Joe Richard v. Eugene Guillotte

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 2018
DocketCA-0017-0900
StatusUnknown

This text of Joe Richard v. Eugene Guillotte (Joe Richard v. Eugene Guillotte) 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
Joe Richard v. Eugene Guillotte, (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

17-900

JOE RICHARD

VERSUS

EUGENE GUILLOTTE

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF IBERIA, NO. 128418 HONORABLE ANTHONY THIBODEAUX, DISTRICT JUDGE

SHANNON J. GREMILLION JUDGE

Court composed of Marc T. Amy, Shannon J. Gremillion, and Candyce G. Perret, Judges.

AFFIRMED. Michael W. Campbell Caffery, Oubre, Campbell & Garrison, L.L.P. 100 E. Vermilion St., Suite 201 Lafayette, LA 70501 (337) 232-6581 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Joe Richard

Leon J. Minvielle, III Haik, Minvielle & Grubbs P. O. Box 11040 New Iberia, LA 70562-1040 (337) 365-5486 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Eugene Guillotte GREMILLION, Judge.

The plaintiff/appellant, Joe Richard, appeals the trial court’s judgment

awarding him $500 and court costs. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Richard is the owner of a metal building located in New Iberia, Louisiana,

which was leased to the defendant/appellee, Eugene Guillotte, for a period of about

fifteen years ending in November 2015. Guillotte operated a collision repair and

auto sales shop. In January 2011, a fire accidentally occurred in the building when

a truck floorboard ignited from sparks emitted while Guillotte was welding.

Richard filed a petition for breach of contract on rent agreement in June

2016, alleging that Guillotte owed him $1,734.75 for the removal of a sign,

$6,792.00 for a damaged overhead door, $36,780.00 for replacement of a metal

roof and metal walls, and $966.00 in back rent.

Following an April 2017 trial, the trial court awarded Richard $500.00 for

remaining smoke damage related to the welding fire and cast him with all court

costs. Richard now appeals. For the following reasons, we affirm.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

1. The trial court’s denial of awarding Appellant the property damages resulting from the fire in the amount of $36,780.00 was manifest error and clearly wrong.

2. The trial court’s award of only $500.00 in damages to the Appellant was manifest error and clearly wrong.

3. The manifest error and clearly wrong Judgment of the trial court warrants a de novo review of the record which supports a finding of liability and damages in favor of Appellant with Appellee to pay all court costs. DISCUSSION

Manifest Error

The supreme court summarized the manifest error standard of review:

This court has announced a two-part test for the reversal of a factfinder’s determinations: (1) the appellate court must find from the record that a reasonable factual basis does not exist for the finding of the trial court, and (2) the appellate court must further determine that the record establishes that the finding is clearly wrong (manifestly erroneous). See Mart v. Hill, 505 So.2d 1120, 1127 (La.1987). This test dictates that a reviewing court must do more than simply review the record for some evidence which supports or controverts the trial court’s findings. See id. The reviewing court must review the record in its entirety to determine whether the trial court’s finding was clearly wrong or manifestly erroneous. See id.

Lobell v. Rosenberg, 15-247 p. 10 (La. 10/14/15), 186 So.3d 83, 90.

A trial court is in a better position to make credibility determinations as it

has the benefit of examining the nuances of a witness’s testimony and demeanor.

Lopez v. Lopez, 00-660 (La.App. 3 Cir. 11/2/00), 772 So.2d 364.

The trial court set forth oral reasons for its findings at the conclusion of trial.

First, it found no rent was due because it had been paid through October 15, 2015,

with the rent for the month of November having been bartered for a clear coat

application by Guillotte to a car owned by Richard. Therefore, the claim for back

rent was dismissed. The trial court further found that the damages to the overhead

door pre-existed the fire based on the testimony, the chain system used to raise and

lower it, and the “constant” calls to have it repaired. Therefore, damages related to

the overheard door were dismissed as the trial court found “they probably existed

prior to the Guillottes taking possession of the place.” Relating to the sign, the trial

court found Richard failed to prove that it was not a gift given to Guillotte by

Richard. Therefore, it dismissed any claims relating to the sign.

2 Relating to the smoke damage, the trial court found:

[T]here’s no doubt that the cause of any damages to this building, the remainder of it . . . the fire damage . . . was definitely caused by Eugene Guillotte welding on a vehicle inside that building for its intended purposes, okay? . . .[T]he vehicle overheated, and it caught on fire, and that’s what caused the damages to the building[.]

....

The court finds that the condition of the building, as demonstrated in Defendant’s Exhibit 1, is the manner in which it was as of November 15, 2015, the day that the Guillottes exited the building in question. The lighting was repaired, and the building was pressure-washed. It looks like the entire – that entire section of that building did receive some soot damage to the – probably to the inside of the whole building, the purlings, the rafters, the plastic that holds up the – that rests on the purlings which holds up the insulation. Exhibit 9 reflects it very well . . . and P-7 and P-8. P-8 shows the damage to the lighting. Exhibit 9 shows the lighting repaired.

Defense Exhibit Number 1 shows the lighting repaired and soot removed from the rafters and the purlings and from the walls and from the plastic leaving – there’s a little bit of gray on that plastic[.] . . .

I’m going to assess you at $500 cost for leaving that gray on that plastic, okay, because you messed up the aesthetics of the building. Even though it is an industrial building for mechanic work, okay, it should still look pretty, because mechanics are people too.

James Stewart testified he did the assessment. The estimate of the damage is $36,378. And since then, the materials to repair the building have increased by eight percent. He inspected the building in March of 2016. He personally physically inspected the building and found heat damage to the roof. He has no idea if it was leaking. He doesn’t know if the building itself had burned. . . . The area that needed replacement of roof materials was put in the quote. He never visited the building before 2016.

He did testify that the structure underneath the metal structure, the purlings and I guess the rafter beams, structural – eave struts, that’s what they call them – needed to be replaced, because they got so hot the paint melted on them.

3 He also testified that the metal on top of the roof – remove and replace thirty-two feet by two hundred twenty-five foot roof with new three-inch insulation and twenty-six gauge RP galvalume aluminum in the amount of $21.600 – that was damaged by the fire.

I don’t understand – but I see no evidence of that other than his testimony. I’ve seen no photographs of damage to the metal. I find it hard to believe that the metal could be damaged, but the plastic underneath it was not damaged. But yet, then again, the purlings and the struts that were holding up the plastic got so hot the paint melted on them. But yet the plastic was not damaged. I find that incredible.

It says the front wall – needed to replace thirty-one sheets and the door trim on the OHD, $3,200. No, it just needs to be pressure-washed.

Same thing for the back wall. Replace seventy-five sheets in the amount of $7,655. What were the sheets made of? What type of material?

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Related

Mart v. Hill
505 So. 2d 1120 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1987)
Kenneth H. Lobell v. Cindy Ann Rosenberg
186 So. 3d 83 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2015)
Lopez v. Lopez
772 So. 2d 364 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2000)

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Joe Richard v. Eugene Guillotte, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-richard-v-eugene-guillotte-lactapp-2018.