Phillips C. Witter v. Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC; Page Global Marine, LLC; Page Marine Holdings, LLC; and Derrick Taylor

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 2020
Docket2019CA1031
StatusUnknown

This text of Phillips C. Witter v. Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC; Page Global Marine, LLC; Page Marine Holdings, LLC; and Derrick Taylor (Phillips C. Witter v. Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC; Page Global Marine, LLC; Page Marine Holdings, LLC; and Derrick Taylor) 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
Phillips C. Witter v. Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC; Page Global Marine, LLC; Page Marine Holdings, LLC; and Derrick Taylor, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 CA 1031

PHILLIPS C. WITTER

VERSUS

SANIBEL YACHT & SLIP, LLC; PAGE GLOBAL MARINE, LLC; PAGE MARINE HOLDINGS, LLC; AND DERRICK TAYLOR

Judgment rendered JUN 2 4 2020

On Appeal from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana No. C669316, Sec. 24

The Honorable R. Michael Caldwell, Judge Presiding

David C. Spinner Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellant Galen M. Hair Phillips C. Witter New Orleans, Louisiana

Ashley C. Meredith Attorneys for Defendant/Appellees John Stone Campbell, III Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC; Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC; Page Baton Rouge, Louisiana Marine Holdings, LLC

BEF RE: McCLENDON, WELCH, AND HOLDRIDGE, JJ. s HOLDRIDGE, J.

Plaintiff, Phillips C. Witter, appeals a trial court' s judgment sustaining a

declinatory exception raising the objection of lack of personal jurisdiction filed by defendants, Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC ( Sanibel), Page Global Marine, LLC, and

Page Marine Holdings, LLC ( collectively referred to as " the defendants"). We

amend the judgment, and as amended, affirm.

BACKGROUND

On May 21, 2018, Mr. Witter filed this lawsuit in the 19t" Judicial District

Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, against Sanibel, Page Global,

and Page Marine, all Florida limited liability companies with registered offices

located in Fort Myers, Florida, seeking damages and attorneys' fees. Mr. Witter

asserted that the Louisiana court had specific personal jurisdiction over all of the

nonresident defendants, on whom service was perfected pursuant to the Louisiana long arias statute, La. R.S. 13: 3201.

The petition contains the following allegations: Mr. Witter, a long-time boating enthusiast and resident of East Baton Rouge Parish, found a 2004 32'

Boston Whaler Outrage for sale on an internet boat trader website. The vessel was

located in Fort Myers and was being sold through Sanibel, a company that acts as a listing and selling broker of watercraft. In April 2017, Mr. Witter travelled to Fort

Myers to inspect and test drive the vessel. He met with representatives of the

defendant companies at a boat yard where the vessel was parked on a trailer. A

licensed marine surveyor, Donavan Pike, was present at the time, and he and Mr. Witter inspected the vessel while it was on land. The vessel was pulled to a launch

ramp so that Mr. Witter could test drive it; along the way, Mr. Witter learned from

employees of two of the defendants that the trailer on which the vessel was being

2 stored was not sound, and if he wished to purchase the vessel, a new trailer would

have to be purchased prior to having the vessel transported to Louisiana.

Mr. Witter alleged that neither he nor Mr. Pike uncovered any defects or damage to the hull of the vessel, and based on the visual inspection and test drive,

Mr. Witter agreed to purchase the vessel for the sum of $83, 000. 00. Mr. Witter

signed a conditional acceptance of the vessel.

According to Mr. Witter, " Scott," an employee of either Page Global or Page

Marine, told him he would order a new trailer to transport the vessel, it would take

about six weeks to arrive and during that time, the defendants would store the boat

for safe keeping. After several weeks without any communication from the

defendants, Mr. Witter contacted the defendants to inquire about the status of the

trailer delivery and learned from an unknown individual that it had not yet arrived. After this initial telephone call, Mr. Witter again attempted to contact the

defendants over the next several weeks, but did not receive a response from them.

Mr. Witter further alleged that he was finally contacted by Scott in late July of 2017, who informed him the trailer had arrived and was being fitted for the vessel. Several weeks later, the vessel was delivered to Mr. Witter in Louisiana by Derrick Taylor, a Louisiana domiciliary. Upon delivery of the vessel to him in

Louisiana, Mr. Witter noticed a number of defects in the hull of the vessel, which

were not present when he and Mr. Pike inspected the vessel in Florida. Mr.

Witter' s representative contacted Sanibel regarding the damage and was told that

the prior owners of the vessel had done work on the hull of the vessel before listing it for sale. Mr. Witter' s representative contacted the prior owners of the vessel,

who denied the existence of any defects prior to listing it for sale.

Mr. Witter alleged that during the weeks the defendants were waiting for the trailer to arrive, they used the vessel and caused the damages that were present

3 when the vessel was eventually delivered. He claimed that numerous attempts

were made to open amicable discussions with the defendants, but they were

ignored. Further, Mr. Witter alleged that he infonned the defendants he was not accepting delivery of the vessel and those communications were ignored.

Alternatively, Mr. Witter alleged that although unlikely, the vessel may have been damaged during the transportation from Florida to Louisiana.

Asserting claims of fraudulent misrepresentation, negligence, strict liability, vicarious liability, and violations of Louisiana' s unfair trade practices and

consumer protection law, Mr. Witter sought to recover the full purchase price of

the vessel, damages for causing or allowing the vessel to be damaged while in their custody, treble damages, costs, and attorneys' fees from the defendants. Mr.

Witter insisted that defendants made the following misrepresentations to him or to his representative via written or electronic communication while Mr. Witter or his representative was located in Louisiana: ( 1) the trailer needed to transport the

vessel would take six weeks to arrive and when it did the defendants told Mr. Witter it had not arrived; ( 2) the previous owners of the vessel caused repairs to be

done to the vessel; and ( 3) the vessel would be stored for safe keeping while the new trailer was being delivered to Florida. According to Mr. Witter, the

defendants intentionally made these false misrepresentations to cover up the fact they damaged the hull of the vessel, to buy time to repair that damage, and to

deceive him into believing there were no problems with the vessel while in their

custody, with the knowledge that by the time Mr. Witter discovered the extent of

the damage, the vessel would already have been delivered to him in Louisiana.

In the petition, Mr. Witter asserted that the trial court had specific personal

jurisdiction over all of the defendants because the acts committed by each of the defendants constituted intentional torts, and the tortious conduct was committed in E the State of Louisiana or with the knowledge that the damages would be suffered in this state.

The defendants filed a declinatory exception raising the objections of lack of personal jurisdiction and improper venue'. Therein defendants asserted that Mr.

Witter could not establish that a Louisiana court has personal jurisdiction over them because he could not demonstrate that any of the defendants had sufficient minimum contacts" with the State of Louisiana to justify their being " haled into" court here. Moreover, they asserted, maintenance of the suit in Louisiana would

offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.""

A hearing was held on the defendants' declinatory exception, during which no evidence was introduced in support of or to controvert the exception.

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Bluebook (online)
Phillips C. Witter v. Sanibel Yacht & Slip, LLC; Page Global Marine, LLC; Page Marine Holdings, LLC; and Derrick Taylor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-c-witter-v-sanibel-yacht-slip-llc-page-global-marine-llc-lactapp-2020.