General Elec. Co. v. Dugas
This text of 526 So. 2d 854 (General Elec. Co. v. Dugas) 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.
Opinion
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY
v.
Willard B. DUGAS, Sylvia G. Dugas MacDonald, and Dami Leigh Dugas.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*855 Stephen P. Strohschein, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant General Elec. Co.
Alex W. Wall, Sr., Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellee Willard Dugas.
Before LOTTINGER, EDWARDS and ALFORD, JJ.
ALFORD, Judge.
Plaintiffs, General Electric Company and Robert E. Brizendine, appeal from a judgment in the trial court sustaining the exception of improper joinder of parties filed by the defendant, Willard B. Dugas, dismissing the petition of Robert E. Brizendine. The plaintiffs in the instant lawsuit seek to obtain the revocation of the donation of certain immovable property by Willard B. Dugas and Sylvia G. Dugas MacDonald, defendants, to their daughter, Dami Leigh Dugas, also a party defendant.
General Electric is the judgment creditor of Sylvia G. Dugas MacDonald and originally filed suit against all three defendants. An exception of no cause of action and no right of action was filed by Willard B. Dugas and was subsequently sustained on August 6, 1985, by the trial court, dismissing General Electric's suit as to Willard B. *856 Dugas.[1] Thereafter, plaintiff's first amended and supplemental petition was filed wherein Robert E. Brizendine, denominated "Trustee of the Bankruptcy Estate of Willard B. Dugas", was added as a party plaintiff; General Electric restricted its claims to that portion of the immovable property previously owned and donated by Sylvia G. Dugas MacDonald, while Robert E. Brizendine maintained the action as to the donation of that portion of the property previously owned by Mr. Dugas. Both plaintiffs claim that the donation was made with the fraudulent intent to deprive the creditors of their rights to the immovable property.
To this first amended and supplemental petition, Willard B. Dugas filed exceptions of lack of procedural capacity, res judicata, improper joinder of parties, and a motion to dismiss the amended and supplemental petition. Thereafter, plaintiffs filed a second amended petition for the purpose of clarifying the separateness of the claims of each plaintiff. After hearing, the trial court sustained the exception of lack of procedural capacity and allowed plaintiff, Robert E. Brizendine, to further amend the petition to allege procedural capacity, pretermitting the other exceptions and the motion to dismiss.
A third amended petition was then filed, specifically alleging the capacity of Mr. Brizendine as trustee in the bankruptcy proceeding of Willard B. Dugas, accompanied by documents from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Georgia in support thereof. The judgment on the remainder of Mr. Dugas' exceptions, dated November 19, 1986, sustained the exception of improper joinder of parties, dismissed the petition of Robert E. Brizendine and declared the exception of res judicata to be moot. The trial court's written reasons for judgment state that the court "having considered all of the facts, the evidence and the pleadings grants the exception of improper joinder of parties filed by the defendant, dismissing plaintiff Brizendine's case." No substantive reason was given for this judgment, and defendant's motion to dismiss the amended and supplemental petition was not directly addressed. From this judgment, the plaintiffs, General Electric and Robert E. Brizendine, appeal, asserting that the trial court erred in granting the exception of improper joinder, and also, that the exception of res judicata and the motion to dismiss should have been dismissed.
The propriety of the trial court's dismissal of the amended petition adding Robert E. Brizendine as a party plaintiff on grounds of misjoinder, will first be addressed. As mandated by La.Code Civ.P. art. 647, the permissive joinder of parties is governed by La.Code Civ.P. art. 463. Those articles allow joinder where three conditions exist: 1) there is a community of interest between the parties joined; 2) each of the actions cumulated is within the jurisdiction of the court and is brought in the proper venue; and 3) all of the actions cumulated are mutually consistent and employ the same form of procedure. As La. Code Civ.P. art. 463, comment (b) points out, the term "community of interest" is considered as being synonymous with the term "common interest", and is used in the sense used by the court in Gill v. City of Lake Charles, 119 La. 17, 43 So. 897 (1907). The Gill Court held that, "the avoidance of a multiplicity of suits is always desirable, but that parties are not allowed to join unless they have a common interest as to the point at issue...." Gill, 43 So. at 898.
It is clear that where several judgment creditors join to revoke a fraudulent transfer made by a common debtor that there exists a community of interest between those creditors. In Marx v. Meyer, 50 La.Ann. 1229, 23 So. 923 (1898), fourteen creditors brought suit to set aside, revoke and annul a collusive confession of judgment and the resulting seizure of assets effected by the debtor in favor of seven other creditors. The court noted, in dicta, *857 that "the several creditors who bring this action could legally join therein, and could also join as parties defendant all who are charged with colluding for the purpose of defrauding them." Marx, 23 So. at 925. The plaintiffs in New Orleans Credit Men's Association v. Cattana, 145 La. 330, 82 So. 289 (1919), brought suit to annul a transfer of property made by the debtor to his wife, as either a simulation or a fraudulent preference. The plaintiff association alleged itself to be the subrogee of thirteen creditors of the defendant and was joined with six other persons also claiming to be creditors of the defendant. The court summarized the jurisprudence on the subject as follows:
When a suit of this character is brought by a judgment creditor, there is but one issue involvedthat of the nullity vel non of the act sought to be annulled.... And, as the several creditors have a common interest in that issue, there could be no good reason why they should not be allowed to join in one suit for litigating it; and our jurisprudence so recognizes.
82 So. at 289.
Since the plaintiffs did not allege that they were judgment creditors, the court distinguished the case on appeal from the jurisprudence as involving the additional issue of "indebtedness vel non". The court noted that where the creditor's claims were not reduced to judgment, there would be as many additional separate issues as plaintiffs since each plaintiff would have to prove the validity of each claimed debt. Based on that distinction, the lower decision dismissing the case was affirmed.
The present case differs factually from those cases in that each plaintiff has a separate cause of action against not one common debtor but separate debtors who allegedly donated community property[2] collusively, in fraud of the separate rights of the creditors; General Electric is the judgment creditor of Sylvia G. Dugas MacDonald and Robert E. Brizendine, as trustee of Mr. Dugas' bankruptcy estate, is authorized by 11 U.S.C.A. § 544 et seq. to avoid fraudulent transfers of the debtor, Mr. Dugas. Because the transfer about which each party plaintiff complains is one and the same[3], and since the only issue before the trial court is the nullity vel non of that transaction, we are unable to concur in the trial court ruling, sustaining the exception of improper joinder.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
526 So. 2d 854, 1988 WL 49371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-elec-co-v-dugas-lactapp-1988.