Seale & Ross, PLC v. Littleleaf Properties, LLC and Jennifer Lee

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 2021
Docket2021CA0083
StatusUnknown

This text of Seale & Ross, PLC v. Littleleaf Properties, LLC and Jennifer Lee (Seale & Ross, PLC v. Littleleaf Properties, LLC and Jennifer Lee) 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
Seale & Ross, PLC v. Littleleaf Properties, LLC and Jennifer Lee, (La. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

NO. 2021 CA 0083

CHH SEALE & ROSS, PLC

W'" C" 64 VERSUS

LITTLELEAF PROPERTIES, LLC AND JENNIFER LEE

Judgment Rendered: QCT 0 4 2021

On Appeal from the 21' Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Tangipahoa State of Louisiana Trial Court No. 2019- 0003993

Honorable Brenda Bedsole Ricks, Judge Presiding

Kenneth L. Ross Attorney for Plaintiff A - ppellant, Hammond, LA Seale & Ross, PLC

Matthew A. Sherman Attorneys for Defendants -Appellees, Patrick R. Follette Littleleaf Properties, LLC and Metairie, LA Jennifer Lee

BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C. J., THERIOT, CHUTZ, WOLFE, AND RESTER, JJ.

Y. diss ts vka CkS 5' 1 T0,4 r °~ 06( 4 1

bti CR14 s

HESTER, J.

Plaintiff, Seale & Ross, PLC, appeals a judgment of the trial court sustaining

the peremptory exception asserting the objection of prescription filed by defendants,

Littleleaf Properties, LLC and Jennifer Lee, and dismissing plaintiff' s lawsuit

against defendants, with prejudice. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and

remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On December 18, 2019, Seale & Ross, PLC (" Seale & Ross") filed a suit on

open account against Littleleaf Properties, LLC (" Littleleaf') and Jennifer Lee

sometimes collectively referred to as " defendants"), alleging defendants were

indebted to it in the amount of $10, 479. 59 as of November 30, 2019. According to

the allegations of the suit, defendants engaged Seale & Ross to represent them in a

purchase agreement dispute and maintained an open account with Seale & Ross for

legal services and charges incurred. The last payment on account was made by

defendants on December 30, 2016, but Seale & Ross maintained that defendants did

not pay the balance due, despite amicable demand.

Invoices, which were allegedly mailed to defendants, were attached as an

exhibit to the suit. The " invoices" were actually a single statement showing legal

fees charged from May 6, 2015 through October 17, 2016, as well as expenses and

cost advancements from October 19, 2015 through October 18, 2016. The statement

also reflected payments, dated December 30, 2016, from two different checks

totaling $ 1, 100. 00.

In response to the suit on open account, defendants filed peremptory

exceptions asserting the objections of no cause of action and prescription, seeking

to dismiss the suit with prejudice. According to defendants, Lee was employed by

Seale & Ross as an attorney from 2013 until November 2016. During Lee' s employ

with Seale & Ross, suit was filed on behalf of Littleleaf, a limited liability company of which Lee is a member and co- owner, against Darren Short, seeking specific

performance and damages caused by Short' s breach of a purchase agreement. Lee

engaged another attorney at Seale & Ross, Glen Galbraith, to assist her in the

Littleleaf matter, and Galbraith counseled Lee, signed pleadings, and made court

appearances.

As argued in defendants' memorandum in support of their exceptions, it was

customary for the attorneys of Seale & Ross to handle their own personal legal

matters through the firm, without payment. Further, defendants alleged that they

neither opened nor maintained an open account with Seale & Ross and did not agree

to pay for legal services Lee provided to her own company, Littleleaf. Instead,

defendants maintained that because the amount and award of attorney' s fees and

costs were the only issues in the Littleleaf matter, Lee merely opened a file with

Seale & Ross in order to track time and expenses as an item of damage.

The Littleleaf matter concluded in October 2016, and an award of legal fees

and court costs was granted to Littleleaf, which award was allegedly based on a

statement nearly identical to the statement attached as an exhibit to Seale & Ross' s

suit on open account. Pursuant to the terms of the judgment, payments for damages,

identified as Littleleaf s attorney fees and court costs, were due monthly to Littleleaf.

According to defendants, "[ b] ecause the judgment awarded legal fees and costs, and

the defendant in the [ Littleleaf matter] was aware Ms. Lee was formerly an attorney

at [ Seale & Ross], the first two payments totaling $ 1, 100 were made payable to

Seale & Ross], without the consent of Ms. Lee."

While denying an account existed, defendants argued that the applicable

prescriptive period for the suit on open account had run. October 18, 2016 was the

date of the last work done on the file, which was more than three years prior to the

filing date of December 18, 2019. See La. Civ. Code arts. 3494 and 3495.

Defendants further maintained that the suit was prescribed on its face and that the

3 payment made by a third party on the file without their consent did not serve to

interrupt prescription.

Seale & Ross opposed the exceptions, arguing that the suit was not prescribed

since payment was made on the account on December 30, 2016. Such payment

consisted of a check from Darren Short made payable to Seale & Ross, which was

delivered to Seale & Ross by Lee. According to Seale & Ross, the payment

arrangement was confirmed in an alleged text message between Lee and Galbraith,

stating as follows:

Also, re Little leaf / Short, I have that $800 check from Darren I' ll leave at SR to deposit. That acct still needs to be cleaned up. Will you write all my time off and apply the $ 800 to costs and your time. What do you want to do about the rest of your time?

The exceptions were heard by the trial court on August 31, 2020, at which

time arguments, joint evidence, and the testimony of Galbraith were presented. At

the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court sustained the exception of prescription,

and pretermitted ruling on the exception of no cause of action. Judgment was signed

on September 4, 2020, sustaining defendants' exception of prescription and

dismissing Seale & Ross' s lawsuit against defendants, with prejudice. From this

judgment, Seale & Ross appeals, and assigns the following assignments of error: ( 1)

the trial court erred in failing to find that Lee' s December 28, 2016 text message was

an acknowledgement of the debt that interrupted prescription; (2) the trial court erred

in failing to find Lee delivered or sent payment to Seale & Ross, which was an

acknowledgement of the debt; and ( 3) the trial court erred in excluding the printed

text messages from evidence.

LAW AND ANALYSIS

Prescription is properly raised through a peremptory exception and must be

specifically pled. La. Code Civ. P. art. 927. Prescription statutes are strictly

construed against prescription and in favor of the claim sought to be extinguished by

it. Bailey v. Khoury, 2004- 0620 ( La. 1/ 20/ 05), 891 So. 2d 1268, 1275. Ordinarily, 0 the party urging prescription bears the burden of proof at trial of the exception;

however, if the petition is prescribed on its face, the burden of proof shifts to the

plaintiff to negate the presumption by establishing a suspension or interruption.

Smith v. Transportation Services Co. of Illinois, 2013- 2788 ( La. 7/ 1/ 14), 148

So. 3d 903, 907, cert. denied, 574 U.S. 1154, 135 S. Ct. 1404, 191 L.Ed.2d 362

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