Holmes v. Peoples State Bank

796 So. 2d 176, 2001 WL 1131966
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 26, 2001
Docket35,072-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 796 So. 2d 176 (Holmes v. Peoples State Bank) 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
Holmes v. Peoples State Bank, 796 So. 2d 176, 2001 WL 1131966 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

796 So.2d 176 (2001)

Patricia Lattier HOLMES, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PEOPLES STATE BANK, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 35,072-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 26, 2001.
Rehearing Denied October 25, 2001.

*178 Darien D. Lester, Shreveport, Counsel for Appellant.

John Clifton Conine, Natchitoches, Margaret L. Tooke, Baton Rouge, Counsel for Appellee.

Before NORRIS, WILLIAMS and CARAWAY, JJ.

NORRIS, Chief Judge.

The plaintiff, Patricia Holmes, appeals a judgment that rejected all her claims against Peoples State Bank of Many ("PSB"), as well as a judgment holding her lawyer, Darien D. Lester, in contempt of court. We affirm.

Factual and procedural background

This suit arises from the construction of Ms. Holmes's "dream home" on Cross Lake in Shreveport. In August 1996 she obtained an interim construction loan of $294,000 from PSB. The loan was for 180 days and secured by a mortgage on the property. Because she wanted to use an unlicensed builder (her boyfriend, Larry Reed) as general contractor, PSB required her to obtain a performance bond of $295,000. Construction began and PSB made disbursals to Ms. Holmes or Reed. For various reasons that were hotly disputed at trial, construction lagged and PSB twice extended its interim commitment. On October 2, 1997 PSB funded the last of its original commitment and in November it loaned her an additional $4,841, secured by the pledge of Ms. Holmes's Lucent stock. However, the house was still not complete; for this reason, Ms. Holmes had not obtained permanent financing.

In December 1997 Ms. Holmes requested an additional $25,000 to finish the project. PSB loaned her $25,527, requiring her to execute a multiple indebtedness mortgage on the property subject to a maximum obligation limit of $156,000. Around this time, however, PSB learned *179 that various suppliers and laborers had filed liens on the property in excess of $52,000. PSB also learned that Ms. Holmes had paid neither property insurance nor property tax on the lot; she actually lost title by tax sale in May 1997. Feeling the loan was "out of control," PSB assigned it to a special assets manager, Dale Hopper, who took over the file in January 1998.

Hopper testified that he met with another contractor who estimated it would take an additional $132,000 to complete the house ($52,000 to pay off the liens and $80,000 to complete construction). He knew that Ms. Holmes was working with a loan broker and had obtained a tentative commitment for permanent financing of $487,000 through Hibernia Mortgage Banking. He therefore recommended that PSB try to continue the loan, and prepared a "Draft Loan Agreement" offering her an additional $80,000 to complete construction and an amount sufficient to cover the liens, subject to various conditions including a hold-harmless agreement and her promise to hire a licensed contractor. Ms. Holmes, however, refused to sign this agreement. Relations between Hopper and Reed deteriorated quickly. By February 1998 Ms. Holmes had not yet made a single payment on the $324,368 already loaned; therefore PSB filed an executory process suit against Ms. Holmes in Caddo Parish in March 1998. The District Court issued a writ of seizure and sale on March 30.

Ms. Holmes filed the instant suit against PSB on April 1, 1998, asserting violations of the Louisiana and Federal Equal Credit Opportunity Acts, R.S. 9:3581 et seq., and 15 U.S.C. § 1691, with a prayer for jury trial. Ms. Holmes also attempted unsuccessfully to block the sheriff sale.[1]

PSB asserted an affirmative defense and reconventional demand, urging in essence that any recovery she might have on these claims would be offset by the unpaid notes. Later, PSB filed a motion to strike the jury demand on grounds that Ms. Holmes had not posted her bond within the time limit fixed by the scheduling order. The sheriff sale ultimately occurred on October 28, 1998, with PSB buying the property for $164,000.

By amended petitions, Ms. Holmes abandoned her federal claim and added a prayer to nullify the sheriff sale. When she learned that PSB was trying to sell the property, she filed in the instant proceedings a motion for preliminary injunction, which the District Court granted but this court vacated. Holmes v. Peoples State Bank, 32,749 (La.App. 2 Cir. 3/3/00), 753 So.2d 1006. She then added claims for Federal Truth-In-Lending violations and damages for breach of contract to loan her additional money.

In a separate action, PSB obtained a deficiency judgment against Ms. Holmes in January 2000 for $200,544 plus interest and attorney fees. She did not move for a new trial or suspensive appeal; the judgment is final.

The instant matter came to trial in June 2000. On the first day, the District Court denied Ms. Holmes's demand for jury trial, stating that with the reconventional demand and mandatory offset, her damages would not exceed the jurisdictional limit of $50,000 for a jury trial. Ms. Holmes's *180 counsel, Darien Lester, vigorously objected but did not ask for a stay to seek writs. The trial proceeded for six days between June 26 and July 5.

At the conclusion of trial, the District Court delivered oral reasons for judgment. It enumerated Ms. Holmes's nine remaining claims[2] and reviewed the evidence. The court concluded that she utterly failed in her burden of proof, adducing not a scintilla of evidence to support any of her claims. The court added that Ms. Holmes's case was so devoid of merit that had PSB moved for involuntary dismissal at the close of the plaintiffs case, or for directed verdict in a jury trial, it would have been granted.

On July 11, 2000 the court filed a written judgment rejecting all claims and directing the clerk of court to cancel and erase the notice of lis pendens that had burdened the property since early in the proceedings. Ms. Holmes appealed suspensively, but when she could not provide adequate surety she converted it to a devolutive appeal on September 15. Her first seven assignments of error pertain to the July 11 judgment.

Meanwhile, Ms. Holmes filed another voluntary petition for bankruptcy reorganization on August 9, but converted it to Chapter 7 on September 12. On November 11 PSB filed the instant motion for contempt of court and abuse of process. PSB alleged that on September 15 (three days after filing for Chapter 7 relief and the same day that she abandoned her suspensive appeal) Mr. Lester filed, on Ms. Holmes's behalf, a suit in federal court against PSB and others involved in the failed loan, advancing exactly the same grounds as those just rejected by the state District Court on July 11. He also filed another notice of lis pendens in the Caddo Parish mortgage records; PSB learned of this only moments before a scheduled closing to sell the property. PSB urged that this conduct was constructive contempt of the July 11 judgment canceling the notice of lis pendens.

The District Court held a hearing on December 1, receiving evidence that only the bankruptcy trustee had standing to file the federal suit on Ms. Holmes's behalf on September 15, 2000. The court concluded that the federal suit was a blatant attempt by Mr. Lester to relitigate the claims already rejected in the state court, and that the notice of lis pendens filed in connection with the federal suit was a deliberate circumvention of the state court judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
796 So. 2d 176, 2001 WL 1131966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-peoples-state-bank-lactapp-2001.