La. Cotton Ass'n Wkrs'comp. Group Self-Insurance Fund v. Tri-Parish Gin Company, Inc.
This text of 624 So. 2d 461 (La. Cotton Ass'n Wkrs'comp. Group Self-Insurance Fund v. Tri-Parish Gin Company, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
LOUISIANA COTTON ASSOCIATION WORKERS' COMPENSATION GROUP SELF-INSURANCE FUND and Arthur J. Gallagher of Louisiana, Inc. D/B/A Broussard, Bush & Hurst as Fund Administrator, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
TRI-PARISH GIN COMPASNY, INC., Charles LaPrairie and Anthony Mose, Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*462 McGlinchey Stafford Lang, New Orleans by Peter L. Hilbert, Jr., Kathleen K. Charvet, Kneipp & Hastings, Monroe by Donald L. Kneipp, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Kantrow, Spaht, Weaver & Blitzer, Baton Rouge by Martin E. Golden, Randal J. Robert, for defendants-appellees.
Before MARVIN, HIGHTOWER and STEWART, JJ.
STEWART, Judge.
Louisiana Cotton Association Worker's Compensation Group Self-Insurance Fund and Arthur J. Gallagher of Louisiana, Inc. d/b/a Broussard, Bush and Hurst, as fund administrator (hereinafter referred to as "the Fund"), appeal the trial court judgment which sustained the exception of lis pendens which had been filed by Tri-Parish Gin Company, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as Tri-Parish). The Fund asserts that the trial court erred in granting the declinatory exception of lis pendens because the other suit, which had been filed in the Nineteenth Judicial Court had been effectively dismissed. We disagree.
FACTS
The Fund issued a worker's compensation self-insurance policy to Tri-Parish. Tri-Parish employees, Charles LaPrairie and Anthony Mose, were injured on October 5, 1992 in the course of their employment working with barges at Tri-Parish's facility located at the Pointe Coupee Port Commission in Simmesport, Louisiana. Tri-Parish made demand on the Fund for defense and indemnity from all claims of LaPrairie and Mose, and demanded that the Fund pay their compensation and medical benefits. The Fund took the position that w.c. benefits which may be owed to LaPrairie and Mose are provided by the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act and not the Louisiana Workers' Compensation Law, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 23:1035.2.
The parties then took the following procedural actions:
November 4, 1992Tri-Parish filed a lawsuit in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court, East Baton Rouge Parish, (hereinafter referred to as the East Baton Rouge Parish suit) against the Fund seeking declaration of the rights between the parties under their contract for participation in the Fund's group self-insurance program regarding this work-related accident.
November 5, 1992The Fund filed suit in the Fourth Judicial District Court, Ouachita Parish, (hereinafter referred to as the Ouachita Parish suit) against Tri-Parish and its *463 injured employees, seeking the same declaratory relief.
November 24, 1992Tri-Parish filed an exception of lis pendens in the Ouachita Parish suit, asserting that a prior suit had been filed in the Nineteenth Judicial District.
December 15, 1992The Fund filed an exception of improper venue in the East Baton Rouge Parish suit, asserting that venue would only be proper in Ouachita Parish because the insurance application and agreement provide that with regard to any dispute, "the parties stipulate that the proper venue for the legal action shall be at the location of the administrative office of the Fund," i.e., Monroe, Ouachita Parish, Louisiana.
January 29, 1993The Nineteenth Judicial District Court sustained the Fund's declinatory exception of improper venue. According to the parties, the Nineteenth Judicial District Court ordered the East Baton Rouge Parish suit transferred to the Fourth Judicial District Court on January 29, 1993. However, the judgment which sustains the venue exception makes no reference to either a transfer or dismissal of the East Baton Rouge Parish suit, pursuant to LSA-C.C.P. art. 931. In response thereto, Tri-Parish filed a motion for new trial which the trial court denied. Tri-Parish then filed an application for supervisory writs to the First Circuit Court of Appeal.
February 17, 1993The Fourth Judicial District Court sustained Tri-Parish's exception of lis pendens. The Fund subsequently filed an application for supervisory writs with this court to review this trial court ruling. In denying the writ application, we stated the following:
As the judgment of the 19th Judicial District Court of East Baton Rouge Parish sustaining the exception of improper venue and transferring the matter to Ouachita Parish was not a final judgment, the exception of lis pendens was properly sustained by the 4th Judicial District Court, Parish of Ouachita, pursuant to LSA-C.C.P. Art. 531.
The Fund now appeals the judgment which granted Tri-Parish's exception of lis pendens. We affirm.
DISCUSSION
At issue is whether the Nineteenth Judicial District Court's grant of the Fund's exception of improper venue means that the East Baton Rouge Parish suit was no longer pending at the time the Fourth Judicial District Court sustained Tri-Parish's exception of lis pendens.
A declinatory exception of lis pendens declines jurisdiction over a second suit where a prior suit is pending between the same parties, in the same capacities, on the same transaction or occurrence. LSA-C.C.P. arts. 531, 923, and 925(3).[1]
It is undisputed that both the East Baton Rouge Parish suit and the Ouachita Parish suit involve the same transaction or occurrence. Only the identity of the parties and the pendency of more than one suit are at issue. We therefore address each of these issues.
Identity of the Parties
The identity of parties requirement for lis pendens turns on whether the parties added or omitted would be necessary to reach a judgment on all of the issues asserted against the common parties in both suits. Fincher v. Insurance Corp. of America, 521 So.2d 488, 490 (La.App. 4th Cir.1988), writ denied, 522 So.2d 570 (La.1988). In Jensen Construction Co. v. DOTD, 542 So.2d 168, 171 (La.App. 1st Cir.1989), writ denied, 544 So.2d 408 (La.1989), the court observed that
The jurisprudence does not demand that the parties in the two lawsuits be physically identical. The "identity of parties" requirement is met whenever "the same parties, their successors, or others appear so *464 long as they share the same `quality' as parties". [Welch v. Crown Zellerbach Corporation, 359 So.2d 154, 156 (La.1978)].
Thus, where the parties not only share the same quality as parties but, in essence, their identities are virtually merged into one, to the extent of the policy limits, the parties are the same for the purposes of lis pendens. See Funai v. Air Center, Inc., 499 So.2d 669, 673-674 (La.App. 3d Cir.1986), and cases cited therein.
Tri-Parish filed suit in East Baton Rouge Parish against the Fund, Midwest Employers Casualty Co. (which, along with the Fund, issued the policy), Terry M. Duke (the Fund's insurance agent who marketed the policy), and ABC Ins. Co. The Fund, Midwest Employers Casualty Company and Terry M. Duke not only share the same quality as parties but, to the extent of the policy limits, share virtually the same identity and are identical parties for the purposes of lis pendens. See Funai, supra.
The Fund filed suit in Ouachita Parish against Tri-Parish, LaPrairie, and Mose. Neither LaPrairie nor Mose was a party to the insurance policy which forms the basis for the declaratory action.
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