Parker v. Southern American Ins. Co.

578 So. 2d 1021, 1991 WL 57822
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1991
Docket89-1190
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 578 So. 2d 1021 (Parker v. Southern American Ins. Co.) 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
Parker v. Southern American Ins. Co., 578 So. 2d 1021, 1991 WL 57822 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

578 So.2d 1021 (1991)

Glenda June PARKER, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
SOUTHERN AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 89-1190.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

April 17, 1991.
Writ Granted June 14, 1991.

*1022 Jeffrey Runson, Alexandria, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Stassi, Rausch, Rodney Lacoste, Jr., Metairie, for defendant-appellee.

Before STOKER, KNOLL and KING, JJ.

STOKER, Judge.

This appeal concerns a wrongful death action arising out of the death of John Burton Parker. The principal issue is whether a suit brought by his survivors for worker's compensation saves from prescription a tort action filed more than one year after the death.

The petition in this wrongful death action alleges that John Burton Parker, the decedent, suffered a stroke[1] on May 16, 1984, while working as a deputy sheriff for Marshall T. Cappel, Sheriff of Rapides Parish, Louisiana. Plaintiffs allege that decedent's death was caused by negligence and discriminatory acts of the Sheriff. Mr. Parker died on May 20, 1984. The tort suit was not filed until February 24, 1987. The central issue in this case is whether the facts and procedural events which took place between the two dates interrupted the running of prescription. Refinement of the issue requires a more detailed statement of the facts.

FACTS

The plaintiffs in this case are Glenda June Parker, wife of the decedent, and the Parkers' four minor children. Initially, the plaintiffs filed a worker's compensation claim. That suit was a proceeding separate from this wrongful death action presently before us. Plaintiffs timely filed a suit seeking worker's compensation benefits. The defendants were Marshall T. Cappel, the Sheriff, and the State of Louisiana. This worker's compensation suit was dismissed at the Louisiana Supreme Court level. Parker v. Cappel, 500 So.2d 771 (La.1987). That case is completed and is significant only as the filing of the suit in that case may affect prescription of the wrongful death action now before us. The record in the worker's compensation suit is not a part of the record in this tort action now before us, and we rely on the description of the worker's compensation suit in the Supreme Court's opinion at 500 So.2d 771 and the undisputed facts in the briefs of counsel.

In the wrongful death action filed on February 24, 1987, the plaintiffs named as defendant Southern American Insurance Company, the liability insurer for the sheriff and his office. Southern American filed a peremptory exception of prescription which the trial court sustained on April 20, 1988. The plaintiffs appeal from this ruling. The ruling is embodied in a document signed by the trial judge and filed in the record entitled "REASONS FOR JUDGMENT" but which concludes with the following paragraph: "Accordingly[,] the exception of prescription is maintained and plaintiff's suit is dismissed at her costs." (Although Glenda June Parker is technically the sole plaintiff, she represents her *1023 minor children as well as herself and we use the plural form.).

ISSUES

The first issue is whether the trial court's ruling of April 20, 1988 constituted a final judgment which would render the plaintiffs' devolutive appeal to this court untimely. If the appeal was timely filed, then the prescription issue must be addressed, and that issue concerns the effect of the filing of the worker's compensation suit by plaintiffs referred to above.

TIMELINESS OF THE APPEAL

The plaintiffs filed a "motion for reargument" on April 14, 1989, which the trial court denied. The trial judge signed a formal judgment effecting the denial on September 5, 1989. The plaintiffs filed a devolutive appeal on September 21, 1989, and lodged their appeal here on November 13, 1989. In this appeal plaintiffs urge that the delay for appeal ran from the September 5, 1989, judgment. The appellee urges that the "REASONS FOR JUDGMENT" signed on April 20, 1988, triggered the running of the appeal time. The question, then, is whether the judgment of April 20, 1988 denominated as "REASONS FOR JUDGMENT," constituted a final judgment.

The defendant-exceptor, Southern American Insurance Company, relies on the Louisiana Supreme Court case of Hinchman v. International Bros. of Elec. W., L.U. # 130, 292 So.2d 717 (La.1974). If the facts of this case were parallel to those of Hinchman, then we would agree that the April 20, 1988 "REASONS FOR JUDGMENT" did constitute a final judgment. We find that the facts of this case are not parallel to those of Hinchman.

The statutory authority governing the point at issue consists of LSA-C.C.P. arts. 1911 and 1918.

Article 1918 provides:

"Art. 1918. Form of final judgment
"A final judgment shall be identified as such by appropriate language. When written reasons for the judgment are assigned, they shall be set out in an opinion separate from the judgment."
Article 1911 provides:
"Art. 1911. Final judgments; signing; appeals
"Except as otherwise provided by law, every final judgment shall be signed by the judge. For the purpose of an appeal as provided in Article 2083, no appeal may be taken from a final judgment until the requirement of this Article has been fulfilled."

In Hinchman the Supreme Court held that Article 1918 should not be given a restrictive or mechanical interpretation. In Hinchman, although the judgment in question contained language appropriate to reasons for judgment, the Supreme Court held that the judgment in question was a final judgment as contemplated by law because it contained the essentials of a judgment. The judgment was labeled as a judgment, included a decree and was read and signed in open court. (At the time of Hinchman, Article 1911 required that final judgments be read and signed in open court.) The Supreme Court noted that the document in question "determines the rights of parties and awards the relief to which they are entitled." The Supreme Court held that the language in the second sentence of Article 1918 was precatory and "does not render invalid a judgment which is complete and valid except for inclusion of reasons."

We see a distinction in the facts of Hinchman and the facts of the case before us. Here, the parties were not alerted in the title, as they were in Hinchman, that what followed was intended to be a judgment. The parties might have reasonably assumed that the title "REASONS FOR JUDGMENT" was meant to convey the fact that reasons were all that was intended by the document. Further, in Hinchman, the language of the judgment in that case concluded with a formal decree employing the words "IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that...." In the case before us the document appears to be nothing more than reasons for judgment but concludes with the one sentence reading: *1024 "Accordingly[,] the exception of prescription is maintained and plaintiff's suit is dismissed at her costs." While this language is no doubt technically sufficient to constitute a valid decree, we feel that it is of such an ambivalent nature following what was so far reasons for judgment, that counsel were not placed on adequate notice that the document was intended to be a judgment.

If the position we take as just stated should not be correct, there is another reason for which the appeal here should be considered timely. The hearing on defendant-appellee's exception of prescription was heard on April 4, 1988.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
578 So. 2d 1021, 1991 WL 57822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-southern-american-ins-co-lactapp-1991.