State of Louisiana, Department of Children and Family Services in the Interest of Victor Lannelongue-Navarro Versus Philippe Gilbert Antoine Lannelongue

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 2023
Docket22-CA-220
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana, Department of Children and Family Services in the Interest of Victor Lannelongue-Navarro Versus Philippe Gilbert Antoine Lannelongue (State of Louisiana, Department of Children and Family Services in the Interest of Victor Lannelongue-Navarro Versus Philippe Gilbert Antoine Lannelongue) 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
State of Louisiana, Department of Children and Family Services in the Interest of Victor Lannelongue-Navarro Versus Philippe Gilbert Antoine Lannelongue, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA, DEPARTMENT OF NO. 22-CA-220 CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES IN THE INTEREST OF VICTOR FIFTH CIRCUIT LANNELONGUE-NAVARRO COURT OF APPEAL VERSUS STATE OF LOUISIANA PHILIPPE GILBERT ANTOINE LANNELONGUE

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 2019-NS-491, DIVISION "B" HONORABLE AMANDA L. CALOGERO, JUDGE PRESIDING

February 01, 2023

MARC E. JOHNSON JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Marc E. Johnson, Stephen J. Windhorst, and John J. Molaison, Jr.

AFFIRMED MEJ SJW JJM COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE, STATE OF LOUISIANA Honorable Paul D. Connick, Jr. Thomas J. Butler Darren A. Allemand Lekita G. Robertson Timothy P. O'Rourke Reese M. Woessner

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT, PHILIPPE GILBERT ANTOINE LANNELONGUE Laurel A. Salley Michael J. DuBose

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, ESTER NAVARRO Joseph L. McReynolds Frederic T. Le Clercq JOHNSON, J.

Appellant, Phillippe Lannelongue, seeks review of the Jefferson Parish

Juvenile Court’s March 10, 2022 judgment awarding permanent child support

payments to his ex-wife Esther Navarro-Muñoz on behalf of their son Victor1. For

the following reasons, we affirm the juvenile court’s judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Victor Lannelongue-Navarro was born in Spain on September 11, 2004.

Victor’s parents, Ms. Esther Navarro-Muñoz and Phillippe Gilbert Antoine

Lannelongue married on January 2004 in Nevada but had physically separated by

the time of Victor’s birth.

In September 2016, Ms. Navarro-Muñoz, represented by a Spanish pro bono

attorney, filed a custody and support proceeding against Mr. Lannelongue in Spain.

Ms. Navarro-Muñoz is a resident and domiciliary of Málaga, Spain. On July 20,

2017, the Court of First Instance and Preliminary Jurisdiction Number 1 of Torrox

issued a judgment (hereinafter referred to as the "Spanish Order"), which awarded

custody of the then minor child, Victor, and ordered child support to be paid by

Mr. Lannelongue in the amount of 1,000 euros per month. The Spanish Order was

made final on February 23, 2018, as no appeal had been filed within the time

period allowed by law.

In April 2019, Ms. Navarro-Muñoz began the process of registering the

Spanish Order in the State of Louisiana, Mr. Lannelongue's state of residence and

domicile. The Jefferson Parish District Attorney’s Office filed a Petition to

Register the Child Support Order of Another State for Enforcement on April 16,

2019. On May 17, 2019, Mr. Lannelongue filed his Notice of Objection to

Registration of Foreign Order, contesting the registration of the Spanish Order on

1 Victor, who has reached the age of majority since the lodging of this appeal, was twelve years old when his mother began the process to obtain a child support order in Spain.

22-CA-220 1 several grounds. Mr. Lannelongue argued that he first learned of the Spanish

Order in October 2018, when contacted by Orleans Parish’s Department of

Children and Family Services, and he is not fluent in Spanish. Further, he

questioned the child’s paternity and argued that he was denied due process. Mr.

Lannelongue contended that he did not receive notice and was not given an

opportunity to be heard; and, he was not served with a petition or notice of the

proceedings. He claimed the Spanish Order was obtained by fraud, and Ms.

Navarro-Muñoz and her family had his contact information. He also alleged that

counsel for Ms. Navarro-Muñoz contacted him earlier threatening legal action if he

did not contact her to resolve the legal situation regarding the minor child.

The parties’ first appearance in Jefferson Parish Juvenile Court was on July

26, 2019. The hearing on the matter of registration of the support order was held

on the same day, and Ms. Navarro-Munoz elected to institute a child support

obligation based on the Louisiana guidelines outlined in La. R.S. 9:315, et seq. In

response, the State of Louisiana, through the Department of Children and Family

Services (“DCFS”), requested that the parties undergo genetic testing and filed a

Rule for Child Support on August 2, 2019, in case the hearing officer denied Ms.

Navarro-Muñoz’s petition to register the Spanish Order.

At the next hearing on the Petition to Register the Foreign Order and Rule

for Child Support held on August 27, 2019, the hearing officer acknowledged that

DNA testing confirmed that Mr. Lannelongue was Victor’s father, found that Mr.

Lannelongue was legally obligated to support his minor child, and recommended

that a temporary support order be issued in the amount of $500.00 per month plus

5% court costs, starting September 2019. The hearing officer also ordered an

income assignment, and that the support would be retroactive to August 2, 2019,

once a permanent order was established.

22-CA-220 2 On October 29, 2019, the hearing officer ruled that the Spanish Order could

not be “registered for enforcement” in Louisiana because Mr. Lannelongue never

was served with the petition in accordance with “minimum standards of due

process and was not given the opportunity to be heard in Spain”. On November 7,

2019, the foregoing recommendations were made an interim judgment of the

juvenile court, pending the disagreement hearing.

On July 7, 2020, Mr. Lannelongue filed a Declinatory Exception of Lack of

Subject Matter Jurisdiction (hereinafter referred to as "the exception"). Mr.

Lannelongue's basis for the exception was that the State did not comply with the

provisions of La. Ch. Code art. 1302.4(A), which addressed simultaneous

proceedings, in pursuing its Rule for Child Support. He argued that a Louisiana

court could not exercise jurisdiction in this matter because 1) the State’s [Rule] for

Child Support was filed after the period allowed for him to challenge Spain’s

jurisdiction over the matter; 2) he could not challenge Spain’s jurisdiction because

he had no knowledge of the child support proceedings that took place there; and 3)

Louisiana was not the minor child’s home state.

Mr. Lannelongue's exception was heard by the hearing officer on July 14,

2020. The hearing officer recommended denial of the declinatory objection, and

the juvenile court heard the matter at the disagreement hearing on September 21,

2020. According to the minute entry from that date, the juvenile court denied the

disagreement and upheld the hearing officer’s recommendation to exercise subject

matter jurisdiction via Louisiana child support order proceedings, Ms. Navarro-

Muñoz agreed not to seek to enforce the Spanish Order, and Mr. Lannelongue

agreed to be subject to the enforcement of the Louisiana support order. Also,

pursuant to the State’s Rule for Child Support, the juvenile court issued a

temporary child support order requiring Mr. Lannelongue to pay $1,127.70 per

22-CA-220 3 month, retroactive to August 2, 2020. Mr. Lannelongue appealed the juvenile

court’s judgment finding that it had subject matter jurisdiction in 2021.

This Court dismissed the first appeal taken in this matter, 21-CA-53, on

April 14, 2021. In the order dismissing the appeal, we observed that Mr.

Lannelongue sought review of a

ruling on subject matter jurisdiction [which] does not determine the merits of the litigant’s claims; it is an interlocutory ruling that is not a final appealable judgment unless specifically provided for by law. Duplechain v.

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State of Louisiana, Department of Children and Family Services in the Interest of Victor Lannelongue-Navarro Versus Philippe Gilbert Antoine Lannelongue, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-department-of-children-and-family-services-in-the-lactapp-2023.