Riess v. Abshire

570 So. 2d 195, 1990 WL 180763
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 1990
Docket90-CA-121, 90-CA-417
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 570 So. 2d 195 (Riess v. Abshire) 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
Riess v. Abshire, 570 So. 2d 195, 1990 WL 180763 (La. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

570 So.2d 195 (1990)

F. Kelleher RIESS, et al.
v.
Stephen G. ABSHIRE, et al.

Nos. 90-CA-121, 90-CA-417.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

November 14, 1990.
Rehearing Denied December 17, 1990.
Writ Denied March 1, 1991.

*196 Donald V. Organ, New Orleans, for plaintiffs/appellants, F. Kelleher Riess and F. Kelleher Riess, A Law Corp.

Randy P. Roussel, Bradford & Roussel, A Professional Law Corp, and William C. Shockey, Shockey & Ziober, A Professional Law Corp, Baton Rouge, for defendants/appellees, Roland M. Toups and Kathryn B. Toups, David R. Carpenter and Erica, Johanna Wolff Carpenter, Hollis O. Graham and Ida R. Graham, Della J. Robin, Harry R. Layne and Janet J. Layne, Comprehensive Planning Co., Kenneth G. Fink, Jr. and Carol Fink, Donald L. McCollister and Sandra M. McCollister, Joseph W. Guitreau and Marie H. Guitreau, Frank E. Lanier and Nell T. Lanier, George and Dorothy Armstrong Wolcott.

Before KLIEBERT, BOWES and DUFRESNE, JJ.

BOWES, Judge.

Appellants F. Kelleher Riess, Attorney at Law, A Professional Corporation, and F. Kelleher Riess (hereinafter referred to jointly as Riess), appeal two judgments of the district court maintaining exceptions filed by certain defendants. We reverse and remand.

Appellants initially appealed a judgment maintaining an exception of improper venue in favor of Roland M. Toups and Kathryn B. Toups, David R. Carpenter and Erica Johanna Wolff Carpenter, Hollis 0. Graham and Ida R. Graham, Della J. Robin, Harry R. Layne and Janet J. Layne, Comprehensive Planning Company, Kenneth G. Fink, Jr. and Carol Fink, Donald L. McCollister and Sandra M. McCollister, Joseph W. Guitreau and Marie H. Guitreau and Frank E. Lanier and Nell T. Lanier.

Later, in the same proceeding, a judgment in favor of George A. Wolcott and Dorothy Armstrong Wolcott was granted, dismissing Riess' action against them, apparently on an exception to personal jurisdiction. Riess has also appealed this judgment. Both appeals were consolidated for hearing, but will be considered separately hereinbelow.

FACTS

Briefly, the underlying facts are as follows. In 1972, Mr. John C. Yemelos formed a partnership or joint venture called Casren Development Company. Casren undertook the project of developing the Biloxi Hilton Hotel in Biloxi, Mississippi. After obtaining a franchise, Yemelos obtained financing for the project at 4½ percentage points in excess of the prime interest rate of Chemical Bank of New York. Yemelos was aware that the interest to be charged would be usurious under Mississippi law if made to an individual or partnership. In order to take advantage of the depreciation and interest on an individual level, Mr. Yemelos desired to own the hotel through a partnership. A corporation, Argo Hotels, Inc., was formed to take title as an "agent" and obtain the loan.

Argo was the nominee corporation for the partnership. Casren was converted to a partnership in commendam, now called the Biloxi Hotel Properties Partnership (hereinafter BHPP). Several limited partners were admitted to BHPP in 1975, 1976, and 1977. Among the 1977 partners were Messrs. Carpenter, Fink, Guitreau, and McCollister. In July, 1977, the hotel properties were transferred by Argo to BHPP.

The Internal Revenue Service (hereinafter I.R.S.) audited the tax returns of the partners and partnership for the years 1975-1977. Each of the defendants, individual partners in BHPP, had claimed certain items of income, gain, loss, deduction, and credit under the presumption that the tax attributes arising from BHPP would flow to them as partners, and not to the corporate nominee. The I.R.S. denied the losses claimed by the individual partners and the matter was litigated as to certain "docketed" partners from the United States Tax Court as the trial court, through appellate courts and, finally, in the United States Supreme Court (where appellant Riess was ultimately victorious). The attorney who handled the matter in the Tax *197 Court had become a judge in that court and had withdrawn abruptly from the litigation. Yemelos, the general partner of BHPP, contacted Riess to respond to the appeals taken by the I.R.S. to the United States Courts of Appeal for the Fourth and Fifth Circuits.

Riess, in fact, did undertake the litigation in November of 1985 and handled it from that time on until its final conclusion. In 1988, the Supreme Court vacated decisions adverse to the BHPP partners, appellees herein, and remanded the cases to the Circuit Courts. Ultimately, the claimed losses were allowed to the individual partners. In May, 1989, after fruitless amicable demand, Riess filed suit against the individual partners for his claimed fee of $622,454.00.

Appellees herein filed several exceptions, including an exception of improper venue. Each alleged that he or she is a domiciliary of parishes other than Jefferson and contended that this action must be brought against each of them in the parish of their respective domiciles.

The exceptions were tried and, following the hearing, the court maintained the exceptions of venue as to those defendants. This appeal followed.

From the briefs filed in this matter, as well as from the transcript of the hearing, it appears that the defendants, at a trial on the merits, will urge that Riess undertook the litigation on behalf of the partnership, and that it is the partnership which is liable for any fees (BHPP is now in bankruptcy). Riess, on the other hand, vehemently contends that he represented the individual partners, and that it is they who are liable for the fee. In fact, it is the (77) individual partners whom Riess made defendants, and whom he has sued individually.

VENUE

The narrow issue before us is one of a proper venue for the suit. We note at the outset that a judgment resulting in a dismissal without prejudice is a final judgment from which an appeal will lie. Therefore, a judgment sustaining an exception of improper venue is a final appealable judgment. Pasquier, Batson, & Co. v. Ewing, 367 So.2d 28 (La.App. 2 Cir.1978); Thibodeaux v. Hood Enterprises, Inc., 405 So.2d 1249 (La.App. 1 Cir.1981).

The question of whether the partnership, BHPP, or the individual partners themselves are liable for Riess' fee is the issue to be decided on the merits at trial. The specific and only question before us now is whether Riess may maintain his suit, as it is presently drawn, against the partners now named as defendants, in the Parish of Jefferson. Whether or not appellants will prevail on the merits is not at issue at this time, although all parties have addressed these issues to some extent in their briefs on this appeal.

Riess maintains that a proper venue is in Jefferson Parish, as an exception to LSA-C.C.P. art. 42, on several grounds, including those in LSA-C.C.P. arts. 73 and 78. Those articles read as follows:

LSA-C.C.P. art. 42 states (in pertinent part):

"The general rules of venue are that an action against:
(1) An individual who is domiciled in the state shall be brought in the parish of his domicile; or if he resides but is not domiciled in the state, in the parish of his residence;
Art. 73. Action against joint or solidary obligors
A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
570 So. 2d 195, 1990 WL 180763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riess-v-abshire-lactapp-1990.