Wayne Setliff, Managing Broker of Keller Williams Realty Professionals, LLC v. Chuck Cucchiara and Dennis Good ( 2022 )


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  •                               STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    TiW
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2021 CA 0792
    WAYNE SETLIFF, MANAGING BROKER OF KELLER WILLIAMS
    REALTY PROFESSIONALS, LLC
    VERSUS
    CHUCK CUCCHIARA AND DENNIS GOOD, ET AL.
    JUDGMENT RENDERED:        MAR 0 7 2022
    Appealed from
    The Twenty -Second Judicial District Court
    Parish of St. Tammany - State of Louisiana
    Docket Number 2020- 12615 - Division I
    The Honorable Reginald T. Badeaux, III, Presiding Judge
    Tom Caruso                                           COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT
    Slidell, Louisiana                                   DEFENDANT/ CROSS-
    PLAINTIFF— Dennis Good
    Alex J. Peragine                                     COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    Christina Falco Baldwin                              DEFENDANT/ CROSS-
    Covington, Louisiana                                 DEFENDANT— Chuck Cucchiara
    Wayne Setliff                                        PRO SE APPELLEE
    Slidell, Louisiana                                   PLAINTIFF— Wayne Setliff
    Michael P. Bienvenu                                  COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana                               DEFENDANT/ CROSS-
    DEFENDANT— Sharon Kochera
    BEFORE: MCCLENDON, WELCH, AND THERIOT, JJ.
    WELCH, J.
    In this concursus action, the defendant/cross- plaintiff, Dennis Good, appeals
    a judgment sustaining peremptory exceptions raising the objections of no right and
    no cause of action filed by the defendant/ cross- defendant, Chuck Cucchiara, which
    dismissed,   without   prejudice,    the cross- claims filed by Mr.    Good against Mr.
    Cucchiara. We maintain the appeal, and affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On October 16, 2019, Mr. Cucchiara and Mr. Good entered into a residential
    purchase agreement for Mr. Cucchiara to purchase a portion of a piece of property
    located on I- 10 Service Road in Slidell, Louisiana.          The property is owned by
    Good, Maniglia, Milazo, Properties, L.L.P. (" GMMP").            The purchase agreement
    outlined that Mr. Cucchiara would purchase a piece of property for $ 150, 000. 00,
    subject to a subdivision of the property among the GMMP partners.          In accordance
    with the purchase agreement, Mr. Cucchiara gave the property' s real estate listing
    firm—Keller      Williams Realty Professionals,     LLC— a check for $ 2, 000. 00 as a
    deposit. The October 2019 sale never closed, however, as the partners of GMMP
    could not agree on subdividing the property, and as was later discovered, the
    property could not be subdivided due to its zoning designation.
    On February 11, 2020, Mr. Cucchiara signed a new purchase agreement that
    set forth he was to purchase the entire piece of property from GMMP for
    450, 000. 00.     This   purchase    agreement    required   Mr.   Cucchiara   to   secure
    360, 000. 00 in financing.   The original $ 2, 000. 00 deposit from the failed October
    2019 purchase would be applied to this purchase. On March 13, 2020, the parties
    executed an amendment to the purchase agreement indicating that the purchaser
    was Slidell Storage Mart, LLC.         Slidell Storage applied for a loan with Hancock
    Whitney Bank and was pre -approved for $360, 000. 00,         subject to the completion of
    the environmental survey and appraisal,           which Hancock Whitney ordered on
    2
    March 10, 2020.
    The anticipated closing date was March 31,        2020; however, on March 24,
    2020, Hancock Whitney advised Mr. Cucchiara that it would not have the appraisal
    completed in time to prepare the loan documents for the March 31 closing.     Slidell
    Storage' s   real   estate agent,   Sharon Kochera,   contacted Keller Williams   and
    requested that the closing date be rescheduled for April 16, 2020.   GMMP refused
    to grant the extension. On March 26, 2020, Mr. Cucchiara executed a Cancellation
    of Agreement to Buy or Sell and requested that the $ 2, 000. 00   deposit be returned
    to him.
    Wayne Setliff, the managing broker of Keller Williams, instituted this
    concursus action on June 23, 2020, to adjudicate the ownership of the $ 2, 000. 00
    deposit made by Mr. Cucchiara. Mr. Setliff named as defendants Mr. Cucchiara
    and the GMMP partners— Dennis Good, Carlo Maniglia, and Dr. Nicholas Milazo.
    Mr. Cucchiara filed an answer to the petition for concursus, wherein he
    stated that he did not wish to incur additional legal fees and costs related to the
    concursus    action.   Mr. Cucchiara stated that he believed the $ 2, 000. 00 deposit
    belonged to GMMP. Mr. Cucchiara attached an unsigned " consent judgment"           to
    his answer, which stated that he consented to the entry of judgment in favor of the
    GMMP partners— Mr. Good, Mr. Maniglia, and Dr. Milazo.
    Mr. Good answered the petition for concursus, wherein he stated that Mr.
    Cucchiara was not entitled to the $ 2, 000. 00, which he argued belonged to GMMP.
    Additionally,   Mr. Good raised cross- claims against Mr. Cucchiara and Sharon
    Kochera, Slidell Storage' s real estate agent. Mr. Good alleged breach of contract,
    arguing that Mr. Cucchiara failed to make a good faith effort to obtain financing
    and complete the sale, resulting in GMMP' s property being off the market for a
    considerable amount of time,        which prevented the property from being sold to
    another buyer.      Mr. Good further alleged that Mr. Cucchiara and Ms. Kochera
    3
    made misrepresentations regarding the ability of Slidell Storage to timely obtain an
    appraisal and loan, which caused Mr. Good to incur expenses and attorney fees, as
    well as suffer mental anguish and anxiety. Mr. Good also raised a claim of unfair
    trade practices under La. R.S.         51: 1401,       et seq.   Mr. Good   sought specific
    performance of the purchase agreement, or alternatively, liquidated damages as
    specified in the contract as 10% of the purchase price; damages;             attorney fees;
    costs; reimbursement; and legal interest.
    Thereafter,   Mr.   Cucchiara   filed   a    peremptory   exception   raising   the
    objections of no right of action and no cause of action in response to Mr. Good' s
    cross- claim.'    First, Mr. Cucchiara argued that Mr. Good had no cause of action to
    assert a cross- claim against Mr. Cucchiara because the contract was not made with
    Mr. Cucchiara— the purchaser named in the contract was Slidell Storage, not Mr.
    Cucchiara. (     At the hearing on the exception,            Mr.   Cucchiara withdrew      this
    objection.).     Second, Mr. Cucchiara argued that Mr. Good had no right of action to
    pursue a cross- claim on behalf of GMMP. He claimed that Mr. Good did not have
    the authority to seek damages on behalf of GMMP, who was a party to the contract
    with Mr. Cucchiara.'       Third, Mr. Cucchiara asserted that Mr. Good had no right of
    action to raise this unrelated cross- claim in the concursus proceeding.
    After a hearing, the trial court sustained the objections filed by Mr.
    Cucchiara and dismissed Mr. Good' s cross- claim against Mr. Cucchiara, without
    prejudice.      The trial court signed a judgment in accordance with its ruling on
    January 29,      2021.    Following a request from Mr. Good, the trial court issued
    written reasons for its judgment. Therein, the trial court held:
    This court does not need to look any further than the
    distribution of the funds for this concursus proceeding.
    Mr. Cucchiara has already filed into the record of this
    Mr. Good opposed the objections.
    Z Mr. Cucchiara argued that GMMP' s partnership agreement required "     two partners to take
    action."
    4
    matter a consent judgment awarding [ GMMP] the funds
    that were deposited in the registry by Mr. Setliff. Mr.
    Setliff as the stakeholder is relieved of his liability[;]
    therefore[,] the concursus proceeding is extinguished. If
    Mr. Good and one of his partners wish to pursue their
    claims raised in the cross- claim in this matter, they
    should file their own lawsuit against the proper party,
    Slidell Storage Mart, LLC.
    Therefore, [ Mr.]        Cucchiara' s        Exception          of No
    Right    of Action      regarding          Dennis      Good' s         lack     of
    authority to file a cross claim and Exception of No Cause
    or No Right of Action regarding Dennis Good bringing
    his cross- claim action within a concursus proceeding are
    hereby SUSTAINED and Dennis Good' s Cross -Claim
    for     Specific    Performance             and      Damages            against
    defendant,    Chuck      Cucchiara[,]          is    dismissed         without
    prejudice.
    Mr. Good now appeals.3
    APPELLATE JURISDICTION
    On August 25, 2021, this Court issued a show cause order, ex proprio motu,
    wherein an examination of the January 29, 2021 judgment on appeal revealed that
    the judgment appeared to be a partial judgment that dismissed the cross- claim filed
    by Mr. Good against Mr.               Cucchiara, but did not appear to address all claims
    asserted in the concursus proceeding. We ordered the parties to show cause by
    briefs why this appeal should not be dismissed.                       We further remanded this matter
    for the limited purposes of inviting the trial court to:                     1)   advise in writing that the
    judgment at issue does not warrant or need the La. C. C. P. art. 1915( B) designation;
    2) sign a judgment with a La. C. C. P. art. 1915( B) designation; and 3) provide a per
    curiam (   in the       event   the    trial    court       supplies   the        La.   C. C.P.    art.   1915( B)
    designation), in which the trial court gives its explicit reasons for its determination
    that there is no just reason for delay based upon the factors expressed in R.J.
    Messinger, Inc. v. Rosenblum, 2004- 1664 ( La. 3/ 2/ 05), 
    894 So. 2d 113
    , 1122- 23.
    See La. C. C. P. art. 2088( A)( 11) (          as amended by 
    2021 La. Acts 259
    , § 2 ( eff. Aug.
    3 Mr. Good filed a motion for devolutive appeal on April 15, 2021.                      The trial court signed an
    order of appeal on April 20, 2021, notice of which was transmitted by the Clerk of Court on
    April 27, 2021.
    5
    4
    L 202 1)).
    Thereafter,   the   trial   court   supplemented   the   record   with   an   amended
    judgment signed on October 11, 2021, which included a La. C. C. P.                      art.   1915
    designation certifying the judgment as final.
    Although the trial court designated the judgment as being final and
    appealable under La. C. C. P. art. 1915( B), that designation is not determinative of
    this court' s jurisdiction.     Van ex rel. White v. Davis, 2000- 0206 ( La. App. 1St Cir.
    2/ 16/ 01), 
    808 So. 2d 478
    , 480.        Appellate courts have the duty to examine subject
    matter jurisdiction sua sponte, even when the parties do not raise the issue.
    1St
    Motorola, Inc. v. Associated Indemnity Corporation, 2002- 0716 ( La. App.
    Cir. 4/ 30/ 03), 
    867 So. 2d 715
    , 717 ( en Banc).       If no reasons for the certification are
    given but some justification is apparent from the record, the appellate court should
    make a de novo determination of whether the certification was proper.                           R.J.
    Messinger, Inc., 894 So. 2d at 1122.
    Historically, our courts have had a policy against multiple appeals and
    piecemeal litigation.         Capital Management Consultants, Inc. v. Duhon, 2016-
    0703 ( La. App.      1st Cir. 4/ 18/ 17), 
    227 So. 3d 839
    , 842- 43. Article 1915( B) attempts
    to strike a balance between the undesirability of piecemeal appeals and the need for
    making review available at a time that best serves the needs of the parties.                   
    Id. at 843
    .      Thus,   in considering whether a judgment has been properly designated as
    final and appealable pursuant to Article 1915( B), a trial court must take into
    account judicial administrative interests as well as the equities involved.                     R.J.
    Messinger, Inc., 894 So. 2d at 1122; Templet v. State of Louisiana, Department
    of Public Safety and Corrections, 2005- 1903 ( La. App.                 1St Cir. 11/ 3/ 06), 
    951 So. 2d 182
    , 185.        Some of the factors a trial court should take into account in
    4 Comments --2021( b) to La. C. C. P. art. 2088 indicate that as of August 1, 2021, subparagraph
    A)( 11)    of Article 2088 allows a trial court to retain jurisdiction after an order of appeal is
    granted to certify a partial judgment under Article 1915( B) as a final judgment after an appeal
    has been taken.
    no
    making      an    Article   1915( B)   certification     are   the    relationship          between     the
    adjudicated      and   unadjudicated   claims;   the possibility that the need for review
    might or might not be mooted by future developments in the trial court;                                 the
    possibility the reviewing court might be obliged to consider the same issue a
    second time;       and miscellaneous factors such as delay,                economic,
    and solvency
    considerations, shortening the time of trial, frivolity of competing claims, expense,
    and the like. R.J. Messinger, Inc., 894 So. 2d at 1122.                    However, the overriding
    inquiry for the trial court is whether there is no just reason for delay.                    Id. at 1122-
    23.    In the present case, the amended judgment that was signed on October 11,
    2021, and designated as final does not contain reasons why " there                       is no just reason
    for delay."       Accordingly, we will make a de novo determination of whether the
    certification was proper. R.J. Messinger, Inc., 894 So. 2d at 1122.
    The trial court' s judgment dismissed Mr. Good' s cross- claim against Mr.
    Cucchiara.       The only other claims asserted against Mr. Cucchiara are those by Mr.
    Setliff in the petition for concursus.       In his answer to the petition for concursus,
    however, Mr. Cucchiara disavowed any claim to the $                        2, 000. 00,    stating that he
    believed the funds belong to GMMP.                On that basis, there is no possibility of
    piecemeal        appeals.   Accordingly,     we      find   that     the    designation       meets     the
    requirements of R.J. Messinger, Inc. We maintain the appeal.
    LAW AND DISCUSSION
    Concursus proceedings are governed by La. C. C. P. arts. 4651 through 4662.
    A concursus proceeding is one in which two or more persons having competing or
    conflicting claims to money, property, or mortgages or privileges on property are
    impleaded and required to assert their respective claims contradictorily against all
    other parties to the proceeding."        La. C. C. P. art. 4651;           Glassell Producing Co.,
    Inc.   v.   Naquin, 2019- 0252 ( La.      App.       1st Cir. 2/ 18/ 20),      
    296 So. 3d 1
    ,       4.    A
    concursus proceeding is simply a proceeding whereby one who admits owing
    7
    money to others may deposit that money into the registry of the court, thereby
    relieving himself of the liability for the money so deposited.           La. C. C. P. art. 4658;
    Jefferson v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,              53, 849 ( La. App.     2nd Cir. 5/ 26/ 21),
    
    321 So. 3d 520
    , 524, writ denied, 2021- 00886 ( La. 10/ 12/ 21), 
    325 So. 3d 1073
    .
    A concursus proceeding is neither a summary proceeding nor a substitute for
    trial on the merits.   Concursus cannot be used for the adjudication of claims raised
    in a main demands         Jefferson, 321 So.3d at 524; see also Landry &                  Passman
    Realty, Inc. v. Beadle, Swartwood, Wall &                Assocs., Inc., 
    303 So. 2d 761
    , 763
    La. App.     Pt Cir. 1974), writ refused, 
    307 So. 2d 631
     ( La. 1975); Lent, Inc. v.
    Lemel Steel Fabricators, Inc.,        
    340 So. 2d 1035
    , 1036 ( La. App.          1St Cir. 1976),   writ
    denied, 
    343 So. 2d 1075
     ( La. 1977) (" The concursus procedure should not be
    tortured into a forced consolidation of all claims[.]").         The primary purpose of the
    concursus proceeding is to protect the stakeholder from multiple liability, from
    conflicting claims,     and from the vexation attending involvement in multiple
    litigation in which the stakeholder may have no direct interest. Cimarex Energy
    Co. v. Mauboules, 2009- 1170 ( La. 4/ 9/ 10), 
    40 So. 3d 931
    , 940; Allen & Norman,
    LLC v. Chauvin, 2004- 0519 ( La. App.               Pt Cir. 6/ 29/ 05), 
    916 So. 2d 1071
    , 1073.
    The jurisdiction of the court in a concursus proceeding is limited to disposing of
    funds on deposit and relieving the stakeholder from further liability to the
    impleaded claimants arising out of or as a result of the stakeholder' s ownership or
    possession of the fund.        Int' 1 Carriers, Inc. v. Pearl River Navigation, Inc.,
    2014- 1189 ( La. App.     4th Cir. 4/ 15/ 15), 
    166 So. 3d 1114
    , 1119; Asian Int' l, Ltd. v.
    1st
    Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,              
    435 So. 2d 1064
    , 1067 ( La. App.
    Cir. 1983);   see also Landry & Passman Realty, Inc.,            303 So. 2d at 763.
    Mr. Good makes numerous              allegations in his cross- claim against Mr.
    Cucchiara; however, those          claims    involve     damages Mr. Good            believes     Mr.
    5 Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 4662 provides that "      the rules applicable to an
    ordinary proceeding apply, so far as practicable, to a concursus proceeding."
    E
    Cucchiara owes him for alleged breach of contract, bad faith, misrepresentations,
    and unfair trade practices.'       In a concursus proceeding, however, the trial court' s
    jurisdiction is limited only to the disbursement of the funds deposited into the
    registry of the court.      See Int' 1 Carriers, Inc., 166 So. 3d at 1119; Asian Int' l,
    Ltd.,   435 So.2d at 1067; Landry & Passman Realty, Inc., 303                So. 2d at 763.
    While Mr. Cucchiara classified his exception as a `` peremptory exception
    raising the objection of no right of action,' courts do not take at face value the
    parties' descriptions of actions in their pleadings. Courts must also look through a
    pleading' s caption, style, and form to determine its substance and to do substantial
    justice to the parties. Am. Turbine Tech., Inc. v. Omni Bancshares, Inc., 2016-
    707 ( La. App.    511 Cir. 5/ 31/ 17), 
    222 So. 3d 189
    , 196, writ denied, 2017- 1103 ( La.
    11/ 13/ 17), 
    230 So. 3d 205
     ( citing Metro Riverboat Assocs., Inc. v. Louisiana
    Gaming Control Bd.,         2001- 0185 ( La. 10/ 16/ 01), 
    797 So. 2d 656
    , 660).         It is clear
    from the record on appeal that Mr. Cucchiara was invoking the limited jurisdiction
    of the trial court in a concursus proceeding over the allegations raised by Mr. Good
    in his cross- claim, which is a declinatory exception raising the objection of lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction.' On that basis, we find that the trial court did not err in
    granting the exception raised by Mr. Cucchiara and dismissing Mr. Good' s cross-
    claim against Mr. Cucchiara.           The jurisprudence is clear that the trial court' s
    jurisdiction is limited only to the disbursement of the funds deposited into the
    6 A cross- claim may be asserted against a co- defendant where the demand arises out of the
    subject matter or relates to the property that is the subject matter of the original action. See La.
    C. C. P. arts. 1031 and 1071.    While a defendant in concursus may not bring reconventional
    demands or demands for additional relief against a plaintiff in concursus, defendants in
    concursus may cross claim against each other, but not make claims extraneous to the subject
    matter of the proceeding. See McLean v. Majestic Mortuary Servs., Inc., 2011- 1166 ( La.
    App. 5th Cir. 5/ 22/ 12), 
    96 So. 3d 571
    , 577.
    The declinatory exception raising the objection of lack of subject matter jurisdiction addresses a
    court' s authority to adjudicate the cause of action before it. The exception may be raised at any
    stage of an action, and may even be raised by the court on its own motion. See La. C. C. P. art.
    925; see also Whittenberg v. Whittenberg, 97- 1424 ( La. App. 1St Cir. 4/ 8/ 98), 
    710 So. 2d 1157
    ,
    1158.    Where the exception is raised for the first time on appeal, the appellate court has
    discretion to consider such exception, because it goes to the core of the validity of the judgment
    and is not subject to the waiver provisions generally affecting declinatory exceptions.       Kerr-
    McGee Corp. v. McNamara, 2000- 0770 ( La. App. 1St Cir. 6/ 22/ 01), 
    826 So. 2d 1
    , 5.
    registry of the court in a concursus proceeding.               Thus, the allegations raised in Mr.
    Good' s cross- claim against Mr. Cucchiara are clearly outside the scope of the trial
    court' s jurisdiction.'
    8 We make no pronouncement as to whether Mr. Cucchiara' s filing of an exception was the
    proper procedural device to achieve the dismissal of the cross- claim.           See, f.g.,   Lestelle &
    Lestelle v. Campo Music Shopping Center Condominium Association, 2021- 0077 ( La. App.
    4t"
    Cir. 3/ 23/ 21), 
    315 So. 3d 331
    . In that case, Campo Music Shopping Center Condo
    Association sustained damages in Hurricane Katrina.             Campo filed a claim with its insurer;
    however, the amounts received were insufficient to repair damages.              Campo entered into a
    contract with Stan Pore d/ b/ a Gulf Coast Claim Recovery ( GCCR) to assist in its insurance
    claim.  The contract provided for a contingency fee and specified that GCCR could assign its
    rights at its sole discretion. GCCR claimed that Mr. Pore assigned its rights under the contract to
    GCCR.       Campo hired a law firm ( Lestelle &         Lestelle) to sue its insurer; the claim settled.
    Lestelle &   Lestelle then instituted a concursus proceeding, claiming that Campo and GCCR were
    each asserting entitlement to $ 91, 000 of settlement proceeds.         GCCR filed an answer to the
    petition for concursus, claiming that it was entitled to the proceeds via the assignment contained
    in the contract.     Campo filed an answer and exceptions, as well as a cross- claim and a
    reconventional demand against GCCR, asserting several defenses to GCCR' s claim to the
    proceeds.    GCCR filed exceptions, defenses, and an answer to Campo' s reconventional demand
    and cross- claim. Id. at 333.
    Campo then filed an exception of no right of action, claiming that GCCR lacked proof of the
    assignment of the contract from Mr. Pore to GCCR.              The trial court ultimately sustained the
    exception.    Id. at 333- 34.   On appeal, the Third Circuit reversed the trial court' s judgment and
    rendered judgment denying the exception:
    W] hile the defendant in a concursus is considered both a plaintiff and a
    defendant, there is nothing to support the argument that the exception was filed in
    response to [ GCCR' s] position as a plaintiff. As was done in this case, parties
    named as defendants in concursus proceedings file answers to the petition in the
    concursus proceeding.      At a hearing on the merits, each " defendant" would then
    argue entitlement to the proceeds. Therefore, each defendant is also considered a
    plaintiff in relation to the other defendants in the proceeding.
    This transforms the answer of each defendant into its own petition or
    incidental action to which a party could properly file an exception. La. C. C. P. art.
    4656 specifies, however, that no exception may be filed to the answer of a
    defendant. Comment ( C) to La. C. C. P. art. 4656 notes that "[ n] othing in the
    above article prevents a defendant from excepting to the plaintiff' s petition, to
    raise the objections of lack of jurisdiction, improper venue, no right to implead
    the defendants, and so forth."    Accordingly, La. C. C. P. art. 4656 limits the filing
    of exceptions in this instance, only allowing them to be filed in response to the
    petition to institute the concursus proceeding. Here, [ Campo] filed an answer to
    the petition to institute the concursus proceeding, asserting defenses to [ GCCR' s]
    entitlement to the settlement proceeds.    Thereafter, [ Campo] filed an exception of
    no right of action to [ GCCR' s] answer wherein [ GCCR] asserted its entitlement to
    the proceeds. Thus, [ Campo' s] argument that it filed the exception of no right of
    action in response to [ GCCR' s] status as a plaintiff is not supported by La. C. C. P.
    art. 4656 or by the record. Instead, [ Campo' s] exception of no right of action to
    GCCR' s] answer is prohibited by the plain wording of La. C. C. P. art. 4656.
    Accordingly, we find that the trial court erred in granting [ Campo' s] exception of
    no cause of action. We reverse the trial court' s judgment and render judgment
    denying the exception of no cause of action.
    Id. at 335- 36.
    10
    DECREE
    We affirm the trial court' s October 11, 2021 judgment.          All costs of this
    appeal are assessed to the defendant/ cross- plaintiff, Dennis Good.
    APPEAL MAINTAINED; JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
    11