MOREHOUSE PARISH HOSP. v. Pettit

630 So. 2d 1338, 1994 WL 10195
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 19, 1994
Docket25396-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 630 So. 2d 1338 (MOREHOUSE PARISH HOSP. v. Pettit) 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
MOREHOUSE PARISH HOSP. v. Pettit, 630 So. 2d 1338, 1994 WL 10195 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

630 So.2d 1338 (1994)

MOREHOUSE PARISH HOSPITAL SERVICE DISTRICT dba Morehouse General Hospital, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Sharon Kay PETTIT and Nathan Pettit, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 25396-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 19, 1994.

*1340 Rankin, Yeldell, Herring & Katz by Richard A. Bailly, Bastrop, for appellant, Morehouse Parish Hosp.

C. Daniel Street, Monroe, for appellees, Sharon Kay Pettit and Nathan Pettit.

Blaine Adkins, Monroe, for appellee, C. Daniel Street.

Before MARVIN, SEXTON and BROWN, JJ.

SEXTON, Judge.

The plaintiff/creditor appeals a partial summary judgment in favor of the defendant/debtors dismissing plaintiff's suit on open account. Plaintiff also here appeals a separate judgment awarding sanctions against plaintiff and its attorney as a result of an amending petition filed against the defendants' attorney on the same basis. The defendants answer seeking dismissal of the entire suit and additional attorney fees as sanctions. We amend the trial judge court judgment with respect to the partial summary judgment to reject all of plaintiff's demands. We affirm the judgment awarding sanctions.

At issue in this appeal are disputed interpretations of obligations incurred in a letter agreement between the two defendant/debtors and the plaintiff creditor. The agreement was reached by letters exchanged between the parties' attorneys after suit on open account was filed by the plaintiff/creditor. In the agreement, plaintiff agreed to dismiss the suit in exchange for a promissory note executed by the defendant/debtors. Defendants gave plaintiff the note, but plaintiff never dismissed the suit. Then, several years after the note was given, plaintiff amended and supplemented its original petition alleging the promissory note as an alternative basis for recovery. Plaintiff also added debtors' attorney as a defendant based upon allegations that the attorney promised to pay the plaintiff when recovery was made in a separate lawsuit filed by defendants. The trial court partially granted debtors' motion for summary judgment by dismissing creditor's claim to the extent it was not based upon the promissory note. Additionally, the trial court granted the defendant attorney's motion for summary judgment and a motion for sanctions filed by the attorney against the creditor and its attorney. Creditor appeals these judgments and is joined by its attorney in appealing the award of sanctions. Debtors answer the appeal seeking dismissal of the entire suit as prayed for in their original motion for summary judgment. Debtors' attorney also requests an award of additional attorney fees for defense of the trial court's award of sanctions on appeal.

On August 3, 1987, Morehouse Parish Hospital d/b/a Morehouse General Hospital (hereinafter "plaintiff") filed suit on open account against Sharon Kay Pettit and her husband, Nathan Pettit (hereinafter "defendants"), to recover the sum of $3,068.36, plus legal interest, attorney fees and court costs. The charges arose out of medical services provided to Sharon Pettit, the payment of which were guaranteed by Nathan Pettit.

Defendants answered the suit with a general denial; however, in a letter dated August 13, 1987 from their attorney, Mr. C. Daniel Street, to plaintiff's attorney, Mr. Alex Rankin, defendants requested that the plaintiff forebear prosecution of the claim until they obtained a monetary recovery in a medical malpractice claim against a Dr. Nobles. It was Dr. Nobles' alleged malpractice, defendants said, that generated the medical bills in question. In that letter, Mr. Street, attorney for the Pettits, stated: "The bills of Morehouse General Hospital have been included in those claims and we will certainly pay them as soon as any recovery has been made." (Emphasis added.)

Mr. Street and Mr. Rankin exchanged several letters thereafter wherein an agreement was reached regarding the debt. On August 25, 1987, after informing his client of Mr. Street's request for delay, Mr. Rankin sent Mr. Street a letter in which he stated: "I *1341 have been advised that if your clients would sign a promissory note, in the amount of $3,068.36, providing for interest at the rate of 12% per annum, and agree that the debt would be paid within a year from now, the current suit will be dismissed." (Emphasis added.) Mr. Rankin further stated that "[w]e would waive any right we have at this time to attorney's fees, but would want an attorney fee provision included in the note, in case we had to sue on the note at a later date." (Emphasis added.)

On October 1, 1987, Mr. Street sent Mr. Rankin a promissory note which was signed by Sharon and Nathan Pettit on September 30, 1987 for the total amount of the outstanding bills and under the terms requested by Mr. Rankin in his August 25th letter.

On October 5, 1987, Mr. Rankin sent Mr. Street a letter acknowledging receipt of the note and the agreement. Mr. Rankin also reaffirmed the parties' understanding of the agreement stating: "I write this to make it clear that it is our understanding, based on your letter of August 13, 1987, that the Pettits will pay the Morehouse General Hospital bill `as soon as recovery has been made.'" (Emphasis added.) After receiving this letter, Mr. Street wrote "Accepted" at the bottom of the letter, signed his name, and returned the letter to Mr. Rankin.

The plaintiff never dismissed the suit against the Pettits. Although the Pettits settled their suit with Dr. Nobles in September of 1990, no payment for the hospital bills in question was disbursed. It turns out that the hospital bills in the instant suit were not part of the demand in the defendants' suit against Dr. Nobles, as Mr. Street had previously thought. The hospital bills in the case at bar, although owed to the same institution by Mr. Street's clients, apparently were unrelated to the malpractice action he was handling on their behalf. No payment on the promissory note was made by the Pettits, nor was there any demand for payment of the note made by the plaintiff. Several years passed, however, before any action on the suit was taken.

Nearly five years after the original petition was filed, on July 29, 1992, plaintiff filed and served Mr. Street with a First Amending and Supplemental Petition alleging that the promissory note executed by defendants constituted "a new contractual arrangement between the parties, or an alternative basis for recovery by the plaintiff against defendants herein, or either of them." Plaintiff also named Mr. Street as a defendant in the amended and supplemental petition, alleging that he was liable for the debt pursuant to the letter agreement. Plaintiff based this allegation on the language quoted above in the letter dated August 13, 1987, wherein Mr. Street stated that "we will certainly pay them as soon as any recovery has been made."

Mr. Street filed two motions for summary judgment. On behalf of the Pettits, whom Mr. Street could not locate to notify of the amended petition, defendants sought dismissal of the entire petition on grounds that the plaintiff agreed in the letter dated August 25, 1987, to dismiss the original action in exchange for the promissory note executed by the Pettits. Defendants contended that plaintiff should not be allowed to amend its petition because it had agreed to dismiss the suit, and the defendants have upheld their end of the bargain. Defendants argued that plaintiff must file a new suit on the promissory note and serve the Pettits, not Mr. Street. Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
630 So. 2d 1338, 1994 WL 10195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morehouse-parish-hosp-v-pettit-lactapp-1994.