Ramona A. James and Laurie A. Dauzat as Co-Trustees of Addison Family Trust and Annice Ruth Addison v. Shelly J. Strobel, Individually and as Temporary Curator of Don H. Strobel, John Cooper Fore, and Patricia Ballard Fore

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 2020
Docket2019CA0787
StatusUnknown

This text of Ramona A. James and Laurie A. Dauzat as Co-Trustees of Addison Family Trust and Annice Ruth Addison v. Shelly J. Strobel, Individually and as Temporary Curator of Don H. Strobel, John Cooper Fore, and Patricia Ballard Fore (Ramona A. James and Laurie A. Dauzat as Co-Trustees of Addison Family Trust and Annice Ruth Addison v. Shelly J. Strobel, Individually and as Temporary Curator of Don H. Strobel, John Cooper Fore, and Patricia Ballard Fore) 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.

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Ramona A. James and Laurie A. Dauzat as Co-Trustees of Addison Family Trust and Annice Ruth Addison v. Shelly J. Strobel, Individually and as Temporary Curator of Don H. Strobel, John Cooper Fore, and Patricia Ballard Fore, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA I A

COURT OF APPEAL

r 1' 1 i Main 1, . 1 Ivllrljol

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Judgment Rendered:

Appealed from the Ju 1

In f for the Parish of Livingston State of 1 Docket Number

Honorable Charlotte H. Foster, Judge Presiding

Robert V. McAnelly Counsel for Defendants/ Appellants, Baton Rouge, LA John Cooper Fore and Patricia Ballard Fore

A. Shelby Easterly, III Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellees, Denham Springs, LA Ramona A. Janes and Laurie A. Dauzat as Co -Trustees of the Addison Family Trust and Annice Ruth Addison

Robert H. Harrison, Jr. Counsel forDefendant/Appellee, Watson, LA Shelly J. Strobel, Individually and as Temporary Curator of Don H. Strobel

BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C.J., McDONALD, AND THERi T, JJ.

j.

d WHIPPLE, C.J.

This matter is before us on appeal by defendants/ defendants in cross claim,

John Cooper Fore and Patricia Ballard Fore, from a judgment of the trial court in

favor of plaintiffs, Ramona A. James and Laurie A. Dauzat, individually, and as

co- executors of the Succession of Annice Ruth Addison, and defendants/ plaintiffs

in cross claim, Shelly J. Strobel, individually, and as curator of Don H. Strobel.

For the reasons that follow, we vacate in part, reverse in part, and remand.

Charles Raymond Addison, his wife, Annice Ruth Addison, Shelly J.

Strobel, and Don H. Strobel were co- owners of a 28. 77 acre tract of land in

Livingston Parish. Mr. Addison died on June 16, 2010, and pursuant to Mr.

Addison' s last will and testament, his one- fourth ownership interest in the property

was placed in the Addison Testamentary Trust.' Mr. Addison appointed his

brother- in- law, Don Strobel, as trustee of the Addison Testamentary Trust. On

2 July 7, 2015, Don Strobel resigned as trustee. Eventually, on November 30, 2017,

Annice Addison, who succeeded Strobel as trustee, appointed her daughters,

Ramona James and Laurie Dauzat, as successor co -trustees of the Addison

Testamentary Trust.

In the meantime, however, on July 8, 2015, Annice Addison, Shelly Strobel,

and Don Strobel executed an agreement purporting to partition ownership of the

28. 77 acre tract such that Annice Addison was granted ownership of the southern

14. 34 acres and Shelly and Don Strobel were granted ownership of the northern 14. 34 acres. The Addison Testamentary Trust, however, was not a party to this

agreement. The agreement and attached map were filed in the parish conveyance

records at CB 1228, page 663.

The trust is also referred to in the record and briefs as the " Addison Family Trust."

2The " Resignation of Trustee" executed by Strobel, was subsequently notarized on July 9, 2015.

2 On March 20, 2017, Shelly and Don Strobel executed a document entitled

Exhibit A," purporting to be a cash sale of approximately eighteen acres of the

original 28. 77 acres for $ 100. 00 to buyers, John Fore and Patricia Fore. The

document and attached map were recorded at CB 1281, page 677. On November

7, 2017, the Strobels and Fores executed a " Cash Sale/ Act of Correction" in an

attempt to correct the legal description of the land contained in the March 20, 2017

Exhibit A" cash sale. The " Cash Sale/Act of Correction" was recorded at CB

1305, page 254.

On December 4, 2017, James and Dauzat, along with Annice Addison,

plaintiffs") filed the instant suit against Shelly Strobel, individually, and in her capacity as temporary curator of Don Strobel; John Fore; and Patricia Fore.'

Therein, plaintiffs sought a judgment declaring that the July 8, 2015 partition agreement was null, void, and of no legal effect where: ( 1) the Addison

Testamentary Trust, a co-owner of the property, was not made a party to the partition agreement; ( 2) subdivision of the property had not been approved by the Livingston Parish Government; and ( 3) a legal description of the property did not

fully appear within the four corners of the document or map attached thereto, in that " the line" referenced therein was neither defined nor fixed, had no point of

beginning, had no compass bearing, and had no distance. Alternatively, plaintiffs

requested that a common boundary be judicially fixed pursuant to LSA-C. C. art.

784, et seq. Plaintiffs later supplemented their original petition to aver that the

Strobel -Fore agreements stemming from the July 8, 2015 partition agreement were also null, void, and of no effect.

Shelly Strobel, individually, and as the curator of Don Strobel, (" plaintiffs in

cross claim") then filed a cross claim against the Fores, alleging in the alternative:

3Following Annice Addison' s death on February 16, 2018, James and Dauzat were substituted as parties plaintiff in their capacities as co -testamentary executors of her succession.

3 1) that the " Exhibit A" cash sale of eighteen acres for $ 100. 00 was subject to

rescission for lesion beyond moiety and was thus a nullity in accordance with LSA- C. C. art. 2589; ( 2) that the " Exhibit A" cash sale was, in fact, a disguised

donation, not in the form of an authentic act as required by LSA-C. C. art. 1541,

such that it was an absolute nullity subject to rescission; and ( 3) that the " Exhibit A" cash sale and Cash Sale/ Act of Correction were insufficient to convey

ownership of immovable property where the documents did not adequately identify the consideration for the transfer and the property alleged to be conveyed.

Thereafter, plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment on the claims asserted in their main demand against the Strobels and Fores.' The Strobels, as

plaintiffs in cross claim, likewise filed a motion for summary judgment on the

cross claim against the Fores. According to the minutes, the trial court granted

both motions after a hearing on October 9, 2018. A judgment was ultimately

signed on October 22, 2018, decreeing that the July 8, 2015 agreement between Mrs. Addison and the Strobels, the " Exhibit A" purported cash sale for $ 100. 00

between the Strobels and Fares, and the " Cash Sale/Act of Correction" between the Strobels and Fores, were null, void, and of no effects The judgment further

ordered the Livingston Parish Clerk of Court to make marginal notations on the

relevant conveyance book pages.

Following the denial of their motion for new trial, the Fores filed the instant

Although plaintiffs initially moved for summary judgment on the claims asserted in their original petition, they filed a second motion for summary judgment after the filing of their supplemental petition.

The judgment initially states that the court finds in favor of " Third Party Plaintiffs against Third Party Defendants," yet no third party claim was filed in the proceedings below. Nonetheless, the subsequent decretaI language of the judgment sufficiently identifies the parties and the relief granted.

El suspensive appeal. On appeal, the Fores contend that the trial court erred in

granting summary judgment on the plaintiffs' main demand and the Strobels' cross

claim by declaring the partition agreement and cash sale null, void, and without

legal effect without first restoring the parties to the situation that existed prior to

entering the contracts, pursuant to LSA-C. C. arts. 2033 and 2035. The Fores

further contend that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on the cross claim, where the Strobels claimed an act of cash sale was a disguised

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Ramona A. James and Laurie A. Dauzat as Co-Trustees of Addison Family Trust and Annice Ruth Addison v. Shelly J. Strobel, Individually and as Temporary Curator of Don H. Strobel, John Cooper Fore, and Patricia Ballard Fore, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramona-a-james-and-laurie-a-dauzat-as-co-trustees-of-addison-family-trust-lactapp-2020.