Donald Hodge, Jr. v. Jared Oertling

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 6, 2022
DocketCA-0021-0707
StatusUnknown

This text of Donald Hodge, Jr. v. Jared Oertling (Donald Hodge, Jr. v. Jared Oertling) 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
Donald Hodge, Jr. v. Jared Oertling, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

21-707

DONALD HODGE, JR.

VERSUS

JARED OERTLING, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 2013-4620 HONORABLE KENDRICK J. GUIDRY, DISTRICT JUDGE

JOHN E. CONERY JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Chief Judge, Billy H. Ezell, and John E. Conery, Judges.

AFFIRMED. Donald Hodge, Jr. Attorney at Law 4148 Palm Street Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70808 (337) 794-8873 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Donald Hodge, Jr. As The Administrator Of The Estate of Donald Hodge, Sr.

Maurice L. Tynes Attorney at Law 4839 Ihles Road Lake Charles, Louisiana 70605 (337) 479-1173 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Jared Oertling

Jeffrey A. Carrier Fuerst, Carrier & Ogden 127 West Broad Street, Suite 300 Lake Charles, Louisiana 70601 (337) 436-3332 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Jared Oertling

Steven William Usdin John W. Joyce Laurence D. Lesueur Barrasso, Usdin, Kupperman Freeman & Sarver, L.L.C. 909 Poydras Street, Suite 2400 New Orleans, Louisiana 70112 (504) 589-9700 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Vigilant Insurance Company

Pierce A. Rapin Kourtney L. Kech James Edward Sudduth III Sudduth & Associates, LLC 1109 Pithon Street Lake Charles, Louisiana 70601 (337) 480-0101 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Ken Begnaud CONERY, Judge.

This case comes before the court on an appeal by Donald Hodge, Jr., as the

Administrator of the Estate of Donald Hodge, Sr., (Estate of Hodge, Sr.). The trial

court’s May 28th judgments granted summary judgment in favor of Vigilant

Insurance Company (Vigilant) on the issue of coverage, and dismissed all claims

made by the Estate of Mr. Hodge Sr. with prejudice. The trial court also granted

summary judgment based on judicial estoppel in favor of Mr. Jared Oertling on all

claims made by the Estate of Hodge, Sr., also dismissing all claims made by the

Estate of Mr. Hodge, Sr., with prejudice. The trial court additionally granted a

motion in limine filed by Mr. Oertling, and excluded the Estate of Hodge, Sr.’s

expert, Mr. Jeffrey Campbell, based on lack of support for his Expert Report. It is

from these two judgments that the Estate of Hodge Sr. now appeals. For the

following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Mr. Hodge, Sr. owned a fenced whitetail deer farm at 5890 River Road, in

Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. The farm was licensed by the Louisiana Department

of Agriculture and Forestry (LDAF). Mr. Hodge, Sr. was in the business of selling

and buying whitetail deer under the LDAF license, which required strict record-

keeping of all sales and transfers of deer.

This case is based on a sale in early 2012 of whitetail deer transported from

a whitetail deer farm in Pennsylvania under Mr. Hodge, Sr.’s license. Instead of

transporting the whitetail deer in question to his farm in Calcasieu Parish, the

whitetail deer in question, six does, were off loaded in Carencro, Louisiana, and

transported to Mr. Jared Oertling’s deer farm in Mississippi. This transaction was

based on the sale of the whitetail deer from Mr. Hodge, Sr. to Mr. Oertling in violation of the federal Lacey Act, which relates, in part, to the illegal

transportation of wildlife. See 18 U.S.C. § 371; 16 U.S.C. §§ 3371-3378. There

was no documentation or record of this transaction made at the time of the transfer

in the records of Mr. Hodge, Sr.

After an inquiry from Pennsylvania about the whereabouts of the whitetail

deer sold in the transaction in early 2012, on October 16, 2012, the LDAF

quarantined Mr. Hodge, Sr.’s whitetail deer farm. The quarantine was imposed

due to the possibility that the whitetail deer in question may have been exposed to

Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). CWD is a contagious prion disease found in

whitetail deer. Prion is a protein particle believed to be the cause of brain disease.

Symptoms of CDW include long term weight loss, with loss of body conditioning,

as well as increased drinking and urination.

Tragically, Mr. Hodge, Sr., lost his life in a hunting accident on or about the

day the LDAF imposed its quarantine on his whitetail deer farm. Mr. Hodge, Sr.

had no knowledge of the quarantine. His son Donald Hodge, Jr., was not involved

in the operation of his father’s business. A subsequent LDAF investigation into

the operation of the whitetail deer farm owned by Mr. Hodge, Sr., revealed he had

failed to keep the legally required records for the whitetail deer he sold or

transferred to others.

Donald Hodge, Jr., individually and as the administrator of the Estate of

Hodge, Sr., and his sister, Rachael Hodge, filed suit on March 20, 2013 against the

LDAF in the 14th Judicial District Court. Their petition sought to lift the

injunction maintaining the quarantine. Mr. Hodge, Jr., swore in verified pleadings

that the whitetail deer inside the enclosure at the Hodge farm posed no CWD

transmission risk. Mr. Hodge, Jr. further stated in the petition that LDAF had no

2 reason to believe the six does ever reached the Hodge Farm, since they were

delivered to Mr. Oertling at his deer farm in Mississippi, which Mr. Oertling had

admitted.

Despite this admission from Mr. Oertling, the LDAF vigorously opposed the

lifting of the quarantine. In a sworn affidavit filed by the defense, the LDAF

Assistant Commissioner testified that “… investigation indicated that the deer farm

was likely involved in an illegal deer-smuggling operation,” which compelled the

quarantine, along with the discovery of legally insufficient records kept by Mr.

Hodge, Sr. The LDAF required that all the deer tags on the Hodge Farm be

scanned at the Hodges’ expense to ensure none of the deer came from

Pennsylvania. The ongoing quarantine prevented the Estate of Hodge, Sr., from

putting the farm up for sale and required the Estate to sustain the farm at its

expense. The plaintiff’s also claimed damages from the LDAF allegedly suffered

due to the quarantine.

On October 15, 2013, Donald Hodge, Jr., as Administrator of the Estate of

Donald Hodge, Sr., filed the present suit against Mr. Oertling, Ken Begnaud, the

owner of the deer farm in Carencro, Louisiana, and Stacy Fontenot.1 The plaintiffs

claimed damages including loss of income, expenses of maintaining the Hodge

Farm while under quarantine, and the costs associated with the testing of the deer,

the loss of value of the deer and the cost of additional deer not being born. They

also filed a direct action suit naming Vigilant, Mr. Oertling’s homeowner’s insurer

for his home in Slidell, Louisiana.

Shortly thereafter, on November 4, 2013, the Hodges’ signed a settlement

agreement with the LDAF which dismissed the Hodges’ suit against the LDAF.

1 Mr. Fontenot was subsequently dismissed.

3 The parties agreed that the LDAF would be allowed to depopulate the Hodge Farm

at the LDAF’s expense. After the settlement was perfected between the Hodges

and the LDAF, the defendants in the companion suit, Mr. Oertling, Mr. Begnaud,

Mr. Fontenot, and Vigilant, filed a motion for summary judgment claiming that the

settlement also released all claims against them. The trial court granted the

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