Pontchartrain Natural Gas System, k/d/s Promix, L.L.C., and Acadian Gas Pipeline System v. Texas Brine Company, LLC ( 2019 )


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  •                                         STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    NO. 2019 CA 0141
    to/
    GERALD WAYNE MIZELL AND PAMELA MIZELL HELTON
    VERSUS
    BOBBY JOE WILLIS AND JAMES E. WILLIS
    Judgment Rendered:     NODI 1 5 2019
    V"
    Appealed from the 22° d Judicial District Court
    in and for the Parish of Washington
    Case No. 110744
    The Honorable Reginald T. Badeaux, III, Judge Presiding
    Richard W. Watts                                      Counsel for Appellants
    Franklinton, LA                                       Defendants/ Petitioners- in-
    reconvention/ Third- party plaintiffs
    Bobby Joe Willis and James E.
    Willis
    William H. Arata                                      Counsel for Appellees
    Bryan A. Harris                                       Plaintiffs/ Defendants- in-
    Bogalusa, LA                                          reconvention
    Gerald Wayne Mizell, Pamela
    Mizell Helton
    Counsel for Appelle
    Third -party defendant
    Charles Blackwell
    BEFORE: HIGGINBOTHAM', PENZATO, AND LANIER, JJ.
    1 Judge Toni Manning Higginbotham was not present at oral argument of this case; however, she
    participated in deliberations via a recording of the hearing.
    LANIER, J.
    In the instant case,         Bobby Joe Willis and James E. Willis (" the Willis
    brothers"), challenge the trial court' s October 24, 2018 judgment, which purported
    to dismiss,   with     prejudice,   their reconventional and third -party demand against
    Gerald Wayne Mizell, et al.2 For the reasons that follow, we dismiss the appeal.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    According to the record, Gerald Wayne Mizell and Pamela Mizell Helton,
    and the Willis brothers own adjoining tracts of land in Washington Parish ( the
    Mizell"   and "   Willis" tracts).     There is a gravel road running in a north/ south
    direction along the western edge of the Mizell and Willis tracts, which the Willis
    brothers allege they have used for in excess of 30 years to access their property. A
    dispute arose in 2016 when a fence was built across the road, blocking the Willis
    brothers' use of the road.     The Mizells filed suit for partition in kind of the property
    they co -owned with the Willis brothers.             In response, the Willis brothers filed a
    reconventional and third -party demand, seeking restoration of their right of passage
    along the road. Named in this demand as third -party defendants were Charles Guy
    Blackwell and Lylia D. Blackwell.             The Mizells were named as defendants -in -
    reconvention.      The Willis brothers alleged that the road had been " consistently
    maintained"    by them and " used on a daily basis" by them until the fence was
    constructed in November 2016.            They asserted further that the road had been in
    existence for well over 30 years and was at one time maintained by the governing
    body of Washington Parish.
    The matter proceeded to a bench trial on August 16, 2018, at which time
    various documents were introduced into evidence and the trial court heard from
    2 The underlying suit, a petition for partition in kind of a tract of land measuring approximately
    33 acres, filed by the Mizells, was settled prior to the trial of this matter. The parties reached an
    agreement as to partitioning of the property such that Willis brothers were granted ownership of
    seven acres of land.
    2
    numerous witnesses regarding the road in question.             At the conclusion of the trial,
    the trial court took the matter under advisement.             The trial court issued written
    reasons for judgment on October 24, 2018, concluding that the Willis brothers had
    not met their burden of proof under La. R. S. 48: 491 and that the road was not a
    public road.    On October 24, 2018, the trial court singed a judgment as follows:
    IT   IS       HEREBY       ORDERED,            ADJUDGED,         AND
    DECREED         that    the   reconventional      and third -party demand by
    petitioner -in -reconvention      Bobby     Joe     Willis,   ET   AL    against
    defendant -in -reconvention       Gerald    Wayne       Mizell,    ET   AL   be
    DISMISSED with prejudice.
    IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the costs associated with
    this proceeding be assessed to petitioner -in -reconvention, Bobby Joe
    Willis, ET AL.
    This is a final and appealable Judgment pursuant to La. C. C. P.
    art. 1915.
    It is from this judgment that the Willis brothers have appealed, arguing that
    the trial court erred ( 1)   in finding that the road had not been publicly maintained in
    accordance with La. R.S. 48: 491 and ( 2) in failing to find the Willis brothers had
    provided " sufficient proof to establish ownership of a servitude of passage acquired
    by [ 30 years acquisitive] prescription."
    RULE TO SHOW CAUSE
    On July 24, 2019, this court, ex proprio motu, issued a rule to show cause in
    this matter on the grounds that the judgment on appeal was ambiguous in that the
    court was " unable to discern what specific relief [was] granted to which particular
    parties."   Both sides filed briefs in response to this court' s show cause order.
    The Willis brothers contend that although the judgment " may not have been
    drafted as artfully or precisely as a reviewing court may wish, the effect of the
    judgment is perfectly clear: Gerald Wayne Mizell, Pamela Mizell Hilton, Charles
    Guy Blackwell and Lydia D. Blackwell won. Bobby Joe Willis and James E.
    Willis lost."   They request that either the show cause order be dismissed or that the
    3
    case " be remanded to the trial court for the limited purpose of supplying a suitable
    judgment with the appropriate decretal language for consideration" by this court.
    The Mizells and Charles Blackwell argue that the judgment is not a final and
    appealable judgment because it fails to name all of the parties in whose favor the
    judgment is rendered and all the parties against whom the judgment is ordered.
    Moreover, they point out that because the judgment requires reference to extrinsic
    evidence to discern the trial court' s ruling, the judgment lacks the decretal language
    necessary to vest this court with appellate jurisdiction.
    SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
    Appellate courts have the duty to determine sua sponte whether their subject
    matter jurisdiction exists, even when the parties do not raise the issue.                 Gaten v.
    Tangipahoa Parish School System, 2011- 1133 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 3/ 23/ 12), 
    91 So. 3d 1073
    ,   1074.       This court's appellate jurisdiction extends only to " final
    judgments."        See    La.    Code   Civ.   P.       art.   2083( A);   Rose   v.   Twin   River
    Development, LLC, 2017- 0319 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 11/ 1/ 17), 
    233 So. 3d 679
    , 683.
    Under Louisiana law, a final judgment is one that determines the merits of a
    controversy in whole or in part.          La. Code Civ. P. art. 1841.             A valid judgment
    must be precise, definite, and certain; must contain decretal language; and must
    name the party in favor of whom the ruling is ordered, the party against whom the
    ruling is ordered, and the relief that is granted or denied. Gaten, 
    91 So. 3d at 1074
    .
    These determinations should be evident from the language of the judgment without
    reference to other documents in the record.                    Advanced Leveling &       Concrete
    Solutions v. Lathan Company, Inc., 2017- 1250 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 12/ 20/ 18), 
    268 So. 3d 1044
    , 1046 ( en banc).
    The October 24, 2018 judgment sought to be appealed herein contains the
    Latin phrase "     et   al"   when referring to the parties both in the caption of the
    judgment and in the actual body of the judgment itself.                    In cases with multiple
    4
    plaintiffs or defendants, the failure to name the plaintiff(s) or defendant( s) for or
    against whom the judgment is rendered makes the judgment fatally defective
    because one cannot discern from its face for or against whom it may be enforced.
    See Jenkins v.       Recovery Technology Investors, 2002- 1788 ( La. App.                        1 Cir.
    6/ 27/ 03),   
    858 So. 2d 598
    , 600; but cf. Micken v. DHC OPCO- Napoleonville,
    LLC, 2018- 0140 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 11/ 2/ 18) 
    2018 WL 5732482
    , * 2 ( unpublished)
    because plaintiff was clearly identified in the caption and body of the judgment as
    the only plaintiff in the case, judgment was found to contain sufficient decretal
    language even though it did not specify that plaintiff had filed the action against
    the defendants or that the judgment was rendered against her). Thus, because the
    judgment lacks sufficient decretal language, ascertainable from the four corners of
    the order or judgment, the ruling on which this appeal is based is not a final
    appealable judgment.             In the absence of appropriate decretal language,                    the
    judgment is defective and cannot be considered a final judgment for purposes of
    appeal,
    notwithstanding the trial court's certifying it as such.                     Thus,   we    are
    constrained to find that this court lacks appellate jurisdiction to review this matter,
    and the       appeal must be dismissed.'                See Advanced Leveling &              Concrete
    Solutions, 268 So. 3d at 1046- 1047.
    3 Although this court could consider converting this matter to an application for supervisory
    writs, we decline to do so.      The decision to convert an appeal to an application for supervisory
    writs is within the discretion of the appellate courts.        Stelluto v. Stelluto, 2005- 0074 ( La.
    6/ 29/ 05), 
    914 So. 2d 34
    , 39.
    Generally, appellate courts have exercised that discretion when the
    motion for appeal was filed within the thirty -day time period allowed for the filing of an
    application for supervisory writs under Uniform Rules, Courts of Appeal, Rule 4- 3 and where
    reversal of the trial court' s decision would terminate the litigation, or where clear error in the trial
    court's judgment, if not corrected, will create a grave injustice. However, when the jurisdictional
    defect lies in the non -finality of a judgment ( as opposed to an appeal from an interlocutory
    judgment),   an appellate court will generally refrain from the exercise of its supervisory
    jurisdiction when an adequate remedy exists by appeal. In such cases, an adequate remedy by
    appeal will exist upon the entry of the requisite precise, definite, and certain decretal language
    necessary for appellate review. This is because in the absence of proper decretal language, the
    judgment is defective, and this court lacks jurisdiction to review the merits, even if we were to
    convert the matter to an application for supervisory writs. Accordingly, we decline to exercise
    our discretion to convert this appeal of a judgment that is not final for lack of decretal language
    to an application for supervisory writs. See Boyd Louisiana Racing, Inc., v. Bridges, 2015-
    0393 ( La. App. I Cir. 12/ 23/ 15), 
    2015 WL 9435285
    , * 34 (unpublished).
    5
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we dismiss the appeal of the October 24, 2018
    judgment.   Costs of this appeal are assessed against appellants, Bobby Joe Willis
    and James E. Willis.
    APPEAL DISMISSED.
    0
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2018CA0500

Filed Date: 11/15/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024