Ted Norris v. Stafford P. Fontenot

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 2004
DocketCA-0003-1455
StatusUnknown

This text of Ted Norris v. Stafford P. Fontenot (Ted Norris v. Stafford P. Fontenot) 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
Ted Norris v. Stafford P. Fontenot, (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

03-1455

TED NORRIS, ET AL.

VERSUS

STAFFORD P. FONTENOT, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-SEVENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. LANDRY, NO. 98-C-2200-D HONORABLE DONALD W. HEBERT, DISTRICT JUDGE

MARC T. AMY JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Marc T. Amy, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Angelo J. Piazza, III Post Office Box 429 Marksville, LA 71351 (318) 253-6423 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Ted Norris

M. Terrance Hoychick Young, Hoyhick & Aguillard (LLP) Post Office Drawer 391 Eunice, LA 70535-0391 (337) 457-9331 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Stafford P. Fontenot Prairie Cajun Seafood Catering of Louisiana AMY, Judge.

The plaintiff filed suit to recover amounts due under two promissory notes

executed by the defendant. In his answer, the defendant claimed that when he signed

the promissory notes, he was acting as a representative of a partnership to which he

belonged, and, as such, he was only liable for his virile share of the debt. The trial

judge determined that a partnership existed when the promissory notes were executed

and that they were executed on its behalf. Accordingly, judgment was entered against

the partnership for the amounts due on the notes. The plaintiff appeals, asserting that

the defendant is personally liable for the entire amount due on the promissory notes.

For the following reasons, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

Ted Norris, plaintiff herein, designed and built a “mobile kitchen” for use at

festivals by installing cooking equipment, such as stoves, burners, and coolers, in an

empty eighteen-wheeler trailer. Mr. Norris estimated the value of the completed

kitchen to be $50,000.

Stafford Fontenot, defendant herein, testified at trial that, approximately six or

seven months before the 1996 Summer Olympics, he and some friends—Steve Turner,

Mike Montelaro, Joe Sokol, and Doug Brinsmade—discussed going to Atlanta,

Georgia, the site of the Games, to sell seafood and other Cajun dishes. However, they

did not have the cooking equipment needed for the endeavor. Mr. Fontenot testified

that Mr. Turner and Mr. Montelaro learned of Mr. Norris’s “mobile kitchen” and

entered into preliminary negotiations with him for its purchase.

The act of sale was executed on June 12, 1996, at the office of William Bennett,

Mr. Norris’s attorney. The record reflects that at this time, Mr. Brinsmade gave Mr.

Norris a down payment of $8,000, in the form of a check drawn on an account titled, “Prairie Cajun Seafood Catering of LA.” Mr. Bennett then presented Mr. Fontenot

with two promissory notes representing the balance of the purchase price of the

kitchen: one for $12,000, and the other for $20,000.

Mr. Fontenot testified that upon examining the notes, he noticed that his was

the only name listed as maker, and he informed Mr. Bennett that he would not sign

individually. According to his testimony, Mr. Bennett replied that he and Mr. Norris

did not intend to list Mr. Fontenot’s associates as co-obligors. At trial, Mr. Fontenot

claimed that he made it clear to Mr. Bennett that the group was purchasing the

kitchen. He recalled that Mr. Bennett offered to re-write the notes, telling him that the

addition of “d/b/a Prairie Cajun Seafood” after his name would “kind of take care of

it.” Mr. Fontenot stated that it was his understanding that adding “d/b/a” to the notes

would relieve him of personal liability as to the notes and would instead make the

obligation one of the partnership. After the promissory notes were rewritten and

signed, the group took possession of the kitchen.

Mr. Fontenot testified that the results of the group’s catering endeavor in

Atlanta were “disastrous” and that what little money they made “went back through

[the group’s] checking account.” He stated that the group has not engaged in business

since the Olympics.

Ted Norris also testified at trial as to his understanding of the events

surrounding the sale of the “mobile kitchen.” He stated that Mr. Fontenot and a

“group of people” came to see the “mobile kitchen,” but he did not know who the

other people were. He likewise recalled that several gentlemen accompanied Mr.

Fontenot to Mr. Bennett’s office when the act of sale was passed but that Mr. Fontenot

had not explained his relationship to them. Mr. Norris testified that he had assumed

that the gentlemen were “associated with” Mr. Fontenot and that he “took it for

2 granted that [Mr. Fontenot] owned the company [that was going to use the kitchen].”

Mr. Norris recalled that his attorney had advised against selling the kitchen to a

corporation or to a “group” and had assured him that the sale was “personally between

[him] and Stafford Fontenot.”

On June 9, 1998, Mr. Norris filed suit against Mr. Fontenot, d/b/a Prairie Cajun

Seafood Catering of Louisiana, in the district court for Avoyelles Parish, the parish

of his—Mr. Norris’s—domicile. In his petition, he asserted that no payments had

been made on either of the two promissory notes. Mr. Fontenot, a domiciliary of St.

Landry Parish, filed an exception of improper venue, and, pursuant to a joint petition

filed by the respective parties’ attorneys, the matter was transferred to St. Landry

Parish. On December 10, 1998, Mr. Norris filed a supplemental and amending

petition, in which he named as defendants Mr. Brinsmade, Mr. Montelaro, and Mr.

Turner, noting that they were “principals in the business Prairie Cajun Seafood

Catering of Louisiana.” However, Mr. Norris voluntarily dismissed Messrs.

Brinsmade, Montelaro, and Turner in open court on May 7, 2001, and on May 29,

2002, in a second supplemental and amending petition, he requested that references

to these gentlemen be “delete[d]” from his petition. On May 24, 2002, Mr. Fontenot

filed an exception of failure to join an indispensable party—viz., the partnership,

Prairie Cajun Seafood Catering of Louisiana.

The matter proceeded to trial on May 29, 2002. On July 10, 2002, the trial

judge issued written reasons for judgment, which stated, in pertinent part, as follows:

Plaintiff, Ted Norris, testified that it was his impression that Stafford Fontenot was buying the mobile trailer himself. He testified that he didn’t ask Stafford Fontenot about his business partners. The eight thousand dollar ($8000.00) check dated June 11th, 1996 was signed by Doug Brinsmade, from Prairie Cajun Seafood Catering of Louisiana. Mr. Norris indicated that he did business with Stafford Fontenot.

3 Della Norris, wife of Plaintiff, testified that they were dealing with Stafford Fontenot and that Mr. Fontenot never indicated to them that he had partners with him in the business. Defendant, Stafford Fontenot, testified that his business partners, namely; [sic] Steve Turner and Mike Montelaro were introduced to the Plaintiffs as business partners. Mr. Stafford Fontenot indicated that he had refused to sign the two (2) notes individually, and they subsequently went back to now Judge William Bennett’s office and added d/b/a Prairie Cajun Seafood Catering of Louisiana to the promissary [sic] notes. Stafford Fontenot testified that Mr. Brinsmade was present at the closing. Judge William Bennett, in his deposition taken for trial purposes on July 31st, 2001, testified that he “remembers [sic] that there were a group of guys that wanted to buy this machine.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tabco Exploration, Inc. v. Tadlock Pipe & Equip., Inc.
617 So. 2d 606 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)
Allain v. Martco Partnership
828 So. 2d 587 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2002)
Medline Industries, Inc. v. All-Med Supply & Equip.
653 So. 2d 830 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1995)
Allain v. Martco Partnership
851 So. 2d 974 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ted Norris v. Stafford P. Fontenot, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ted-norris-v-stafford-p-fontenot-lactapp-2004.