Murphy J. Painter, Sr. v. Dustin Clouatre, Hughes Insurance Services, LLC, Pelican Post News, L.L.C., Wade Petite, Ricky Babin, ABC Insurance Company, Clint Cointment ( 2022 )


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  •                    NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2021 CA 1276
    2021 CW 1196
    MURPHY J. PAINTER, SR.
    VERSUS
    DUSTIN CLOUATRE, HUGHES INSURANCE SERVICES, LLC,
    PELICAN POST NEWS, L.L. C., WADE PETITE, RICKY BABIN,
    ABC INSURANCE COMPANY, CLINT COINTMENT
    Judgment Rendered:    JUN 0 3 2022
    On Appeal from the 23rd Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of Ascension
    State of Louisiana
    Trial Court No. 129, 894
    Honorable A. Bruce Simpson, Judge Presiding'
    Kim Segura Landry                                  Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellant,
    Gonzales, Louisiana                                Murphy J. Painter, Sr.
    Ralph R. Alexis, III                               Attorneys for Defendant/Appellee,
    Glenn B. Adams                                     Ricky L. Babin, in his official
    23rd
    Corey D. Moll                                      capacity as District Attorney,
    New Orleans, Louisiana                             Judicial District
    BEFORE: WHIPPLE, CJ., PENZATO, AND HESTER, JJ.
    1
    Serving Pro Tempore by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court.
    PENZATO, J.
    Appellant,    Murphy J.      Painter,   Sr.,   appeals    a judgment sustaining an
    exception of no cause of action and dismissing all of his claims against Ricky
    Babin in his official capacity as District Attorney for the 23rd Judicial District
    Rabin")    with prejudice.    In an associated writ, Babin seeks review of a judgment
    denying his special motion to strike, in the event this court reverses the judgment
    sustaining his exception of no cause of action and dismissing all of Painter' s claims
    against him. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment and dismiss the
    writ application as moot.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    This case arises from actions alleged to have happened in connection with
    the 2019 election for Ascension Parish President.               Painter and Clint Cointment
    qualified for a run-off election, from which Painter withdrew.               On October 19,
    2020, Painter filed this suit for damages to his reputation in the community against
    Babin, Cointment, Dustin Clouatre, Wade Petite, Pelican Post News, L.L.C.,
    Hughes Insurance Services, LLC, and Westport Insurance Corporation.2                    In his
    petition, Painter alleged that Cointment conspired with defendants Clouatre and
    Petite to injure his chances of winning the election by having a news article and
    allegedly altered voice recording posted by the Pelican Post News, an online news
    source.    Painter alleged the article contained knowingly false statements that
    implicated him in a scheme to cover up child rape allegations against an employee
    while he was the Chief Deputy in the Ascension Parish Sheriff' s Office.
    According to Painter' s petition, in June 2019, Petite provided Babin with a
    copy of the voice recording and requested that he investigate Painter for possible
    crimes related to the recording.       The petition states that Babin asked Painter to
    2 In his original petition, Painter named " ABC Insurance Company" as a defendant. By amended
    petition, Painter substituted " Westport Insurance Corporation for " ABC Insurance Company."
    2
    come to his office for a meeting to discuss the recording. According to Painter,
    Babin told him "        the Sheriff and the State Police had already reviewed the
    recording and determined that [ Painter] had not committed any wrongdoing nor
    was [ Painter] a target of the investigation" and the purpose of the meeting was to
    determine if the District Attorney' s office missed anything.                 Painter alleged that
    during their conversation, he questioned Babin about the recording and Babin
    refused to reveal the source of the recording and advised Painter that the recording
    had not been authenticated.           According to Painter, the meeting with Babin never
    took place.
    Painter further alleged that on October 18, 2019, several days after he and
    Cointment qualified for the run-off, the Pelican Post News published the news
    article with the edited version of the voice recording. According to Painter, on the
    same date that the article was published, Babin publicly announced his plan to
    bring " Painter before the grand jury to discuss the allegations of child rape that are
    mentioned in the recording." According to Painter, being publicly named by Babin
    as the subject of a grand jury investigation gave credence to the article,                       and
    f]aced with the power of the District Attorney and the fear of the District
    Attorney' s control over the grand jury process and the evidence presented in
    support of indictments, while fighting a very heated second primary election in
    which public support was devastated," Painter withdrew from the run- off election.
    Painter further alleged that Babin instituted grand jury proceedings, which
    resulted in Babin announcing on November 4, 2019 that the District Attorney' s
    office found no evidence of any unreported rape cases that were covered up in
    connection     with     the   voice    recording.       Painter    alleged   that   Babin' s   public
    announcement of intent to bring Painter before a grand jury, and the institution of
    grand jury proceedings in which there was no probable cause, was instituted with
    malice.       Painter    further      alleged   that    Babin' s   acts   constituted "   malicious,
    3
    intentional, willful, outrageous, reckless, and/ or flagrant misconduct."              According
    to Painter, Babin' s actions were not intimately associated with the judicial phase of
    the   criminal   process,   and Babin attempted to veil his misconduct under his
    administrative and investigative powers and duties.               Painter further alleged that
    Babin was a co- conspirator in the actions of Petite, Clouatre, and Cointment.
    In response to Painter' s petition, Babin filed a peremptory exception of no
    cause of action, contending that Painter' s claims were barred by the doctrine of
    absolute immunity.'         He also filed a special motion to strike, asserting that
    Painter' s petition did not assert any colorable claims under Louisiana law and
    involved matters of free speech by a public official about a public issue,                     and
    therefore should be dismissed.
    A hearing was held on June 3,            2021.     The trial court sustained Babin' s
    exception of no cause of action on the grounds of absolute immunity.                        Babin
    asserted that the ruling sustaining the exception of no cause of action mooted his
    special motion to strike.      Despite Babin' s assertion, the trial court considered and
    denied Babin' s special motion to strike.        The trial court signed a judgment on July
    15 2021 in accordance with its oral ruling, sustaining Babin' s exception of no cause
    of action and dismissing all of Painter' s claims against Babin with prejudice.                It is
    from this judgment that Painter appeals.
    3 Babin also plead an exception of prescription, alleging that any claims arising out of events
    occurring more that one year prior to the filing of Painter' s suit were prescribed pursuant to La.
    C. C. art. 3492. Babin' s exception of prescription was not ruled on by the trial court and is not a
    subject of this appeal.
    M
    The trial court signed a separate judgment, also on July 1,        2021,    denying
    Babin' s special motion to strike.     Babin sought supervisory writs in connection
    with this judgment "   out   of an   abundance   of caution."   In his writ application,
    Babin argues that in the event this court reverses the judgment sustaining his
    exception of no cause of action and dismissing all of Painter' s claims against him,
    this court should review the trial court' s denial of his special motion to strike. This
    court issued an order on December 6, 2021, referring Babin' s writ to this panel, as
    the panel to which Painter' s appeal is assigned.
    Painter' s Appeal
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    On   appeal,   Painter alleges the trial court erred in sustaining Babin' s
    exception of no cause of action on the basis of absolute immunity.             Painter also
    contends the trial court committed legal error by failing to apply a functional
    analysis to determine whether Babin' s use of a grand jury proceeding was for an
    investigative purpose or for initiating a criminal proceeding for the purpose of
    applying absolute immunity.
    LAW AND DISCUSSION
    The reviewing court conducts a de novo review of a trial court' s ruling
    sustaining an exception of no cause of action because the exception raises a
    question of law and the lower court' s decision is based only on the sufficiency of
    the petition.   Adams v. Owens- Corning Fiberglas Corp.,        2004- 1296 (   La. App.   1
    Cir. 9/ 23/ 05), 
    921 So. 2d 972
    , 976, writ denied, 2005- 2501 ( La. 4/ 17/ 06), 
    926 So. 2d 514
    .
    The function of an exception of no cause of action is to test the legal
    sufficiency of the petition by determining whether the law affords a remedy on the
    facts alleged in the petition. Ramey v. DeCaire, 2003- 1299 ( La. 3/ 19/ 04), 
    869 So. 2d 114
    , 118.     A cause of action, when used in the context of the peremptory
    61
    exception, is defined as the operative facts that give rise to the plaintiff' s right to
    judicially assert the action against the defendant. Everything on Wheels Subaru,
    Inc. v. Subaru South., Inc., 
    616 So. 2d 1234
    , 1238 ( La. 1993).              No evidence may
    be introduced to support or controvert the exception raising the objection of no
    cause of action.   La. C. C. P. art. 931.
    All facts pled in the petition must be accepted as true.               Denham Homes,
    L.L. C. v. Teche Federal Bank, 2014- 1576 (         La. App.    1 Cir. 9/ 18/ 15),   
    182 So. 3d 108
    , 117.   Because Louisiana retains a system of fact pleading, mere conclusory
    statements in the petition, without supporting facts, are insufficient to set forth a
    cause of action.   Montalvo v. Sondes, 93- 2813 ( La. 5/ 23/ 94), 
    637 So. 2d 127
    , 131.
    It is well- settled that the District Attorney and his assistants are absolutely
    immune from civil liability when acting within the scope of their duties in
    initiating and pursuing a criminal prosecution. Sinclair v. State ex rel. Dept. of
    Public Safety & Corrections, 99- 2290 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 11/ 3/ 00),          
    769 So. 2d 1270
    ,
    1271, writ denied, 2000- 3331 ( La. 1/ 25/ 02), 
    806 So. 2d 665
    .          See also Gauthier v.
    Ard, 2018- 0861 (   La. App.    1 Cir. 7/ 23/ 19), 
    2019 WL 3311965
    , * 2 ( Prosecutors,
    acting within the scope of their traditional prosecutorial duties as advocates for the
    state, are entitled to absolute immunity from suit arising from conduct intimately
    associated with the judicial phase of the criminal process).            A determination that
    prosecutors are entitled to absolute immunity for conduct within the course and
    scope of their prosecutorial functions does not mean that a prosecutor will be
    immune from suit in all cases.       Immunity is granted only in those instances where
    the function being served is advanced by the extension of immunity.                  Knapper v.
    Connick,    96- 0434 ( La.    10/ 15/ 96),   
    681 So. 2d 944
    ,   950.     In Buckley    v.
    Fitzsimmons, 
    509 U.S. 2591
     
    113 S. Ct. 2606
    , 
    125 L.Ed.2d 209
     (                1993), the United
    States Supreme Court held that while the actions of a prosecutor that are intimately
    associated with the judicial phase of the criminal process and which occur in the
    ON
    course of a prosecutor' s role as an advocate for the state are entitled to absolute
    immunity, where prosecutors act in an investigatory, administrative, ministerial or
    other role that has no functional tie to the judicial process, only a qualified
    immunity is afforded. Knapper, 681 So. 2d at 950.
    In his petition, Painter alleged causes of action for malicious prosecution,
    abuse of process, and defamation against Babin in his capacity as District Attorney
    for the 23` d Judicial District. Painter' s allegations are that Babin instituted grand
    jury proceedings to investigate allegations of child rape mentioned in the voice
    recording provided to Babin, and that Babin made a public announcement of his
    intent to bring Painter before the grand jury.     Painter further alleged that Babin
    subsequently announced that the District Attorney' s office found no evidence of
    unreported rape cases in connection with the voice recording.
    On appeal, Painter argues that his petition alleges that Babin' s actions were
    for the purpose of " investigating" the matter, not "      initiating a prosecution,"     and
    preclude a claim of absolute immunity.
    Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure article 61 provides:
    Subject to the supervision of the attorney general, as provided in
    Article 62, the district attorney has entire charge and control of every
    criminal   prosecution   instituted   or   pending     in   his   district,   and
    determines whom, when, and how he shall prosecute.
    Accepting as true all of the allegations of Painter' s petition, we find that Babin' s
    decision to convene a grand jury to investigate allegations of unreported child rape
    cases and report this action to the public is within the purview of the duties of the
    district attorney, intimately associated with the judicial phase of the criminal
    process, and occurred in the course of his role as an advocate for the state. As the
    trial court correctly observed in granting Babin' s exception of no cause of action:
    If ...absolute
    immunity did not apply to the grand jury proceeding,
    then we would have these circumstances where the absolute immunity
    may apply to the District Attorney for issues after an indictment is
    returned, but he would not have that protection for issues that arise
    h
    before the indictment is returned, and it seems to me that that would
    have great effects on the efforts of a District Attorney to perform his
    function as a prosecutor and would have harmful effects on society....
    Accordingly, in light of the allegations of the petition, we find that Babin is
    entitled to absolute immunity.
    Painter contends for the first time in his brief that he should be allowed to
    amend his petition to overcome the plea of immunity.             Louisiana Code of Civil
    Procedure article 934 provides that when the grounds of the objection pleaded by
    the peremptory exception may be removed by amendment of the petition,                 the
    judgment sustaining the exception shall order such amendment;             however, if the
    grounds of the objection raised through the exception cannot be so removed, the
    action shall be dismissed. Painter did not submit his request to amend his petition
    to the trial   court,   nor did he assign as error on appeal that amendment was
    disallowed.    Under these circumstances, we find that Painter did not preserve his
    right to seek review of this issue and the interest of justice does not clearly require
    otherwise.     See Uniform Rules—Courts of Appeal, Rule 1- 3; Naquin v. Bollinger
    Shipyards, Inc., 2013- 1638 (    La. App.   1 Cir. 5/ 2/ 14),   
    147 So. 3d 207
    , 213, writ
    denied, 2014- 1091 ( La. 9/ 12/ 14), 
    148 So. 3d 933
    .
    Based upon the above, we find the trial court correctly sustained Babin' s
    exception of no cause of action and dismissed all of Painter' s claims against Babin
    with prejudice.
    Babin' s Application for Supervisory Writs
    Because we have affirmed the July 1, 2021 judgment sustaining Babin' s
    exception of no cause of action and dismissing Painter' s claims against Babin, we
    dismiss as moot Babin' s application for supervisory review of the July 1,          2021
    judgment denying Babin' s special motion to strike.
    M.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the July 1, 2021 judgment sustaining
    the exception of no cause of action and dismissing all claims of appellant, Murphy
    J. Painter, Sr.,   against Ricky Babin in his official capacity as District Attorney for
    the 23rd Judicial District with prejudice.       We dismiss as moot the application for
    supervisory writs from the July 1, 2021 judgment denying the special motion to
    strike filed on behalf of Ricky Babin in his official capacity as District Attorney for
    the 23rd Judicial District.   All costs of this appeal are assessed to Murphy J. Painter,
    Sr.
    AFFIRMED; WRIT APPLICATION 2021 CW 1196 DISMISSED AS
    MOOT.
    E