Patrick E. Phillips, Jr. v. G & H Seed Company, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 2010
DocketCA-0009-1102
StatusUnknown

This text of Patrick E. Phillips, Jr. v. G & H Seed Company, Inc. (Patrick E. Phillips, Jr. v. G & H Seed Company, 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
Patrick E. Phillips, Jr. v. G & H Seed Company, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

09-1102

PATRICK E. PHILLIPS, JR., ET AL.

VERSUS

G & H SEED COMPANY, INC., ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 00-C-2220-D HONORABLE DONALD WAYNE HEBERT, DISTRICT JUDGE

ELIZABETH A. PICKETT JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Oswald A. Decuir, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Andre F. Toce The Toce Firm, APLC P. O. Box 158 Broussard, LA 70518-0158 (337) 233-6818 Counsel for Intervenor-Appellant: Tess Wiltz d/b/a Opelousas Crawfish House, et al. Robert E. Dille Gary A. Bezet Carol L. Galloway Allison N. Benoit Kean, Miller, Hawthorne, D’Armond, McCowan & Jarman, L.L.P. P. O. Box 3513 Baton Rouge, LA 70821-3513 (225) 387-0999 Counsel for Defendants-Appellees: Michael G. Redlich Bayer CropScience, LP

Louis C. Lacour, Jr. Raymond B. Ward Adams and Reese L.L.P. 701 Poydras St., Suite 4500 New Orleans, LA 70139 (504) 581-3234 Counsel for Defendants-Appellees: Michael G. Redlich Bayer CropScience, LP

Terrence McCay Kean, Miller, Hawthorne, D’Armond, McCowan & Jarman, L.L.P. One Lakeshore Dr., Suite 1150 Lake Charles, LA 70629 (337) 439-0490 Counsel for Defendants-Appellees: Michael G. Redlich Bayer CropScience, LP

Michael T. Pulaski Keith W. McDaniel Allen V. Davis McCranie, Sistrunk, Anzelmo, Hardy & McDaniel, PC 195 Greenbriar Blvd., Suite 200 Covington, LA 70433 (504) 846-8332 Counsel for Defendant-Appellee: Allianz Global Risks Us Insurance Company PICKETT, Judge.

The appellant, Tess Wiltz d/b/a Opelousas Crawfish House, appeals a judgment

of the trial court dismissing her petition to intervene.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

A brief history of this case is helpful to understanding the issue before this

court. In 2000, Patrick Phillips d/b/a Phillips Seafood and Atchafalaya Crawfish

Processors, Inc., filed a Class Action Petition. They sought to represent a class of

crawfish buyers and processors who were harmed by the use of the pesticide ICON

in rice fields that also served as crawfish ponds. Named as defendants in that suit

were the manufacturers and sellers of ICON. In May 2005, the plaintiffs filed a

Fourth Amended and Consolidated Petition for Damages. In this petition, the

plaintiffs abandoned their class action suit and named fifty-two plaintiffs who were

buyers and processors of crawfish. The matter proceeded to trial in July 2007, with

three bellwether plaintiffs representing the rest of the plaintiffs. The trial resulted in

judgments against the manufacturer of ICON, a sales representative, and the weather.

The jury awarded a total of $1,750,000 in damages to the three plaintiffs. On appeal,

a five-judge panel of this court reversed the judgment of the trial court, finding that

the plaintiffs failed to state a cause of action against the manufacturer because they

did not have a proprietary interest in the crawfish killed by the use of ICON. Phillips

v. G & H Seed Co., 08-934 (La.App. 3 Cir. 4/8/09), 10 So.2d 339, writ denied, 09-

1504 (La. 10/30/09), 21 So.3d 284, reconsideration not considered, (La. 1/8/10), ___

So.2d ___.

1 While that appeal was pending, on November 17, 2007, the plaintiffs filed a

motion to amend in order to file a “First Resurrected, Reinstigated and Restated Class

Action Petition for Damages.” In it, two of the fifty-two plaintiffs named in the

Fourth Supplemental and Consolidated Petition for Damages attempted to resurrect

the class action suit as the class representatives. The trial court ordered a hearing,

and, following the hearing, it denied the Motion to Amend. At the hearing, the trial

court ordered the parties to send notice to potential class members that the class

action was no longer ongoing and advising them of their rights. This notice was

signed by the trial court on March 12, 2008, and sent to the potential class members.

Within thirty days of receiving this notice, Tess Wiltz, d/b/a Opelousas

Crawfish House, filed an “Intervenor’s Class Action Petition.” In response, the

defendants filed a Motion to Dismiss the petition in intervention, arguing that the trial

court had not granted leave to intervene as required by La.Code Civ.P. art. 1033. The

plaintiff then filed a “Protective Motion for Leave to Intervene.” Following a hearing

on November 17, 2008, the trial court, which considered the motion as one to strike

the petition in intervention, granted the motion to dismiss, struck the Wiltz petition,

and denied Wiltz’s Motion for Leave to Intervene. The trial court also denied an oral

motion made by Wiltz to require that members of the class that Wiltz attempted to

represent be notified that her class action was being dismissed. The judgment was

signed on January 9, 2009. The trial court denied Wiltz’s motion for a new trial in

a judgment signed on July 1, 2009. Wiltz filed a Motion for an Order of Appeal on

the same date. She later amended her appeal in the trial court to join all of the named

plaintiffs in the appeal.

2 ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Wiltz asserts five assignments of error:

1. The trial court erred by summarily striking Wiltz’s entire petition, including the assertion therein of her individual claims. 2. The trial court erred by refusing to grant Wiltz leave to intervene. 3. The trial court erred when it denied the Motion to Amend, by appellants Brown and Robichaux, to restore the Phillips class allegations. 4. The trial court erred by granting Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Wiltz’s Petition in Intervention. 5. The trial court erred by denying Appellants’ Motion for Notice to members of the Wiltz Class that the Wiltz Class Action had been dismissed.

DISCUSSION

At the outset, we note that Wiltz and the forty-six plaintiffs still remaining in

the underlying suit failed to brief the third assignment of error. “All specifications

or assignments of error must be briefed. The court may consider as abandoned any

specification or assignment of error which has not been briefed.” Uniform Rules –

Courts of Appeal, Rule 2-12.4. Therefore, we consider the appellants’ third

assignment of error abandoned.

Wiltz’s first, second, and fourth assignments of error concern the trial court’s

dismissal of Wiltz’s petition to intervene in this lawsuit. Louisiana Code of Civil

Procedure Article 1033 states:

An incidental demand may be filed without leave of court at any time up to and including the time the answer to the principal demand is filed.

An incidental demand may be filed thereafter, with leave of court, if it will not retard the progress of the principal action, or if permitted by Articles 1066 or 1092.

An incidental demand that requires leave of court to file shall be considered as filed as of the date it is presented to the clerk of court for filing if leave of court is thereafter granted. 3 An intervention is an incidental demand. La.Code Civ.P. art. 1031(B).

Articles 1066 and 1092 are not implicated in this case. Wiltz’s intervention was filed

well after the answer in this case. Therefore, leave of court is required in order for

the petition for intervention to be filed. The trial court has broad discretion in

determining whether to allow an intervention to be filed after the answer and in

determining if the intervention will retard the progress of the suit. Charia v. Allstate

Ins. Co., 93-1230 (La.App. 4 Cir. 3/29/94), 635 So.2d 370. We will not overturn the

trial court unless we find an abuse of that discretion.

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Related

Charia v. Allstate Ins. Co.
635 So. 2d 370 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1994)

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Patrick E. Phillips, Jr. v. G & H Seed Company, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-e-phillips-jr-v-g-h-seed-company-inc-lactapp-2010.