Lafayette City Parish Consolidated Government v. Dien's Auto Salvage, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 2005
DocketCA-0005-0201
StatusUnknown

This text of Lafayette City Parish Consolidated Government v. Dien's Auto Salvage, Inc. (Lafayette City Parish Consolidated Government v. Dien's Auto Salvage, 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.

Bluebook
Lafayette City Parish Consolidated Government v. Dien's Auto Salvage, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

05-201

LAFAYETTE CITY PARISH CONSOLIDATED GOVERNMENT

VERSUS

DIEN'S AUTO SALVAGE, INC., ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 2003-0507 HONORABLE JOHN DAMIAN TRAHAN, DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Michael G. Sullivan, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

John Alfred Mouton, III P. O. Box 3244 Lafayette, LA 70502 Telephone: (337) 233-1199 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellee - Lafayette City Parish Consolidated Government

Kaliste Joseph Saloom, III Saloom & Saloom Post Office Drawer 2999 Lafayette, LA 70502-2999 Telephone: (337) 234-0111 COUNSEL FOR: Defendants/Appellants - Dien Duc Huynh, Dien's Auto Salvage, Inc., and Tuyetnga Thi Vo THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

The Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government brought an

enforcement action against Defendants, Dien’s Auto Salvage Inc., Dien Duc Huynh,

and Tuyetnga Thi Vo, for violating 1997 and 1998 City-Parish ordinances requiring

Defendants to fully fence their salvage yard which had been in operation since 1989.

Defendants had not complied with previous ordinances requiring lesser fencing and

filed an exception of prescription. The trial court ordered enforcement. Defendants

appealed. We find that the enforcement action of the City-Parish is not prescribed for

the reasons set forth below. We affirm.

I.

ISSUE

We must decide whether the trial court erred in denying Defendants’

exception of prescription.

II.

FACTS

Defendants own and operate an auto salvage yard at 6157-C Johnston

Street in Lafayette, Louisiana. The business opened in 1989. The Lafayette City

Ordinance, Chapter 14 ¼, enacted in 1965 and amended in 1977, had declared land

with junked items a public nuisance and required such property to be enclosed on all

boundary lines with a non-transparent fence or wall, seven to ten feet high. Chain

link fences were specifically allowed, as long as they contained appropriate slats in

the wire mesh to make the fencing non-transparent. Defendants’ business was not

fenced and not in compliance.

1 In 1996, the city and parish created a consolidated form of government,

and in 1997 the Lafayette City-Parish Council adopted Ordinance O-363-97. This

ordinance repealed, rescinded, and replaced Lafayette City Ordinance, Chapter 14¼

(Junked Property) and Lafayette Parish Ordinance, Chapters 12.5 (Junked Property)

and 15 (Nuisances) and rewrote portions of the existing codes for the City-Parish.

Ordinance O-363-97 again declared the presence of junked vehicles to

be a public nuisance and required that such property be fully enclosed by a seven to

ten foot fence, uniform in height and color, of solid and rigid construction, and in the

color beige, brown, black, dark green, or gray. The fence was required to be

constructed in such a manner and with such materials that rendered it capable of

resisting winds of 50 miles per hour. Certain facilities that were already in

compliance with other pre-existing ordinances were exempt from the seven-foot

height requirement. This ordinance was written into law on December 1, 1997 and

carried a one-year phase-in provision that made the ordinance effective on December

1, 1998. Additionally, the ordinance contained a provision stating that each day and

each act in violation of the ordinance would constitute a separate offense.

In 1998, Ordinance O-107-98 amended Ordinance O-363-97 to provide

a more stringent fencing requirement than any of its predecessors, increasing the wind

resistance requirement such that the fence must be able to sustain 100 mile per hour

winds. Again, certain facilities already in compliance with pre-existing ordinances

were exempt from the height requirement. All other provisions of O-363-97, not in

conflict or specifically changed, were to remain in full force and effect. This included

the one-year phase-in provision. Ordinance O-107-98 was written into law on April

23, 1998, and therefore became effective on April 23, 1999.1

1 The City-Parish brief states the compliance date for Ordinance O-107-98 as April 28, 1999. However, the copy of the Ordinance attached as an exhibit in the record indicates that the City-Parish Council President signed the approval statement on April 23. In the present case, the five day

2 On April 24, 1998, Lafayette Consolidated Government, Environmental

Quality Division, sent Defendants an “informational notice” of Ordinance O-363-97,

included the language of the amended version with the new wind resistance

requirement, and gave them notice of an effective date of December 1, 1998 for

compliance.2 The notice informed Defendants that “Each act, or each day in violation

of any provision hereof shall be deemed a separate offense.” Defendants did not

comply.

Again on May 4, 1999, the City-Parish notified Defendants that an April

29, 1999 inspection revealed that they were in violation of the ordinance. The City-

Parish again provided Defendants with the precise language of the ordinance and the

specific requirements for the fence enclosure, and gave Defendants thirty days from

the date of the notice to comply. Defendants did not comply.

On August 31, 1999, the law offices of John Mouton sent Defendants a

formal demand requiring them to comply with the fence requirements within thirty

days. Defendants did not comply.

On November 19, 2002, the Lafayette Consolidated Government,

Director of Public Works, sent Defendants a formal notice enclosing a copy of the

Ordinance, codified in The Lafayette City-Parish Code of Ordinances at Division 2,

Section 34-53, which again contained the precise requirements for constructing the

fence. This notice gave Defendants thirty days to comply with the Ordinance in order

difference does not affect our decision, and we are not required to reconcile the discrepancy. 2 It appears that this April 1998 notice to Defendants went out the day after the 1998 amendment was signed into law. The notice referenced the 1997 ordinance but used the updated language from the 1998 amendment. Therefore, it seems that the compliance/effective date given to Defendants should have been one year from the new 1998 amendment, but instead provided a December 1998 compliance date for the December 1997 amendment. The correct compliance/effective date of the April 1998 amendment, pursuant to the one-year phase-in provision, would have been April 1999. However, this error in the notice is of no moment because there were several subsequent notices with additional grace periods further extending the date for compliance.

3 to avoid legal proceedings. Therefore, the last compliance date given to Defendants

was December 19, 2002. Defendants did not comply.

On January 29, 2003, Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government

filed its Petition for Injunctive Relief and for Abatement of a Nuisance. Defendants

answered the suit and filed exceptions of prescription and no right of action.3

The trial court denied Defendants’ exception of prescription and ordered

Defendants to construct the fence according to Ordinance O-363-97, as amended by

Ordinance O-107-98.

III.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Standard of Review

An appellate court may not set aside a trial court’s findings of fact in

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