Succession of Manmohan Singh Dhaliwal Succession of Kailash K. Dhaliwal

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 2023
Docket54,932-CA (consolidated with) 54,933-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Succession of Manmohan Singh Dhaliwal Succession of Kailash K. Dhaliwal (Succession of Manmohan Singh Dhaliwal Succession of Kailash K. Dhaliwal) 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
Succession of Manmohan Singh Dhaliwal Succession of Kailash K. Dhaliwal, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Judgment rendered March 1, 2023. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 54,932-CA No. 54,933-CA (Consolidated Cases)

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

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No. 54,932-CA No. 54,933-CA

SUCCESSION OF MANMOHAN SUCCESSION OF SINGH DHALIWAL KAILASH K. DHALIWAL Plaintiff-Appellee Plaintiff-Appellee

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Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court Nos. 2010-4412 and 2015-1413

Honorable Alvin R. Sharp, Judge

MAHINDERPAL “PAUL” SINGH In Proper Person, DHALIWAL Intervenor/Appellant

HUDSON, POTTS & BERNSTEIN, LLP Counsel for Appellees, By: Margaret H. Pruitt Succession of Jan P. Christiansen, III Manmohan Singh G. Adam Cossey Dhaliwal, Succession of Kailash K. Dhaliwal, Simran Dhaliwal Emaus

KARMINDERAL “KARL” S. DHALIWAL In Proper Person, Appellee

DHILLON SOOKHAM DHALIWAL In Proper Person, Appellee *****

Before THOMPSON, HUNTER, and MARCOTTE, JJ. MARCOTTE, J

These consolidated appeals arise from the Fourth Judicial District

Court, Parish of Ouachita, the Honorable Alvin R. Sharp presiding.

Mahinderpal Singh Dhaliwal (“Paul”), in proper person, appeals two

judgments denying: 1) his objection to the final accounting and tableau of

distribution in his father’s succession and the accountings in his mother’s

succession; 2) his motion to recuse and/or disqualify the succession

representative; and 3) and his motion to subpoena and depose succession

counsel. For the following reasons the trial court’s rulings are affirmed.

This is the fifth appeal involving the Dhaliwal family. See Dhaliwal

v. Dhaliwal (Dhaliwal I), 48,034 (La. App. 2 Cir. 9/11/13), 124 So. 3d 470,

writ denied, 13-2931 (La. 2/21/14), 134 So. 3d 1165; Dhaliwal v. Dhaliwal

(Dhaliwal II), 49,973 (La. App. 2 Cir. 11/25/15), 184 So. 3d 773, writ

denied, 16-0236 (La. 4/4/16), 190 So. 3d 1204; Dhaliwal v. Dhaliwal

(Dhaliwal III), 52,507 (La. App. 2 Cir. 2/27/19), 265 So. 3d 1188, writ

denied, 19-00700 (La. 9/6/19), 278 So. 3d 373; and Dhaliwal v. Dhaliwal

(Dhaliwal IV), 54,502 (La. App. 2 Cir. 6/15/22), 342 So. 3d 402.

The following facts are taken from the prior appeals. Members of the

Dhaliwal family own multiple convenience stores in Ouachita Parish. Dr.

Manmohan S. Dhaliwal (“Manmohan”) and Dr. Kailash K. Dhaliwal

(“Kailash”) had two sons, Karl and Paul. Karl is married to Dhillon

Sookham (“Sookham”); they have a daughter, Simran Dhaliwal Emaus

(“Simran”). Manmohan died intestate in June 2010, and his widow, Kailash,

was named administrator of his succession. Following Manmohan’s death,

litigation over the convenience stores commenced. Kailash and Manmohan’s succession sued Karl and Sookham for a

detailed accounting of the convenience store joint venture allegedly

involving Karl and his parents, as well as recovery of damages. The trial

court granted summary judgment in favor of Karl and Sookham, as well as

an exception of prescription they filed. In Dhaliwal I, we reversed both

rulings and remanded for further proceedings.1

Thereafter, Kailash, who was elderly, informed her attorneys, Robert

A. Lee (“Atty. Lee”) and Sedric E. Banks (“Atty. Banks”), that she wished

to dismiss her lawsuit against Karl and Sookham, who at some point had

become her caretakers. In 2011, Paul entered Chapter 7 bankruptcy;

Clifford Conine was the Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee. Attys. Lee and Banks

sought and received appointment as special counsel to investigate what

interest Paul – and, by extension, the bankruptcy trustee – might have in the

lawsuit. Kailash filed a motion to substitute counsel, which was granted

after the trial court met with Kailash privately and determined that she had

full mental capacity and was not unduly influenced. Her motion to dismiss

her claims in the case was granted; however, the claims she filed against

Karl and Sookham on behalf of Manmohan’s succession were not dismissed.

Attys. Lee and Banks petitioned to intervene, asserting various claims

against Kailash, Karl, and Sookham for conspiracy to breach the fiduciary

duty owed by Kailash as the succession representative, collusion, and

tortious interference. Kailash filed a motion to dismiss the petition for

intervention and a motion to disqualify her former attorneys from

1 Paul filed a petition of intervention in which he sought to join with the plaintiff in demanding his portion of the same relief against the defendants. The trial court denied the request to intervene. That ruling was not an issue in Dhaliwal I. 2 representing Paul and Conine in the lawsuit. The trial court granted

Kailash’s motion to disqualify her former attorneys from representing Paul

and the trustee in the case. It also granted the motion to dismiss the petition

to intervene, in part, and denied the motion in part, stating Attys. Lee and

Banks could claim their privilege arising from the contingency fee contract

on any funds ultimately awarded to the plaintiff.

Attys. Lee and Banks then filed a “Petition for Direct Action, Oblique

Action and Revocatory Action,” against Kailash, Karl, and Sookham

claiming that Kailash’s dismissal of her individual lawsuit against Karl and

Sookham resulted in her being unable to pay her attorney fees under their

contingency contract. Kailash filed a peremptory exception of no cause of

action, which was denied by the trial court. Karl and Sookham filed

declinatory and peremptory exceptions of lis pendens, res judicata,

prescription, no right of action, no cause of action, and vagueness. The trial

court granted the exceptions of no right of action and no cause of action.

Attys. Lee and Banks appealed the judgments dismissing their lawsuits

against Kailash, Karl, and Sookham, as well as the judgment granting the

motion to disqualify them as attorneys for Paul and Conine. We affirmed

the trial court judgments. See Dhaliwal II. Atty. Banks was later disciplined

by the Louisiana Supreme Court’s Office of Disciplinary Counsel regarding

his actions in the matter. See In re Banks, 22-0073 (La. 5/13/22), 339 So. 3d

1152.

Following Kailash’s death in April 2015, Karl was initially named

independent administrator in his mother’s succession, but was removed.

Simran was then named independent administrator in Kailash’s succession

and succession representative in Manmohan’s succession. In that capacity, 3 Simran filed a motion to dismiss Manmohan’s succession’s lawsuit against

Karl and Sookham. As an heir to the succession, Paul filed an opposition to

the motion to dismiss. Following a hearing, the trial court granted the

motion to dismiss, finding that there was not enough evidence that an oral

joint venture existed, that the suit was doomed to fail, and that proceeding

with the lawsuit would waste the successions’ assets. Paul appealed. We

affirmed the trial court’s judgment. See Dhaliwal III.

In May 2016, the bankruptcy judge signed an order providing that,

upon the closing of Paul’s case, the bankruptcy estate’s interest in Paul’s

claims in his father’s succession would not be abandoned and that the trustee

was authorized to reopen the bankruptcy case if a meaningful judgment was

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Succession of Manmohan Singh Dhaliwal Succession of Kailash K. Dhaliwal, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-manmohan-singh-dhaliwal-succession-of-kailash-k-dhaliwal-lactapp-2023.