delaVergne v. delaVergne

514 So. 2d 186, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 10241
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 1987
DocketNo. CA-7165
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 514 So. 2d 186 (delaVergne v. delaVergne) 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
delaVergne v. delaVergne, 514 So. 2d 186, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 10241 (La. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

WARD, Judge.

Hugues J. delaVergne, III and Charles E. delaVergne, Jr. suspensively appeal a money judgment in favor of their brother, Louis V. delaVergne. Louis has answered the appeal and requested modifications of the judgment. The appeals arise from a suit in which Louis sued Hugues and Charles to rescind the partition of the family home, Villa delaVergne, an 87-acre estate in St. Tammany Parish, and to rescind agreements incidental to the partition, on the grounds of lesion and breach of fiduciary duty. In the suit Louis also sought an accounting and a share of the profits Hu-gues and Charles allegedly made by selling parcels of Villa delaVergne after the partition. Hugues and Charles excepted to the suit, asserting that the partition and incidental agreements constituted a compromise which was res judicata and hence could not be rescinded. In a reconventional demand Hugues and Charles sought damages caused by the notice of lis pendens Louis filed against Villa delaVergne and the expenses of their attorneys fees in this lawsuit.

After considering extensive testimony and documentary evidence, a Commissioner of the Civil District Court found insufficient proof of lesion, but recommended rescission of the partition because Hugues [188]*188and Charles, an attorney and executor, respectively, of their mother’s succession, breached the fiduciary duty owed to Louis. Hugues and Charles filed exceptions to the Commissioner’s report. Following a hearing and the filing of post-trial memoranda, the Trial Court granted judgment in favor of Louis delaVergne and denied the recon-ventional demand. In his reasons for judgment the Trial Judge stated that the agreement executed by the brothers was a voluntary partition of Villa delaVergne which incidentally partitioned other property and settled several lawsuits between the brothers. The Trial Judge agreed with the Commissioner that the evidence did not prove lesion. Because he found a partition rather than a compromise, the Trial Judge denied the exception of res judicata. He further found that prior to the partition agreement Hugues and Charles had received an appraisal and purchase offers for the property which they did not reveal to Louis, and that they bought Louis’s ⅜ share of the property for an amount far below the value indicated by the appraisal and offers. The Judge held that Hugues and Charles, as officers of their mother’s succession, had breached a fiduciary duty to disclose all material information to Louis as heir, legatee and co-attorney.

The Trial Judge, however, declined to follow the Commissioner’s recommendation to rescind the partition and the other agreements between the parties. Instead, he awarded Louis damages, calculated by allowing Louis fictitiously to participate as ⅜ owner in Hugues and Charles’s sales of the Villa delaVergne property which were made after Louis sold his share to his brothers. Louis was thus awarded of the sales prices, plus 4/9 of the value of the acreage retained by Hugues and Charles, as appraised before the partition, less the amount Louis received from Hugues and Charles pursuant to the agreement. The damages, thus calculated, amounted to $807,555.70, and were awarded with legal interest from date of judicial demand.

In their appeal, Hugues and Charles reassert their contention that the brothers’ agreements are a compromise which is res judicata and insusceptible of rescession. They further contend that the Trial Judge should not have awarded damages since he found that the agreement was a partition but that lesion was not proved. They also argue that the Trial Court erred in finding that they were acting as Louis’s fiduciaries. In the alternative, they contend that if Louis was harmed by their actions, the proper remedy is to set aside all agreements, not only the partition of Villa delaV-ergne. Furthermore, they argue that the damages award is improper because the petition did not plead special damages, and in any event, the amount awarded is not supported by the record.

Louis also appeals, requesting legal interest to run from the date that Hugues and Charles breached their fiduciary duty, rather than from the date of judicial demand, and further requesting attorney fees. Additionally, Louis urges that even if this Court finds that the brothers’ agreements were a compromise, it can be set aside on the grounds of fraud or because material information was withheld. Also in the alternative, Louis asserts that, if we find that Hugues and Charles were not acting as fiduciaries in their capacities with their mother’s succession, they were fiduciaries in their capacities as joint venturers with Louis in the development of Villa de-laVergne.

The resolution of these factual and legal issues requires that we review in some detail the evidence which was before the Trial Court.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The mother of the three delaVergne brothers, Marcelle Menard delaVergne, widow of Charles E. delaVergne, died on September 20, 1975. At the time of her death, Hugues, Charles and Louis each owned a 5/18 interest in Villa delaVergne, and Mrs. delaVergne owned the remaining ¾8. Mrs. delaVergne left a will which, after making particular bequests, gave one-third of her property to each of her three sons. Her entire interest in Villa delaVergne was to be included in Louis’s share. She named Charles and Gerard W. Bar[189]*189ousse executors; Hugues, Louis, and Ernest A. Carrere, Jr. were named as attorneys for the succession.

Following the opening of Mrs. delaVergne’s succession in Orleans Parish her sons became embroiled in bitter disputes concerning the family property. In addition to several conflicts resulting in litigation within the succession proceedings, separate lawsuits were filed in Orleans and St. Tammany Parishes. Many of the disputes centered upon the disposition and possible commercial development of the Villa delaVergne acreage. These disputes culminated in 1977 when Hugues and Charles filed a suit in the 22nd Judicial District Court to partition Villa delaVergne by licitation.. That Court ordered the partition, and the First Circuit Court of Appeal affirmed. delaVergne v. delaVergne, 361 So.2d 1234 (La.App. 1st Cir.1978). Writs were granted by the Supreme Court on October 26, 1978.

Negotiations among the brothers and their attorneys finally led to an agreement, executed on February 1, 1979, which provided that: (1) Louis agreed to sell to Hu-gues and Charles his entire interest in Villa delaVergne, for $285,000.00 cash, reserving only mineral rights and specified movables, the sale to take place within 10 days after the parties were put in possession of their mother’s succession; (2) all parties agreed to “lend their best effort” toward closing that succession within 14 days; (3) Hugues and Charles agreed to transfer ownership of the “delaVergne manuscript” and a specified family portrait to Louis, and Louis agreed to transfer two other portraits to Hugues and Charles; (4) the parties agreed to privately auction jointly-owned movable property at Villa delaV-ergne; (5) Louis agreed to pay the Whitney National Bank approximately $2,800.00 in interest and to reimburse Hugues and Charles $2,700.00 for interest they had paid to Hibernia Bank; (6) the parties agreed to pay certain attorney fees chargeable to Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Delavergne v. Delavergne
514 So. 2d 186 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
514 So. 2d 186, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 10241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delavergne-v-delavergne-lactapp-1987.