Laurie V. Moore v. Edward J. Vauthier, III, and L&E One, LLC and L&E II, LLC

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 19, 2024
Docket2023CA1046
StatusUnknown

This text of Laurie V. Moore v. Edward J. Vauthier, III, and L&E One, LLC and L&E II, LLC (Laurie V. Moore v. Edward J. Vauthier, III, and L&E One, LLC and L&E II, LLC) 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
Laurie V. Moore v. Edward J. Vauthier, III, and L&E One, LLC and L&E II, LLC, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

j FIRST CIRCUIT

2023 CA 1046

LAURIE V. MOORE

VERSUS

EDWARD J. VAUTHIER, III, AND L& E ONE, LLC AND L& E II, LLC

JUDGMENT RENDERED: APR 19 2024

Appealed from the Twenty -Second Judicial District Court Parish of St. Tammany • State of Louisiana Docket Number 2022- 12281 • Division F

The Honorable Vincent J. Lobello, Presiding Judge

David M. McDonald COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT Molly M. Jones PLAINT{ FP--- Laurie V. Moore John D. Perez Metairie, Louisiana

Richard A. Tonry, II COUNSEL FOR APPELLEES Raymond J. Brinson DEFENOAMrs Edward J. Vauthier, Brian L. Glorioso III; L& E One, LLC; L& E, II, LLC; S. Michele Blanchard and the Succession of Edward J. Slidell, Louisiana Vauthier, Jr.

BEFORE; WELCH, WOLFE, AND STROMBERG, LTJ. WELCH, J.

In this quitclaim nullity action, plaintiff sought to annul two quit claims on

the basis of fraud that were executed approximately nine years prior to the filing of

the nullity action. Defendants filed a dilatory exception raising the objection of

vagueness and a peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription, arguing

that plaintiff' s nullity action was prescribed under the five-year period set forth in

La. C.C. art. 2032 for relative nullities. Following a hearing, the trial court sustained

defendants' prescription exception and denied the vagueness exception as moot. For

the reasons discussed herein, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The plaintiff, Laurie V. Moore, instituted this action on May 26, 2022 to annul

two quitclaims; plaintiff also filed an amended and supplemental petition. In her

petitions, plaintiff named as defendants her brother, Edward Vauthier, III (" EV3");

L& E One, LLC (" L& E One"); L& E II, LLC (" L& E II"); and the Succession of

Edward Vauthier, Jr. (" EVJ"). Plaintiff alleged that her father, EVJ, and her brother,

EV3, created two limited liability companies, L& E One and L& E II, which plaintiff

believed stood for " Laurie & Edward as One" in order to provide protection for

certain income- producing property co -owned by plaintiff, her brother, and her

father. Plaintiff argued that EV3 and/ or EVJ conspired to deprive her of her interest

in L& E One and L& E II and alleged defendants " utilized fraudulent and misleading

tactics to convince [ plaintiff) to sign" two quitclaim deeds on July 30, 2013, that

purportedly transferred her interest in the co -owned property to L& E One and L& E

II. She further alleged that she was " unaware that [ L& E One] and [ L& E II] were

solely owned" by EVJ and EV3. Plaintiff alleged that "[ fJurther perpetuating his

scheme," her brother waited until after the death of their father' to file the quitclaims

1 Plaintiff states her father passed away on January 14, 2020. EVJ' s ownership in L& E One and L& E 11 was placed into the Succession of Edward Vauthier, Jr., which was opened on March 10, 2020.

2 into the conveyance office on March 2, 2020. Plaintiff alleged that her brother

committed fraud pursuant to La. C. C. art. 1953 by using misrepresentation and

suppression of the truth with the intention of obtaining an unjust advantage, entitling

plaintiff to nullity of the quitclaims, any damages related to the loss of use, loss of

fruits, and/ or loss of the ability to make insurance claims against the property, and

attorney' s fees.

Defendants filed a dilatory exception raising the objection of vagueness' and

a peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription. In their supporting

memorandum, defendants argued that EVJ created the two limited liability

companies on July 29, 2013, of which EVJ was the sole member and of which EVJ

and EV3 were the sole managers. Also on July 29, 2013, EVJ drafted a last will and

testament and left all of this property to his son, EV3, including the property at issue

in the quitclaim deeds. Defendants argued that on July 30, 2013, the plaintiff, EVJ,

and EV3 entered into two separate quitclaim deeds that purportedly transferred all

of the parties' interest in four immovable properties to L& E One and L& E 11,

3 respectively.

Defendants contended that plaintiff s action for annulment was prescribed on

the face of the pleadings under the five-year period set forth in La. C. C. art. 2032 for

relative nullities. Defendants argue that over eight years had passed since plaintiff

signed and agreed to the quitclaim deeds— July 30, 2013— and the time she

instituted her nullity action— May 26, 2022. Defendants argued that plaintiff had the

burden to show that her nullity action had not prescribed.

z We pretermit any discussion of the vagueness exception, as that ruling is not at issue on appeal.

3 Defendants stated that the first quitclaim deed transferred the parties' interest in the property Municipal No. 57458 Dunbar Drive, Slidell, Louisiana 70460 and Municipal No, 2033- 35 Roosevelt Boulevard, Kenner, Louisiana 70062 to L& E One. Defendants claimed the second quitclaim deed transferred the parties' interest in the property Municipal No. 2726-28 Panama Street, Kenner, Louisiana 70062 and Municipal No. 2705- 10 Huntsville Street, Kenner, Louisiana 70062 to L& E II.

3 Plaintiff opposed defendants' exceptions. Plaintiff stated that she was " under

the impression that [ L& E One] and [ L& E I1] would belong to" her and her brother

after the death of their father based on the company' s name " L& E," i.e., " Laurie and

Edward as One." Plaintiff contended that she " was unaware" that her father' s last

will and testament " would leave her out completely," which she did not discover

until after EVJ' s death on January 14, 2020. She further argued that EV3 did not file

the quitclaim deeds into the records of the conveyance office until March 2, 2020,

two months after EVJ' s death. Plaintiff claimed that she did not discover the alleged

fraud until after the death of her father in 2020; therefore, she argued that

prescription did not begin to run until 2020. Plaintiff argued that she filed suit two

years after her discovery of any alleged fraud, well within the five-year prescriptive

period for relative nullities provided for in La. C. C. art. 2032.

At the hearing on defendants' exceptions, the trial court sustained defendants'

exception of prescription and denied the exception of vagueness as moot. Thereafter,

the trial court signed a judgment on March 29, 2023, in conformity with its oral

ruling and dismissed all of plaintiff' s claims against defendants with prejudice. The

trial court also denied defendants' exception of vagueness as moot. Plaintiff now

appeal S. 4

PRESCRIPTION OF ACTION FOR RELATIVE NULLITY

An action for nullity alleging fraud is a relative nullity, not an absolute nullity.

See Radcliffe 10, L.L.C. v. Burger, 2016- 0768 ( La. 1/ 25/ 17), 219 So. 3d 296, 303

n. 19; United Most Worshipful King George' s Grand Lodge A.F. & A. Masons

v. Lewis, 2021- 1326 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 418122), 342 So.3d 36, 40. As set forth in La.

C.C. art. 2032, an action of annulment of a relatively null contract must be brought

within five years from the time the ground for nullity either ceased, as in the case of

a Plaintiff filed a motion for devolutive appeal on May 27, 2023.

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Laurie V. Moore v. Edward J. Vauthier, III, and L&E One, LLC and L&E II, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurie-v-moore-v-edward-j-vauthier-iii-and-le-one-llc-and-le-ii-lactapp-2024.