtracted

22 from the stated assets. Also included in that judgment was an allocation of the

23 percentages of corporate ownership that factored the death of Clementine Lowrey, her

24 bequest of her estate in toto to Anne Robinson, and the effect of forced heirship on

1 1 the part of the Lowrey defendants at the time of Clementine Lowrey’s death.

2 In March 2007, Robinson filed a petition for writ of mandamus to force Going

3 to prosecute or settle the claims against the Lowrey defendants for the charges

4 encompassed in the judgment, and to force him to collect any outstanding lease

5 payments due the corporation along with late charges. Going filed a rule to show

6 cause against Robinson and the Lowrey defendants to require them to obtain a partial

7 judgment of possession in the succession of Clementine Lowrey, a matter pending in

8 the 15th Judicial District in Lafayette Parish.

9 The hearing on the receiver’s motion and the writ of mandamus was held on

10 May 12, 2008. The trial court denied the motion for writ of mandamus and the

11 motion to require the parties to obtain a partial judgment of possession. The trial court

12 found that the motion to require the partial judgment of possession was res judicata

13 by virtue of having been part of the 2005 judgment that was appealed. In its

14 judgment, the trial court restated the percentage of ownership that had been assessed

15 in the 2005 judgment.

16 Anne Robinson appeals the denial of mandamus and the allocation of the

17 percentages of ownership. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

18 ANALYSIS

19 Assignment of error number one: Robinson asserts as error the trial court’s

20 denial of her petition for writ of mandamus, finding that the judgment was not a

21 money judgment; and the ruling of the trial court regarding the percentages of

22 ownership not including the succession of Clementine Lowrey, as that case was

23 pending in the 15th JDC and was thus outside the judge’s authority.

24 Code of Civil Procedure article 3861provides that mandamus is a writ directing

2 1 a public officer or a corporation or a corporate officer to perform any of the duties set

2 forth in articles 3863 and 3864. Comment (c) provides that the term “duties” is

3 limited to those set forth in articles 3863 and 3864. Over the years, courts have

4 utilized the terms “ministerial” and “discretionary” in drawing the distinction between

5 functions of the office that can or cannot be subject to mandamus. Mandamus is an

6 extraordinary remedy and should not be granted if the duty sought to be enforced is

7 subject to any discretion whatsoever on the party of the officer owing the duty. State

8 v. Hoag, 04-0857 (La. 12/1/04), 889 So.2d 1019.

9 Code of Civil Procedure article 3864 provides that a writ of mandamus may be

10 directed to a corporation or an officer thereof to compel the holding of an election or

11 the performance of other duties required by the corporate charter or bylaws or

12 prescribed by law, or for the recognition of the rights of the members or shareholders.

13 In Levy v. Billeaud, 399 So.2d 775 (La.App. 3 Cir. 1981), this court was asked to

14 reverse the trial court’s dismissal of a suit for mandamus against a corporate

15 liquidator to compel him to distribute the assets of the corporation to the

16 shareholders. Because the law provided remedies by ordinary means, and it did not

17 appear that resort to ordinary means would result in delay causing injustice, we

18 affirmed. The court noted that mandamus had been granted to: uphold a

19 shareholder’s right to examine the books and records of the corporation, require the

20 corporation to issue stock for which a shareholder had paid, uphold a shareholder’s

21 right to statutorily require financial information, and receive a copy of the

22 corporation’s annual report. It distinguished the current case on the basis that the

23 rights on which the case was founded were not clear and specifically fixed, but were

24 greatly questioned and, viewed in a light most favorable to petitioners, in serious and

3 1 bona fide dispute.

2 Receivership is governed by the Title 12 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes.

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