QUALITY GAS PRODUCTS v. Bank One Corp.
This text of 885 So. 2d 1179 (QUALITY GAS PRODUCTS v. Bank One Corp.) 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.
Opinion
QUALITY GAS PRODUCTS, INC.
v.
BANK ONE CORPORATION, Jane Dean and William H. Dean.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Richmond C. Odom, Baton Rouge, for Plaintiff-Appellant Quality Gas Products, Inc.
James Boren, Baton Rouge, for Defendant-Appellee Jane Dean.
William H. Dean, Baton Rouge, Defendant-Appellee in Proper Person.
Robert W. Barton, Baton Rouge, for Defendant-Appellee Bank One, N.A.
Before: PETTIGREW, DOWNING, and McCLENDON, JJ.
PETTIGREW, J.
In this case, plaintiff, Quality Gas Products, Inc. ("Quality"), appeals a judgment rendered by the trial court in favor of *1180 defendant, Bank One, N.A.[1] ("Bank One"), sustaining Bank One's peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court's judgment.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On November 2, 2001, Quality filed the instant suit against defendants, Bank One, Jane Dean, and William H. Dean, alleging conversion (as set forth in La. R.S. 10:3-420) of numerous checks made payable to Quality. According to Quality's petition, Mrs. Dean was hired in 1992 as its propane sales manager. Mrs. Dean's duties included collecting accounts receivable, opening mall, processing payments, making deposits, and reconciling customer accounts. At some point during her employment with Quality, Mrs. Dean began taking checks made payable to and received by Quality and depositing them into a joint account owned by her and her husband, William H. Dean. As alleged by Quality, this activity by Mrs. Dean took place over the five years prior to her termination on February 28, 2001, and amounted to over $730,000.00.
Following Initial discovery, Bank One filed a peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription. Noting the one-year prescriptive period set forth in La. R.S. 10:3-420, Bank One argued that any claims brought by Quality that arose from alleged conversions occurring more than one year prior to suit being filed were prescribed and should be dismissed. The matter proceeded to hearing before the trial court on April 28, 2003, at which time the court received evidence into the record and heard argument from counsel for both sides. After considering the evidence and the applicable law, the trial court sustained Bank One's exception and dismissed, with prejudice, all claims brought by Quality against Bank One based on thefts or conversions alleged to have occurred prior to November 2, 2000. The trial court signed a judgment in accordance with its findings on May 5, 2003.
ISSUE ON APPEAL
It is from this judgment that Quality has appealed, arguing that the trial court erred in sustaining Bank One's exception raising the objection of prescription. Quality asserts this case is clearly distinguishable from Daube v. Bruno, 493 So.2d 606 (La.1986), the case heavily relied on by Bank One in its argument that Quality's claim was prescribed and cited by the trial court in its oral reasons for judgment. Noting that Daube involved an action on a forged indorsement subject to a one-year prescriptive period as set forth in La. Civ.Code art. 3492,[2] Quality asserts that Mrs. Dean's indorsement of the checks in question with "For Deposit" followed by the number of the account into which the checks are to be deposited does not constitute a forged indorsement and, thus, Daube does not apply. Rather, Quality maintains, this is an action on a negotiable instrument and is subject to a five-year liberative prescriptive period as set forth in La. Civ.Code art. 3498.[3]
*1181 Bank One counters, noting, "[t]he flaw in [Quality's] argument is that the one year prescriptive period applies here not because the case involves forgeries, but rather because it involves conversions." (Emphasis in original.) Citing Daube as support for its position, Bank One asserts that because Quality has explicitly pled acts of conversion, La. R.S. 10:3-420(f) mandates a one-year liberative prescriptive period. Thus, Bank One contends, the trial court was correct in sustaining the exception and dismissing all claims by Quality that occurred prior to November 2, 2000. Although we find the facts and circumstances herein to be distinguishable from the facts of Daube, we agree with Bank One's position that the conversion claims as alleged by Quality are subject to a one-year liberative prescriptive period.
DISCUSSION
Generally, the party pleading prescription has the burden of proving the facts supporting the exception. However, where a plaintiff's claims are prescribed on the face of the petition, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to prove a suspension or interruption of the prescriptive period. Iverstine v. Albemarle Corp., 2002-2555, p. 7 (La.App. 1 Cir. 7/2/03), 852 So.2d 492, 497, writ denied, 2003-2583 (La.12/12/03), 860 So.2d 1154. Moreover, it is well settled under Louisiana law that the allegations and prayer of the petition determine the true nature of the action and the applicable prescriptive period. Griffin v. BSFI Western E & P, Inc., 2000-2122, p. 8 (La.App. 1 Cir. 2/15/02), 812 So.2d 726, 733.
In the instant case, Quality's suit specifically asserts a cause of action against defendants for conversion pursuant to La. R.S. 10:3-420. This statute is a modification of former La. R.S. 10:3-419[4] and provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
(a) An instrument is converted when
(i) a drawee to whom it is delivered for acceptance refuses to return it on demand; or
(ii) any person to whom it is delivered for payment refuses on demand either to pay or to return it; or
(iii) it is taken by transfer, other than a negotiation, from a person not entitled to enforce the instrument or a bank makes or obtains payment with respect to the instrument for a person not entitled to enforce the instrument or receive payment.
....
(f) Any action for conversion ... prescribes in one year.
Thus, based on the allegations of Quality's petition and the clear language of La. R.S. 10:3-420(f), the applicable prescriptive period in the instant case is one year.
As previously indicated, Bank One cited the Louisiana Supreme Court's decision in Daube in its argument to the trial court concerning the prescription issue. In Daube, the plaintiff was the payee of checks made by his employer. A third party forged the payee's indorsement on the checks and deposited them to her own account. The plaintiff sued the forger, the payor bank, and the collecting bank under former La. R.S. 10:3-419(1). The issue on appeal was whether the plaintiff's action prescribed in one year as a delictual action under Article 3492 or in five years as an action on a negotiable instrument under Article 3498. The court held that an action by a "true owner" and payee of a check against the payor for payment on a forged indorsement is a tort action, subject *1182 to a one-year liberative prescriptive period.
[W]e conclude that La.R.S. 10:3-419(1) authorizes a delictual action when a person pays an instrument on a forged indorsement for which he may be held liable to the true owner.
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885 So. 2d 1179, 2004 WL 1418056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quality-gas-products-v-bank-one-corp-lactapp-2004.