Elizabeth W. Magner and Michael W. Magner v. Michael Deas

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 16, 2025
Docket2025-C-0302
StatusPublished

This text of Elizabeth W. Magner and Michael W. Magner v. Michael Deas (Elizabeth W. Magner and Michael W. Magner v. Michael Deas) 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
Elizabeth W. Magner and Michael W. Magner v. Michael Deas, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

ELIZABETH W. MAGNER * NO. 2025-C-0302 AND MICHAEL W. MAGNER * VERSUS COURT OF APPEAL * MICHAEL DEAS FOURTH CIRCUIT * STATE OF LOUISIANA *******

APPLICATION FOR WRITS DIRECTED TO CIVIL DISTRICT COURT, ORLEANS PARISH NO. 2022-05431, DIVISION “F-14” Honorable Jennifer M. Medley, Judge ****** Judge Dale N. Atkins ****** (Court composed of Judge Sandra Cabrina Jenkins, Judge Paula A. Brown, Judge Dale N. Atkins)

Gilbert R. Buras, Jr. 710 Carondelet St. New Orleans, LA 70130

COUNSEL FOR RELATOR, Michael Deas

Michael W. Magner P.J. Kee JONES WALKER, LLP 201 St. Charles Avenue, 50th Floor New Orleans, LA 70170

COUNSEL FOR RESPONDENTS, Elizabeth W. Magner and Michael W. Magner

WRIT GRANTED; RELIEF DENIED MAY 16, 2025 DNA

SCJ

PAB

The underlying dispute in this matter is between neighbors regarding a

petition for permanent injunction and right of use. Relator, Michael Deas (“Mr.

Deas”), seeks expedited supervisory review of the trial court’s April 29, 2025

judgment, which granted his Motion for Suspensive Appeal; set the amount of

security to be furnished for his suspensive appeal at $45,000; and ordered him to

furnish his bond via a third-party surety.1 Mr. Deas asks us to vacate that judgment

and permit him to suspensively appeal—without posting a bond—the trial court’s

January 6, 2025, March 19, 2025, and March 20, 2025 judgments. Respondents are

Elizabeth W. Magner and Michael W. Magner (collectively the “Magners”). For

the following reasons, we grant Mr. Deas’ writ application but deny the relief

requested.

1 Mr. Deas requested expedited consideration from this Court pursuant to La. C.C.P. art.

2124. It provides, in pertinent part:

Where the party seeking to appeal from a judgment for a sum of money is aggrieved by the amount of the security fixed by the trial court, the party so aggrieved may seek supervisory writs to review the appropriateness of the determination of the trial court in fixing the security. The application for supervisory writ shall be heard by the court of appeal on a priority basis.

La. C.C.P. art. 2124(C) (emphasis added). As discussed more fully throughout this Opinion, the judgments at issue herein are not for a sum of money. Thus, based on a plain reading of La. C.C.P. art. 2124(C), it is inapplicable to the matter sub judice. Nonetheless, we have exercised our discretion to decide this matter on a priority basis.

1 RELEVANT FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Judgments Mr. Deas Seeks to Appeal

The Magners and Mr. Deas are neighbors; and the Magners sought access to

parts of Mr. Deas’ property to perform work and maintenance on their own

property.2 In resolving the dispute between the Magners and Mr. Deas, the trial

court issued three judgments. In its January 6, 2025 judgment, the trial court

granted the Magners a limited right of use to access part of Mr. Deas’ property “for

the purpose of repair and maintenance of the Magner Property”3 and delineated

that Mr. Deas will be entitled to a compensation rate of $25 per day multiplied by

the number of days the Magners access his property for certain maintenance and

repair projects on their property.4 The trial court also granted the Magners’ Petition

for Permanent Injunction and issued a permanent injunction ordering Mr. Deas not

to restrict the Magners’ access to his property. Further, the trial court granted the

Magners access to Mr. Deas’ property for “[f]uture [w]ork” but ordered the

Magners would have to provide Mr. Deas with notice forty-eight hours prior to the

work and pay Mr. Deas $25 per day for any future work. In its March 19, 2025

judgment, the trial court denied Mr. Deas’ Motion for New Trial regarding these

rulings. Additionally, having ruled in favor of the Magners, in its March 20, 2025

judgment, the trial court assessed Mr. Deas with $6,135.50 in court costs.

2 The facts of the underlying dispute are not at issue in Mr. Deas’ expedited writ application. 3 The trial court also granted this limited right of use to the Magners’ “agents, representatives and contractors.” 4 In particular, the trial court permitted the Magners to access Mr. Deas’ property “for the

purpose of conducting repairs to the parapet and wall running perpendicular to Governor Nicholls Street on the side bounded by the Deas Property including, but not limited to, the construction of scaffolding on the Deas Property.” The trial court specified the $25 per day compensation rate applies so long as the Magners’ access to Mr. Deas’ does not surpass twenty- one days, after which time the Magners owe Mr. Deas $75.00 per day.

2 Hearing on Mr. Deas’ Motion for Suspensive Appeal

In response to the three judgments summarized above, Mr. Deas filed a

Motion for Suspensive Appeal. The trial court held a hearing on Mr. Deas’ motion

on April 24, 2025. In pertinent part, counsel for the Magners stated:

Because this [is not] a money judgment, I think . . . it is up to you to set an amount that takes into account the potential damages that could result in the interim, so we are asking that bond be set at [$]45,000, which would account for the costs that have been set already in the matter as well as the risk to the Magner[s’] property during this period where they would not be able to repair the property as we are going into the hurricane season and waiting for this appeal to play out.

In response, counsel for Mr. Deas stated, “Assuming the $45,000 is acceptable to

my client, we will post his property as the immovable property” pursuant to La.

C.C.P. art. 5121.1 “provided that there is no mortgage standing in the way of that

in excess of value, with the appraisal [showing the property is worth over

$500,000] being the demonstrated value of the property.” Thereafter, counsel for

the Magners argued:

The [Louisiana] Fourth Circuit [Court of Appeal] has a case on this [Franco v. Franco, 2004-0967 (La. App. 4 Cir. 7/28/04), 881 So.2d 131] that basically makes clear that the judgment debtor [cannot] be the person or the party who is providing the security or a bond for his own debt. A bond, though, can be secured by immovable property, but it would need to be -- Mr. Deas would need to go through an actual bonding company or a third party that would -- and that is who the Magner’s [sic] would be able to go against in the case that they would need to. . . . The Court just makes clear that the judgment debtor cannot be securing his own debt.

Counsel for Mr. Deas then countered that the Franco case does not stand for the

above proposition urged by counsel for the Magners. Further, counsel for Mr. Deas

argued the Code of Civil Procedure does not require a suspensive appeal bond to

be placed with a commercial surety if the immovable property serves as the

security. Rather, as counsel for Mr. Deas, explained, “The immovable property

3 itself is the bond,” and this “operates as a judicial mortgage against the property

until satisfaction of the judgment.” Neither counsel for Mr. Deas nor counsel for

the Magners introduced evidence at the hearing.

At the close of the hearing, the trial court orally ruled that the amount of the

suspensive appeal bond was set at $45,000 and that Mr. Deas could secure the

bond with his immovable property but had to go through a commercial bonding

company to do so. In response, counsel for Mr. Deas argued, “$45,000 is excessive

considering the court costs” and in light of the only money awarded by the

judgments being in favor of his client, i.e., the trial court’s order that the Magners

pay Mr.

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Elizabeth W. Magner and Michael W. Magner v. Michael Deas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elizabeth-w-magner-and-michael-w-magner-v-michael-deas-lactapp-2025.