Lake Terrace Property Owners Association, Inc. v. the City of New Orleans, Board of Zoning Adjustments and Celso Eric Hernandez

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 2025
Docket2024-CA-0577
StatusPublished

This text of Lake Terrace Property Owners Association, Inc. v. the City of New Orleans, Board of Zoning Adjustments and Celso Eric Hernandez (Lake Terrace Property Owners Association, Inc. v. the City of New Orleans, Board of Zoning Adjustments and Celso Eric Hernandez) 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
Lake Terrace Property Owners Association, Inc. v. the City of New Orleans, Board of Zoning Adjustments and Celso Eric Hernandez, (La. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

LAKE TERRACE PROPERTY * NO. 2024-CA-0577 OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC. * VERSUS COURT OF APPEAL * THE CITY OF NEW FOURTH CIRCUIT ORLEANS, BOARD OF * ZONING ADJUSTMENTS AND STATE OF LOUISIANA CELSO ERIC HERNANDEZ *******

CONSOLIDATED WITH: CONSOLIDATED WITH:

LAKE TERRACE PROPERTY NO. 2024-CA-0758 OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.

VERSUS

THE CITY OF NEW ORLEANS, BOARD OF ZONING ADJUSTMENTS AND CELSO ERIC HERNANDEZ

APPEAL FROM CIVIL DISTRICT COURT, ORLEANS PARISH NO. 2023-05362, DIVISION “C” Honorable Sidney H. Cates, Judge ****** Judge Nakisha Ervin-Knott ****** (Court composed of Judge Daniel L. Dysart, Judge Nakisha Ervin-Knott, Judge Monique G. Morial)

Keith A. Doley ATTORNEY AT LAW 1554 North Broad Street New Orleans, LA 70119

COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE

Shawn Lindsay DEPUTY CITY ATTORNEY Donesia D. Turner CITY ATTORNEY CITY OF NEW ORLEANS 1300 Perdido Street Suite 5E03 New Orleans, LA 70112 Robert J. Ellis, Jr. Salvador I. Bivalacqua Will C. Griffin GRIFFIN & BIVALACQUA, LLC 650 Poydras Street, Suite 2615 New Orleans, LA 70130

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS

MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL DISMISSED; APPEALS CONVERTED TO WRITS; WRITS GRANTED; AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART; JUDGMENT RENDERED.

FEBRUARY 18, 2025 NEK Appellants, the City of New Orleans (“the City”) and Celso Eric Hernandez DLD (“Mr. Hernandez”), seek review of the district court’s May 30, 2024 judgment, MGM which held the Board of Zoning Adjustments (“BZA”)’s denial of Lake Terrace

Property Owners Association, Inc.1 (“LTPOA”)’s appeal was “arbitrary,

unreasonable, and an abuse of discretion.” The district court vacated the BZA’s May

1, 2023 decision and May 11, 2023 disposition denying LTPOA’s appeal of the

January 31, 2023 zoning verification and remanded this matter to the BZA “for a

full evidentiary hearing and vote by the entire Board.” For the reasons that follow,

we dismiss LTPOA’s motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction; convert the June 18,

2024 motion for suspensive appeal and June 28, 2024 motion for devolutive appeal

1 According to LTPOA’s petition for writ of certiorari and/or judicial review, “LTPOA is a non-

profit corporation organized under Louisiana law and is domiciled and maintains its principal place of business in the Parish of Orleans, State of Louisiana.” LTPOA’s membership is “comprised of owners of residential property within the Lake Terrace Subdivision (bounded by Allen Toussaint Boulevard, London Park, Lake Pontchartrain, and Bayou St. John).” The petition further provides, in pertinent part:

Among the purposes of LTPOA set forth its Articles of Incorporation are to promote, cultivate, and develop a spirit of cooperation and mutuality among its members in the Lake Terrace Subdivision; to maintain and strictly enforce restrictions applicable to the Subdivision; to promote and encourage high standards of residential development and maintenance, and to discourage any offensive or obnoxious activity or misuse of property within the Subdivision.

1 to applications for supervisory writs; grant the writs; affirm in part the district court’s

ruling that the BZA’s denial of LTPOA’s appeal was “arbitrary, unreasonable, and

an abuse of discretion”; reverse in part the district court’s remand of the matter to

the BZA “for a full evidentiary hearing and vote by the entire Board”; and render

judgment granting LTPOA’s appeal of the BZA’s May 1, 2023 decision and May

11, 2023 disposition.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Mr. Hernandez is the owner of residential property located at 6419 Caldwell

Drive (“the Property”) in New Orleans, Louisiana. He purchased said Property on

February 25, 2022, from Stephen Covington Guilbault (“Mr. S. Guilbault”) and

George G. Guilbault, Jr. Prior to Mr. Hernandez’s purchase, the Property was

originally owned by Ms. Palma Covington Guilbault (“Ms. Covington”) from

December 11, 1980 until her death in 2020.2 The Property is located in the Lake

Terrace Subdivision, a residential district that is zoned SR-S Single-Family

Residential District, under the City of New Orleans Comprehensive Zoning

Ordinance (“CZO”), and consists of a principal building and second rear structure

that was originally built as a pool cabana.

After purchasing the Property, Mr. Hernandez began renovation work on the

principal building and rear structure. As part of the renovation work on the Property,

Mr. Hernandez applied for a renovation permit – Building Permit No. 22-07631-

RNVN – to the City of New Orleans, Department of Safety and Permits (“the

Department”), which specifically referenced remodeling the kitchen area in the rear

2 According to the Act of Cash Sale dated February 25, 2022, the property was originally “acquired

by Palma Covington Guilbault, wife of/and George G. Guilbault…by Credit Sale dated December 11, 1980” and “[f]urther acquired by Palma Covington from George G. Guilbault by Act of Partition and Settlement of Community dated February 16, 1983….”

2 structure. The Department had questions concerning the longevity and existence of

the rear structure as a second dwelling unit and requested documentation – such as

affidavits, utility accounts, floorplans, leases, and photographs – in order to

determine whether there was a documented legal history for an Established Two-

Family Dwelling under CZO Sec. 20.3.W. The Department also stated that the

zoning division would have to issue an official zoning verification prior to issuing a

permit.

The Department considered the following documents submitted by Mr.

Hernandez and internal research including but not limited to the following: (1) a

notarized letter from former property owner, Mr. S. Guilbault, attesting that the rear

structure was completed in the 1980’s; (2) photographs of the exterior architectural

design and elements of the rear structure which were the same era as those of the

main house (bricks and windows); (3) Google imagery that revealed the rear

structure had been in existence since images had been recorded in 2004; (4) Orleans

Parish Tax Assessor’s records which described the rear structure as a cabana and

included graphic square footage/building footprint representations; (5) interior

photographs of the rear structure that showed a bathroom with tilework that appeared

decades old, kitchen, laundry room, bedroom, and living space; and (6) a

construction estimate provided as part of the initial renovation permit, with specific

reference to remodeling the kitchen in the rear structure.

On January 31, 2023, the Director of the Department determined the rear

structure was used as a separate dwelling unit for over five years and had attained

status as a permitted use as a two-unit Established Two-Family Dwelling in

accordance with CZO Sec. 20.3.W.1. The Department issued Building Permit No.

3 22-07631-RNVN on February 15, 2023, which allowed renovation of the Property,

including a new kitchen in the rear structure to be used as a dwelling unit.

A month after the Department issued the building permit, the president of

LTPOA, on behalf of LTPOA, appealed the Director’s decision to the BZA, which

was assigned BZA Docket No. 041-23. LTPOA asserted the Director’s decision was

erroneous because there was no evidence the rear structure was used as a two-family

residence. In the alternative, LTPOA asserted that if the rear structure could be

considered a two-family dwelling under the CZO’s provisions regarding established

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Lake Terrace Property Owners Association, Inc. v. the City of New Orleans, Board of Zoning Adjustments and Celso Eric Hernandez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-terrace-property-owners-association-inc-v-the-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-2025.