Kenneth M. Dean v. Anthony Dimattia, also known as Anthony Paul Miller

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 2021
Docket2021CA0288, 2021CA0289
StatusUnknown

This text of Kenneth M. Dean v. Anthony Dimattia, also known as Anthony Paul Miller (Kenneth M. Dean v. Anthony Dimattia, also known as Anthony Paul Miller) 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
Kenneth M. Dean v. Anthony Dimattia, also known as Anthony Paul Miller, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2021 CA 0288

KENNETH M. DEAN

VERSUS

ANTHONY DIMATTIA, also known as ANTHONY PAUL MILLER

A n CONSOLIDATED WITH

S 2021 CA 0289

V KENNETH M. DEAN

TYFFANIE A. VIAL AND THE TITLE SOURCE OF LOUISIANA, L.L.C.

Judgment Rendered: OCT 0 4 2021

Appealed from the 21st Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Tangipahoa State of Louisiana Case No. 2017- 0002224 Consolidated With Case No. 2018- 0000479

The Honorable Robert H. Morrison, III, Judge Presiding

Albert J. Nicaud Counsel for Defendant/Appellant

Jeffrey M. Siemssen Anthony Dimattia Brett D. Guepet, Jr. Metairie, Louisiana Glen R. Galbraith Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee Lesh S. Bolner Kenneth M. Dean Hammond, Louisiana

P. Mike Boyd Counsel for Defendants/ Appellees

Laura F. Ashley Tyffanie A. Vial and The Title New Orleans, Louisiana Source of Louisiana, L.L.C.

BEFORE: McDONALD, LANIER, AND WOLFE, JJ.

01 LANIER, J.

In the instant appeal, defendant, Anthony Dimattia, challenges two

judgments of the district court concerning his eviction from the property located at

39245 West Brickyard Road, Springfield, Louisiana (" the Brickyard Property")

For the reasons that follow, we recall the rule to show cause, vacate the June 8,

2020 judgment, reinstate the June 2, 2020 judgment, dismiss the appeal, and

remand for further proceedings.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff, Kenneth M. Dean, is the court-appointed curator of his interdicted

parents, William E. Dean, Jr. and Linda Rabalais Dean (" the Interdicts").

According to the record, Mr. Dean and Mr. Dimattia have been involved in several

ongoing business dealings related to various real estate transactions. Relative to

the instant appeal, Mr. Dimattia avers that he agreed to purchase the Brickyard

Property from the Interdicts. In exchange, Mr. Dimattia asserts that he agreed to

transfer two pieces of his immovable property to the Interdicts (" the Highway 22

Property" and " the Bud Juban Property"), enter into a " credit deed" and promissory

note, and settle amounts owed to Mr. Dimattia for services he provided Mr. Dean

and the Interdicts.

Mr. Dean filed suit on August 9, 2017, to annul the sale of the Brickyard

Property, arguing that because there was no court approval prior to the sale, the

sale was null.' In response, Mr. Dimattia filed an answer, generally denying the

allegations of the petition, and a reconventional demand seeking: 1) the annulment

of the transfer of the Highway 22 Property and the Bud Juban Property to the

1 Mr. Dean subsequently filed suit on February 9, 2018, against Tyffanie A. Vial, The Title Source of Louisiana, L.L.C., and their respective insurance companies, to recover damages as a result of negligence in transferring the title of the Brickyard Property to Mr. Dimattia. Mr. Dimattia filed a motion to consolidate the two cases, and on October 4, 2018, the parties entered into a consent judgment regarding the consolidation of the matters. However, there are no issues relating to the second suit before us on appeal.

3 Interdicts; 2) a money judgment for the amounts Mr. Dimattia paid to Mr. Dean on

the promissory note regarding the Brickyard Property; 3) a money judgment for all

rents received by the Interdicts on the properties Mr. Dimattia transferred; and 4) a

money judgment for Mr. Dean's purported breaches of contract for Mr. Dimattia's

services.

Thereafter, Mr. Dean filed a motion for partial summary judgment seeking

the annulment of the sale of the Brickyard Property. On March 26, 2019, the

district court signed a judgment granting the motion for partial summary judgment

in favor of Mr. Dean, finding that the " credit deed," which purported to transfer the

Brickyard Property from the Interdicts to Mr. Dimattia, was a relative nullity.

On June 5, 2019, Mr. Dean filed a motion for eviction, noting that despite

amicable demand, Mr. Dimattia refused to vacate the premises of the Brickyard

Property. Mr. Dean alleged that Mr. Dimattia had allowed the insurance on the

property to lapse and made " works on the property in a wetlands area without a

permit from the Army Corps of Engineers." Citing La. Code Civ. P. art. 4701, Mr.

Dean asserted that he had delivered a written notice to vacate to Mr. Dimattia and

that more than five days had elapsed since delivery of said notice. The motion for

eviction was heard on July 29, 2019, at which time the motion was denied as

premature.

In May 2020, Mr. Dean filed a motion for reconsideration of eviction,

arguing that despite amicable demand, Mr. Dimattia still refused to vacate the

premises of the Brickyard Property and surrender possession to the rightful

owners. In a judgment signed on June 2, 2020, the district court inexplicably

ordered that Mr. Dean be evicted from the Brickyard Property. Subsequently, on

June 8, 2020, the district court, on its own motion amended the judgment, ordering

2 the eviction of Mr. Dimattia. This appeal, of both the June 2, 2020 judgment and

the June 8, 2020 judgment, by Mr. Dimattia followed.2

DISCUSSION

After the appeal record was lodged, this court issued a Show Cause Order,

noting while the June 2, 2020 judgment was included in the record, the record did

not contain the June 8, 2020 judgment. The Show Cause Order further indicated it

was unclear which judgment was before this Court and whether multiple appeals

should have been lodged pursuant to Mr. Dimattia' s " October 5, 2020 motion for

appeal that seeks review of two different judgments." In response to the show

cause order, the parties filed briefs, each arguing that the June 8, 2020 judgment

was signed by the district court to correct a " typographical error" in the June 2,

2020 judgment that mistakenly named " Kenneth Dean" as the party to be evicted

rather than " Anthony Dimattia." Thereafter, Mr. Dimattia filed a motion to

supplement the record with the June 8, 2020 judgment, which motion was granted

by this court. Because both judgments are now in the record before us, we recall

the rule to show cause and address the problems we have noted in the two

judgments rendered by the district court.

With regard to the June 8, 2020 judgment, the issue is whether the judgment

is properly before us for review, as the change made by the district judge was

clearly a substantive change. The law provides for only limited amendment of

final judgments. Specifically, La. Code Civ. P. art. 1951 provides, " On motion of

the court or any party, a final judgment may be amended at any time to alter the

phraseology of the judgment, but not its substance, or to correct errors of

calculation." Article 1951 contemplates the correction of a " clerical error" in a

2 Although Mr. Dimattia originally applied for supervisory review of the district court's June 2, 2020 ruling, this court granted the writ application for the limited purpose of remanding the matter to the district court with instructions to grant an appeal to Mr. Dimattia of the June 2, 2020 order as well as the June 8, 2020 order, should Mr. Dimattia seek to appeal said judgments. See Dean v. Dimattia, 2020- 0564 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 9/ 18/ 20) ( unpublished writ action).

5 final judgment but does not authorize substantive amendments. Bourgeois v.

Kost, 2002- 2785 ( La.

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