Saucier v. Washington

229 So. 3d 19, 2017 WL 4162067
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 2017
Docket17-556
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 229 So. 3d 19 (Saucier v. Washington) 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
Saucier v. Washington, 229 So. 3d 19, 2017 WL 4162067 (La. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

PROCEDURE AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

COOKS, J.

| j Robert E. Washington, Sr.’s (Washington) ancestors, the Harrell family, acquired a 61.67 acre tract of land in 1929. Simon and Clara- Harrell farmed the property and raised 16 children on this land. The family had undisturbed peaceable use of a right-of-way to their land for more than 80 years. In 1994, Wilbert J. Saucier, Jr. (Saucier) purchased 2,200 acres of land known as Erris-Omega Plantation. This large tract completely surrounds the Harrell heirs’ acreage (Harrell acreage). Saucier tried, by his admission, multiple times to buy the Harrell acreage to no avail. In 1999, Saucier filed suit against the Harrell heirs claiming garbage flowed in flood waters from a nearby canal bordering the Harrell acreage onto his property. This suit was first filed in District Court and assigned to Judge Donald Johnson. Washington pointed out truthfully in an on-line blog exchange at issue here that Saucier first filed his garbage claim in district court but it was assigned to an African-American Judge. Saucier dismissed his action without prejudice and re-filed it in Pineville City Court where it would be heard by Judge Phillip Terrell (Terrell), a white judge. Judge Terrell later ran for District Attorney and while campaigning discussed his ruling in the Harrell/Saucier matter on the local radio talk show that is also at issue here. Washington, as a representative for the Harrell family, escorted the Judge to the site to show him the garbage. During this visit, Washington showed the Judge that there were “baby diapers and other paraphernalia” and “beer and liquor bottles” on Saucier’s property. He explained to the Judge the Harrell family had no infants at the camp house and the Harrell family did not drink alcohol. Judge Terrell eventually awarded Saucier $15,000.00 in damages for the garbage, plus $2,000.00 for costs and interest. The Harrell heirs tried to pay the money judgment, but Saucier would |2not accept payment and instead filed a lien against the Harrell heirs’ property. The Harrell heirs asked the district court to compel Saucier to accept payment and the court eventually ordered him to do so. This matter was assigned to Judge Donald Johnson, who the article later written by Mr. Aswell quotes as saying: “he did not know how things were done in Pineville, but that the case looked suspicious to him but he was helpless under the law to remedy the situation.” Saucier did not present anything in this record to show that this statement was not made by Judge Johnson. Further, there was no affidavit introduced by Saucier from Aswell to say where he obtained that information.

In 2004, Saucier constructed a ten (10) foot tall fence that surrounds the Harrell tract, along with a ten (10) foot wide cattle guard and two gates crossing the right-of-way to the Harrells’ property. He notified the Harrells and provided them with two keys to the gates. The Harrell family, unable to pass through the gates with their tractors and other farm implements, filed suit against Saucier to enjoin him from interfering with their servitude of passage across his property which they had used since 1929. The action was apparently set for trial in November, 2008, but at some stage of the proceeding the parties agreed in open court, according to Saucier, and this court’s previous opinion, to enter into a settlement whereby the Harrells would gain a servitude of passage over his property, they would agree to pay for a survey- or to set boundaries, they would pay for any widening of the gates, and the court would later determine any compensation due Saucier.1 The choice of surveyor depended on Saucier’s [sapproval as did any enlargement of the gates which were too narrow to allow the Harrells to pass equipment through. The entire proposed settlement agreement was also contingent on approval by the district court in Grant Parish that was handling the Harrell succession matter. The Harrell heirs did not execute any settlement documents and alleged they did not agree to such an arrangement. Saucier, in March, 2009, filed a motion to enforce the settlement agreement which was fixed for April 20, 2009. The Harrells! lawyer asked for a continuance and did not show up for the hearing. The lawyer filed a motion by facsimile on April 15, 2009, requesting the continuance of a hearing set for “May 20, 2009.” The clerk | received the hard copy of the motion on April 27, 2009 and it was signed by the court. But the hearing had already occurred on April 20, 2009, when the trial judge granted the motion in favor of Er-ris-Omega ordering the Harrells to execute and fulfill the terms and conditions contained in the servitude agreement with-, in sixty days of the date of the judgment. Notice of this judgment was received by the Harrells’ lawyer on April 30, 2009. In June, 2009, and within the 60-day window, the Harrells filed a petition to annul this judgment. Saucier filed an exception of no cause of action to the petition to annul. The Exception was fixed for hearing on September 28, 2009. The Harrells and their lawyer appeared for the hearing. On December 1, 2009, the trial judge granted Saucier’s exception of no cause of action dismissing the Harrells’ petition to annul. The trial judge also dismissed all of the Harrells’ claims for injunctive relief and recognition of a servitude of passage with prejudice for their failure to execute and fulfill the settlement agreement within sixty days as ordered in the April 20, 2009 ruling. He also prohibited the Harrells from entering upon Saucier’s property in the future. The Harrells filed an. appeal with this court and the panel affirmed the judgment.2 The. Harrells then filed writs, with .the Louisiana Supreme Court. On December 17, .2010, the Supreme Court reversed our ruling and the trial court rulings sustaining the exception of no cause of action, thereby reinstating the Harrells’ action to annul and further finding that “the [judgment] goes well beyond the initial pleadings by granting relief not prayed for.’’ Significantly, the court made the following observations and rulings:

WRIT GRANTED. The courts have recognized that a judgment may be annulled for fraud and ill practices when (1) the circumstances under which the judgment was rendered show the deprivation of legal rights of the litigant who seeks relief and (2) enforcement of the | ¿judgment would be unconscionable or inequitable. Calcasieu Parish School Board v. Parker, 02-0339 (La. App. 3 Cir. 10/2/02), 827 So.2d 543, writ denied, 02-2719 (La. 1/10/03), 834 So.2d 440. Plaintiffs’ Petition, to Annul, which must be considered on the face of the pleading in ruling on an exception of no cause of action, alleges sufficient facts'to assert a cause of action under La. C.C.P. art. 2004 to annul the April 20, 2009, judgment for fraud and ill practices. Not only was the judgment rendered in plaintiffs’ and counsel’s absence, due in part to confusion over a continuance request, but it goes well beyond the initial pleadings by granting relief not prayed for. In addition, the record does not support the defendant’s assertion that a settlement of the claims was reached by the parties. In fact, price was still at issue and the succession representative had not yet obtained court approval. Accordingly, the judgments of the court of appeal and the trial court are reversed, and ■ the case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings on plaintiffs’ petition to annul the April 20, 2009, judgment of the trial court.

Succession of Harrell v. Erris-Omega Plantation, 10-2059 (La. 12/17/10), 50 So.3d 158 (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
229 So. 3d 19, 2017 WL 4162067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saucier-v-washington-lactapp-2017.