State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Division of Administration, Office of Community Development, Disaster Recovery Unit; State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Department of Economic Development v. Citizens United for Economic Equity

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 8, 2024
Docket2023CA1151
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Division of Administration, Office of Community Development, Disaster Recovery Unit; State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Department of Economic Development v. Citizens United for Economic Equity (State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Division of Administration, Office of Community Development, Disaster Recovery Unit; State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Department of Economic Development v. Citizens United for Economic Equity) 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, Office of the Governor, Division of Administration, Office of Community Development, Disaster Recovery Unit; State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Department of Economic Development v. Citizens United for Economic Equity, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2023 CA 1151

STATE OF LOUISIANA, OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR, DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATION, OFFICE OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, DISASTER RECOVERY UNIT, STATE OF LOUISIANA, OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

VERSUS

CITIZENS UNITED FOR ECONOMIC EQUITY

Judgment Rendered: AUG 08 2024 * KK KK XK On Appeal from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana Docket No. 663632 Honorable Richard “Chip” Moore, Judge Presiding KK KK KK Kristen D. Amond Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee Alysson L. Mills State of Louisiana New Orleans, Louisiana Kriste T. Utley Counsel for Defendant/Appellant Ross A. Ledet Citizens United for Economic Equity

Alexis R. Jani New Orleans, Louisiana

* KK KK

BEFORE: McCLENDON, HESTER, AND MILLER, JJ.

Mille, S lonzvls wy reson S

é Hester, 3. conenes McCLENDON, J.

In this case, the defendant/plaintiff-in-reconvention appeals the denial of a motion for new trial after the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the plaintiffs/defendants-in-reconvention and dismissed the defendant's reconventional demand. After review, we reverse.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Following Hurricane Katrina, the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) provided Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds to aid in Louisiana’s economic recovery. The State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Division of Administration, Office of Community Development, Disaster Recovery Unit (OCD-DRU), was the direct recipient of the HUD-CDBG funds. OCD-DRU partnered with the State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Louisiana Department of Economic Development (LED), to administer the Louisiana Business Recovery Grant and Loan Program (BRGL), which was intended to provide loans and grants to hurricane-affected small businesses in Louisiana. During the two-phase BRGL program, generally, LED administered and facilitated the lending while OCD-DRU maintained a monitoring and compliance role.

Citizens United for Economic Equity (Citizens United), a non-profit corporation with its principal place of business in New Orleans, Louisiana, became a sub-recipient, or intermediary, during Phase II of the BRGL program pursuant to a 2008 Cooperative Endeavor Agreement executed by LED and Citizens United. Subsequently, Citizens United received a grant of funds to lend to small businesses in Louisiana, and Citizens United successfully completed Phase II of the BRGL program.

Giving rise to the dispute between the parties is a two-page Revolving Capital Fund Agreement (RCF Agreement) executed by Citizens United and LED in May 2008, and a one-page amendment to the RCF Agreement executed by Citizens United and LED on in August 2009 (RCF Amendment). As set forth in the RCF Agreement, the Revolving Capital

Fund (RCF) was to be funded with “[p]rincipal repaid on loans” from Phase I and Phase

1 The terms “sub-recipient” and “intermediary” are interchangeable, and both indicate an entity responsible for the administration of disaster recovery funds on behalf of the entity that received the allocation from HUD. II of the BRGL program, “for the intended purpose of supporting small business and general economic development in Louisiana.” The RCF Agreement set limits for recipient eligibility and the use of the RCF funds, authorized Citizens United to charge “[flees and interest . . . to be paid by recipients of funds from the RCF[,]” and provided that LED “reserve[d] the right to request return of all RCF funds if [Citizens United] fail[ed] to comply” with the terms of the RCF Agreement, “or if funds [were not] used for the intended purpose of supporting small business and general economic development in Louisiana.” The RCF Amendment added a provision limiting the reasonable costs associated with the administration of the RCF to 15% “of amounts generated by repaid loans, including principal and interest[.]”

Following several years of disputes regarding whether Citizens United was in compliance with the RCF Agreement and the RCF Amendment, OCD-DRU and LED (sometimes collectively, “the State”) filed a petition seeking damages for breach of contract against Citizens United on November 20, 2017.2 The State’s petition alleged that Citizens United committed numerous breaches of the RCF Agreement, particularly “by incurring administrative overages in excess of that allowed.” Consequently, OCD-DRU suspended Citizens United from lending RCF funds in July 2011. The State alleged that, after Citizens United’s suspension, OCD-DRU “continuously made efforts to work with Citizens United to ensure [Citizens United’s] compliance with the RCF Agreement[,]” and Citizens United corrected some of the alleged deficiencies. The State’s petition further alleged that in September 2014, OCD-DRU permitted Citizens United to resume lending RCF funds “on the condition that [Citizens United] create a comprehensive management plan to address, inter alia, how [Citizens United] would adhere to the RCF Agreement’s restrictions and repay into the RCF account any administrative overages [Citizens United]

had incurred.”

2 In response to petitioners’ original November 20, 2017 petition, Citizens United filed an exception raising the objection of no cause of action, and the trial court sustained the objection. On May 30, 2018, petitioners filed a first amended petition, and Citizens United filed a second exception raising the objection of no cause of action on August 2, 2018. Subsequently, the parties entered into a stipulation agreeing that petitioners’ first amended petition did not allege a cause of action for injunction relief, that petitioners’ first amended petition superseded and replaced all allegations and claims asserted in the original petition, and that the claim for injunctive relief sought in the original petition was no longer being pursued. Citizens United then withdrew the second exception raising the objection of no cause of action. The claims described herein are those asserted in the first amended petition. The State’s petition further alleged that Citizens United ultimately failed to comply with the RCF Agreement, OCD-DRU’s directives, and Citizens United’s own plan. Consequently, by letter dated October 26, 2016 and attached to the State’s petition, the State asserted it was terminating the RCF Agreement for cause and demanded the transfer of the RCF funds and related assets to a qualified non-profit organization. In a second letter, dated September 27, 2017 and also attached to the State’s petition, the State repeated the demand for the return of the RCF funds and related assets and named NewCorp, Inc., as the qualified nonprofit designated to receive the RCF funds and other related assets. When Citizens United failed to transfer the RCF funds and related assets as demanded, the State filed the instant suit seeking specific performance in the form of a judgment “ordering [Citizens United] to specifically perform its obligation under the RCF Agreement to return all RCF funds by transferring the RCF funds and related assets to the designated Qualified Nonprofit” and awarding the State damages for Citizens United’s delay, as well as any and all attorney’s fees and costs allowable by contract or law. Alternatively, the State sought monetary damages for Citizens United’s breach of its obligations under the RCF Agreement, as well as any and all attorney's fees and costs allowable by contract or law.

In response to the State’s petition, Citizens United filed an answer generally denying the State’s allegations and asserting a reconventional demand on the basis that the State breached the RCF Agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Division of Administration, Office of Community Development, Disaster Recovery Unit; State of Louisiana, Office of the Governor, Department of Economic Development v. Citizens United for Economic Equity, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-office-of-the-governor-division-of-administration-lactapp-2024.