Thompson v. Celestain

936 So. 2d 219, 2006 La. App. LEXIS 1604, 2006 WL 2088408
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 2006
DocketNo. 2005-CA-1481
StatusPublished

This text of 936 So. 2d 219 (Thompson v. Celestain) 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
Thompson v. Celestain, 936 So. 2d 219, 2006 La. App. LEXIS 1604, 2006 WL 2088408 (La. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

MAX N. TOBIAS, JR., Judge.

11 This case involves a petition for partition of immovable property brought by Leona Thompson (“Thompson”) against her former boyfriend/fiancé1, Alfred L. Celestain, Sr. (“Celestain”), regarding the house that they purchased together in New Orleans in January 2001. Thompson and Celestain eventually ended their relationship, and Thompson moved out of the house.

On 29 July 2004, Thompson filed a petition to partition the property located at 4624 Eastern Street in New Orleans (“the property”).2 She alleged that she was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the house and that the property was not susceptible to division in kind because the property included the land and the house. She prayed for partition by licitation of the [220]*220immovable property. Along with her petition, she filed a descriptive list of assets and liabilities, listing the movable property in the house, as well as the mortgage on the property and the amount due on a VISA account. Celestain responded to the petition with his own descriptive list of assets and liabilities. His list differed from Thompson’s | ^regarding the value of many items of movable property; the liability for the debt of a VISA credit card; and further assigned ownership for each item of movable property to either himself or Thompson. On 7 December 2004, Celestain filed a motion to set a hearing on the petition to partition the property.

The hearing was set for 29 March 2005. Thompson was the only witness to testify on her behalf.3 She testified that she and Celestain purchased the house for $110,000.00 and that she tendered a $1,000.00 good faith deposit toward the purchase and an additional $26,462.28 as a down payment. She presented copies of an official check for $1,000.00 made payable to the realtor and an official check made payable to herself for $26,462.28. Thompson testified that after she and Celestain purchased the house, she made twelve or thirteen mortgage payments before she eventually moved out in August 2002. She did not present any cancelled checks to introduce into evidence in support thereof, but testified that she made the mortgage payments by money order and could not document the payments.4 She further testified that she paid for the installation of new windows at the house, costing her a total of $4,279.00. In conjunction with this testimony, she presented one copy of a money order made payable to the mortgage holder and two receipts for windows from LAS Enterprises.

Thompson also testified that she and Celestain had a VISA credit card account together, and that the balance on the account was $9,000.00. She testified |sthat she and Celestain were both responsible for the charges on the account, and that he had agreed to pay for half of the charges on the account when they ended their relationship. He purportedly made a $5,000.00 payment on the account, but then withdrew $5,000.00 against the account by way of a counter check.

Celestain’s testimony is at odds with Thompson’s in many regards. Celestain testified that Thompson moved out during Mardi Gras 2001, and did not continue to reside there until August 2002 as she maintains. Further, Celestain denied that Thompson made the entire down payment on the property; he asserts that he put down $12,000.00 toward the purchase price. He further testified that he has made almost all of the mortgage payments on the property, and that Thompson made only one before she moved out. In support of his testimony, Celestain presented copies of canceled checks written on his personal checking account to the mortgage company, which totaled $12,453.58, representing fifteen mortgage payments.5 He [221]*221also described and documented improvements he made to the property over the years, including replacing, the front door, installing a hot tub, restoring a bathtub, plumbing repairs, and various other acts of maintenance on the property.

Celestain’s son and brother were called to testify on his behalf. His son, Alfred Celestain, Jr., testified that he attended college in Baton Rouge, Louisiana from August 1999 through October 2003, frequently coming home to his father’s house both on weekends and during the week. He testified that Thompson was no longer living at the house as of August 2001, but sometimes came by the house to | ¿shower and change clothes. He testified that Thompson and his father owned a white vehicle together of which Thompson retained possession after the break-up.6 Celestain’s brother testified that Thompson had ceased living at the property sometime around Mardi Gras in 2001.

The trial court issued judgment on 6 April 2005 and issued detailed reasons for judgment. It awarded Thompson the following credits, totaling $24,042.20: $1,000.00 for the good faith deposit on the house; $13,081.14, representing one-half of the down payment on the property; $682.06 for one mortgage payment on the house; $4,279.00 for windows she had installed at the house; and $5,000.00 for the portion of the VISA credit card bill that Celestain admitted depositing the money to pay, but which he later withdrew from the joint account. The trial court awarded Celestain the following credits, totaling $48,025.60: $13,081.14 (one-half of the down payment); $25,463.60 for mortgage payments from August 2002 through the time of trial; the value of two windows installed at the house, calculated to total $713.17; and home repairs and improvements totaling $8,767.69. The judgment found that Thompson was indebted to Celestain in the amount of $23,983.40, with judicial interest due from the date of demand. It further found that the parties “have agreed to settle the jointly held real property” and conveyed Thompson’s undivided interest in the property to Celestain.

Thompson appeals the judgment of the trial court, assigning six errors. Thompson maintains that the trial court erred in 1) ordering the transfer of Thompson’s interest to Celestain instead of partitioning the property; 2) alternatively, if the transfer order was proper, failing to require Celestain to |sreimburse Thompson for her one-half undivided interest; 3) issuing a money judgment in favor of Celestain with interest accruing “from the date of judicial demand” when there was no judicial demand; 4) holding Celestain and Thompson to different evidentiary standards and burdens of proof; 5) requiring Thompson to reimburse Celestain for costs related to the Jacuzzi, when it was installed over her objections; and 6) failing to give Thompson a credit against maintenance costs to offset the benefit derived by Celestain who enjoyed sole use and occupancy of the house from August 2002 on.

Celestain argues that the parties negotiated extensively to divide the movable property between them, transfer title of the residential immovable property to Celestain, and to compensate Thompson for the value of her interest in the property. What was not intended by the parties, according to Celestain, was to proceed to a partition by licitation. Thus, although Celestain admits that the judgment as rendered by the trial court may be flawed in [222]*222its computation of damages, he contends that it essentially reflects the will of the parties with regard to the disposition of the immovable property. As we discuss infra, we do not find this argument persuasive or in accordance with Louisiana law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
936 So. 2d 219, 2006 La. App. LEXIS 1604, 2006 WL 2088408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-celestain-lactapp-2006.