Kellie Register and Phyllis Balser Versus Osman Construction, LLC, Master Builders and Renovation, LLC, John Alonso and Pether Alonso

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2024
Docket24-CA-253
StatusUnknown

This text of Kellie Register and Phyllis Balser Versus Osman Construction, LLC, Master Builders and Renovation, LLC, John Alonso and Pether Alonso (Kellie Register and Phyllis Balser Versus Osman Construction, LLC, Master Builders and Renovation, LLC, John Alonso and Pether Alonso) 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.

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Kellie Register and Phyllis Balser Versus Osman Construction, LLC, Master Builders and Renovation, LLC, John Alonso and Pether Alonso, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

KELLIE REGISTER AND PHYLLIS BALSER NO. 24-CA-253

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

OSMAN CONSTRUCTION, LLC, MASTER COURT OF APPEAL BUILDERS AND RENOVATION, LLC, JOHN ALONSO AND PETHER ALONSO STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 842-956, DIVISION "L" HONORABLE DONALD A. ROWAN, JR., JUDGE PRESIDING

November 20, 2024

SCOTT U. SCHLEGEL JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Stephen J. Windhorst, John J. Molaison, Jr., and Scott U. Schlegel

AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART SUS SJW JJM COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, KELLIE REGISTER AND PHYLLIS BALSER Bradford H. Walker Gerald D. Wasserman

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, MASTER BUILDERS AND RENOVATION, LLC, JOHN ALONSO AND PETHER ALONZO Cesar J. Vazquez Paul C. Fleming, Jr. SCHLEGEL, J.

Plaintiffs/Appellants Kellie Register’s and Phyllis Balser’s home in Kenner,

Louisiana suffered extensive damages during Hurricane Ida. Plaintiffs claim that

repairs to their home made by defendants, Master Builders and Renovation, LLC,

John Alonso, and Pether Alonso, were incomplete, substandard, and failed to pass

code inspections. In their petition, plaintiffs seek to hold individual defendants,

John and Pether Alonso, personally liable for the damages sustained because of the

substandard repairs. Defendants filed exceptions of vagueness and no cause of

action arguing that plaintiffs failed to cite to any legal authority to hold the

individual defendants personally liable. Defendants contend that John Alonso is

the sole member of Master Builders and Pether Alonso is an occasional employee.

In its April 9, 2024 judgment, the trial court granted the exceptions and determined

that neither John Alonso nor Pether Alonso could be held personally liable for any

allegations pled in the plaintiffs’ petition. Plaintiffs appeal this judgment.

After conducting a de novo review of the petition, we find that the trial court

erred when it granted defendants’ exceptions of vagueness and no cause of action

as it relates to Pether Alonso. Plaintiffs have sufficiently stated a cause of action

against Pether Alonso based on allegations that plaintiffs remitted substantial

payments in excess of $50,000.00 directly to Pether Alonso, rather than Master

Builders. With respect to John Alonso though, we agree that the facts alleged in

the petition regarding the basis for his personal liability are vague and affirm the

trial court’s ruling on the exception of vagueness. However, we find that the trial

court erred by also granting the exception of no cause of action. The court should

have instead denied the exception of no cause of action as moot and granted

plaintiffs the opportunity to amend their petition.

For these reasons and those discussed more fully below, we reverse the trial

court’s April 9, 2024 judgment granting the exceptions of no cause of action as to

24-CA-253 1 John and Pether Alonso and the exception of vagueness as to Pether Alonso. We

affirm the judgment granting the exception of vagueness as to John Alonso, but

grant plaintiffs thirty days to amend their petition with respect to their claim

against him.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In their petition filed on July 14, 2023, plaintiffs allege that Pether Alonso

represented that he was a contractor with Master Builders and offered to complete

the rebuild and renovation process of their home. Plaintiffs allege in the petition

that John Alonso is an “officer” of Master Builders, but do not allege any facts

regarding Pether’s employment status with Master Builders. Plaintiffs initially

decided to hire another contractor, Osman Construction, LLC. After discovering

that Osman’s repairs were allegedly substandard and deficient, plaintiffs assert that

they contacted Pether Alonso in January 2022 to take over the completion of the

repairs to their home. But the allegations in the petition are not clear as to the

exact defendants who contracted with plaintiffs:

11.

Plaintiffs contacted Pether Alonso in January 2022 to complete the reconstruction of the house, and both parties agreed to a contract for labor and materials offered by Master Builders and Pether Alonso.1

Plaintiffs allege that the first check they remitted on January 13, 2022, in the

amount of $25,000.00, was payable to Master Builders. However, additional

checks remitted in January, February and March 2022, totaling over $51,000.00

were all made payable directly to Pether Alonso. Plaintiffs claim that Pether

Alonso violated La. R.S. 37:2167(A) of the Louisiana Contractors Licensing Law

because he is not a licensed residential contractor.2 They contend that Pether used

1 Later in the petition, plaintiffs allege that they “contracted with defendants for construction work in excess of $75,000.00.” 2 La. R.S. 37:2167(A) was repealed by Acts 2022, No. 195, § 2, effective August 1, 2022. The Editors’ Notes for Acts 2022, No. 195 explain that the “Title of Act for Act 195 provides in part an intent to ‘revise and reorganize provisions related to contractors.’” The Disposition Table for Acts 2022, No. 195

24-CA-253 2 his brother, John, and John’s company, Master Builders, which held commercial

and residential contractor’s licenses, to complete the repairs. Plaintiffs allege that

John Alonso allowed Pether to act with apparent authority on behalf of Master

Builders, and that Master Builders and John Alonso also acted in violation of the

Louisiana Contractors Licensing Law by allowing Pether to perform work while

knowing he lacked the requisite residential contractor’s license.

According to the petition, the repairs performed by defendants were

incomplete, unsatisfactory, and defective. Plaintiffs specifically claim that the

sheetrock was damaged due to protruding screws; tiles in the bathroom showers

were cracking; floors were uneven, stained and some areas were not grouted; walls

were enclosed prior to inspection; and defendants’ work failed a code inspection

by the City of Kenner on September 8, 2022. Plaintiffs further contend that the

property cannot be sold due to these numerous defects, and seek to recover all

funds that they paid to defendants and third parties for materials. They also seek

any additional costs required to complete the repairs to their home, damages for the

loss of use and enjoyment of their home, and penalties, attorney fees, and courts

costs.

In response to the petition, defendants filed exceptions of no cause of action,

vagueness, and improper service on September 21, 2023.3 Defendants argued in

their exception of no cause of action that plaintiffs did not have a cause of action

against Pether Alonso in his individual capacity because he is an occasional

employee of Master Builders and plaintiffs failed to cite to an authority under

which an employee could be held personally liable. They also argued that John

indicates that former sections of La. R.S. 37:2167 are now contained in La. R.S. 37:2153, 2156.1 and 2158. 3 The exception of improper service is not at issue on appeal. The parties represented to the trial court that they resolved all service issues prior to the hearing on the exceptions.

24-CA-253 3 Alonso is the sole member and manager of Master Builders and that plaintiffs did

not allege any facts that could serve as a basis to pierce the corporate veil.

Plaintiffs filed an opposition to the exceptions of vagueness and no cause of

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Kellie Register and Phyllis Balser Versus Osman Construction, LLC, Master Builders and Renovation, LLC, John Alonso and Pether Alonso, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellie-register-and-phyllis-balser-versus-osman-construction-llc-master-lactapp-2024.