Johnson v. Camanga

845 So. 2d 1140, 2002 La.App. 5 Cir. 1198, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 1201, 2003 WL 1969265
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 2003
DocketNo. 02-CA-1198
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 845 So. 2d 1140 (Johnson v. Camanga) 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
Johnson v. Camanga, 845 So. 2d 1140, 2002 La.App. 5 Cir. 1198, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 1201, 2003 WL 1969265 (La. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

|,SUSAN M. CHEHARDY, Judge.

This is a defamation suit in which the trial court ruled in favor of the plaintiff and awarded damages against several defendants. One of the defendants appeals. We affirm.

Rhonda Lee Johnson cohabited with Eugene R. “Gene” Camanga, Jr. for several years. One child was born of their relationship, a daughter, Nichole, on December 30,1987. Rhonda and Gene separated in 1991, when the child was four-and-a-half years old. During the first few years of her life Nichole spent a considerable amount of time with Gene’s parents, Dolores Camanga and Roy Camanga, even after Rhonda and Gene ended their cohabitation.

Sometime in 1992 disagreements arose between Rhonda and the elder Camangas over child-rearing techniques. Rhonda refused to allow the child to stay with the grandparents as she had previously done and placed her in day care. Gene filed a petition for custody, which resulted in a judgment granting joint custody of the child to Rhonda and Gene.

Subsequently Gene decided to seek full custody. His father, Roy Camanga, obtained a rap sheet from a friend in law enforcement that purported to show that Rhonda had been arrested for several crimes. In order to do so, Roy Camanga Lasked Rhonda for her Social Security number, on the pretext he wanted to use it to play the lottery.

In his petition for custody filed on December 21,1992, Gene alleged that Rhonda had been arrested for attempted crimes against nature, prostitution, and felony theft and that she had pleaded guilty to charges of prostitution. On the same date, Roy and Delores Camanga intervened in Gene’s custody proceeding with a pleading entitled “Petition For Relief Under Domestic Abuse Statute, Petition for Intervention and Petition for Custody,” in which they reiterated the allegations that Rhonda had a criminal history. They supported their son’s petition for sole custody and, alternatively, sought custody of the child themselves and sought relief under the Domestic Abuse Assistance statutes, La. R.S. 46:2131 et seq., for protection of the child.

Based on the allegations in the Camanga petitions, the district court signed an ex parte interim order granting interim custody to Roy and Delores Camanga.

In fact, the person named in the rap sheet was not Rhonda Lee Johnson, the plaintiff, but one Sheila Wilson alias Rhonda D. Johnson, who has a similar Social Security number. Rhonda Lee Johnson, the plaintiff, has no such criminal history. She was stationed in Europe on military duty at the time that Sheila Wilson a/k/a Rhonda D. Johnson was convicted.

After a hearing in January .1993, the trial court rendered an interim judgment granting Roy and Delores Camanga custody of the child, with Rhonda to have visitation. Following a full custody trial in November 1993, the court rendered judgment on November 2, 1993 granting Gene and Rhonda joint custody of the child, with each to have physical custody half the year and the other parent to have weekend and holiday visitation while the child was living with the other parent.

|40n December 20, 1993 Rhonda filed the petition in this matter, seeking dam[1143]*1143ages for defamation.1 The suit eventually went to trial in March 2002. The trial court rendered a written judgment on April 12, 2002, finding in favor of the plaintiff and awarding damages in the amount of $1,500.00 against Roy and Delores Ca-manga and in the amount of $7,500.00 against Eugene R. Camanga, Jr.

In lengthy oral reasons for judgment the trial court stated, in pertinent part:

I find that it is more probable than not, given the entire panoply of behavior ... that Mrs. Delores Camanga and Mr. Eugene Roy Camanga were present for that meeting between Benny Plaia and Harry Cabral and Gene Camanga, the biological father, since they were involved in everything before, during and since.
At any rate, it is uncontroverted that at that meeting a discussion was had where in it was discussed that the Social Security number for Rhonda Lee Johnson depicted in the rap sheet was not exactly the same as for the Rhonda Lee Johnson, the mother of the child....
Gene Camanga quite candidly testified that at the time in question ... he ... certainly knew her birth date ..., and the birth date depicted in the rap sheet is certainly not the same as the rap sheet of the Rhonda Lee Johnson before [this] Court....
* * *
On the contrary, it happened that Rhonda Lee Johnson ... was one of those people who went to work everyday and had the same job for years and years, and lived a relatively sane existence.
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It is relatively uncontroverted that the Camangas knew, that Gene Camanga, because it is uncontroverted that he was involved in the conversation with Cabral and Plaia, knew or should have known that this was not the same Rhonda Lee Johnson.
I find ... it is more probable than not that the older Camangas likewise were involved in this conversation, and at any rate all of them signed the affidavits attendant to the ex parte petition.... The petition which contained allegations of serious criminal conduct which is of a nature to include moral turpitude or immorality, and that Rthat being placed before the judge in an ex parte context is publication of the most serious, serious nature.
... [I]t was certainly placed in the petition in an attempt to convince a judicial officer to take a very, very serious act, which was to remove a child from a parent....
... [T]he allegation of prostitution, theft and crime against nature, when placed in the context of the balance of the allegations, cast Rhonda Lee Johnson in a light which was indefensible as a parent.
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The defense makes much of the fact that upon receipt of this information [establishing Rhonda was not the subject in the rap sheet] they asked no questions on this issue, and from their perspective the issue died.
It is imperative to note that when one looks forward at Judge Zeno’s reasons [1144]*1144for judgment, the issue did not die with regard to Judge Zeno.
... [T]he Camangas neither retracted the statement on the record, nor vacated that portion of their pleadings, nor filed amended pleadings deleting the untrue allegations. The pleadings sat in the record as they were from then to this day.
* * *
I must say parenthetically that Judge Zeno showed an incredible amount of restraint of not holding people in contempt of court for knowingly filing false statements in an ex parte motion.
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This Court finds that there was actual malice. All three Camangas signed the pleadings, and all more probably than not knew that the information contained with regard to the three arrests was untrue....
* * *
... I find first, that the defendants knew ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
845 So. 2d 1140, 2002 La.App. 5 Cir. 1198, 2003 La. App. LEXIS 1201, 2003 WL 1969265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-camanga-lactapp-2003.