Dr. Herbert Simmons, Jackson Parish Branch (JPB) NAACP through its' President Windy Calahan, Maxie Monroe, John McCarty v. John B. Edwards, Governor of State of Louisiana ( 2019 )


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  •                  NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2018 CA 1436
    DR. HERBERT SIMMONS, JACKSON PARISH BRANCH (JPB)
    NAACP THROUGH [ ITS] PRESIDENT WINDY CALAHAN[,]
    MAXIE MONROE, JOHN MCCARTY, ET AL
    VERSUS
    JOHN B. EDWARDS, GOVERNOR OF STATE OF LOUISIANA
    DATE OF JUDGMENT' '
    AUG 0 7 2019
    ON APPEAL FROM THE NINETEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    NUMBER 659780, SECTION 22, PARISH OF EAST BATON ROUGE
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    HONORABLE TIMOTHY E. KELLEY, JUDGE
    Ernest L. Johnson                         Counsel for Plaintiffs -Appellants
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana                    Dr. Herbert Simmons and NAACP
    Jackson Parish Branch
    Madeline Sue Carbonette                   Counsel for Defendants -Appellees
    Angelique Duhon Freel                     State of Louisiana through
    Alicia Edmond Wheeler                     Governor John Bel Edwards and
    Assistant Attorneys General               Attorney General Jeff Landry
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana
    Michael John O' Shee                      Counsel for Defendant -Appellee
    Martha R. Crenshaw                        Jackson Parish Police Jury
    Steven M. Oxenhandler
    Alexandria, Louisiana
    BEFORE: WELCH, CHUTZ, AND LANIER, JJ.
    D' sposition: AFFIRMED.
    CHUTZ, J.
    Plaintiffs -appellants, Dr. Herbert Simmons and the Jackson Parish Branch of
    the NAACP,'       appeal the trial court' s judgment, sustaining a peremptory exception
    raising the objection of no cause of action and dismissing, with prejudice, their
    claims for injunctive and declaratory relief against defendants -appellees, the State
    of Louisiana through Governor John B.                Edwards and Attorney General Jeff
    Landry,' and the Jackson Parish Police Jury, arising out of allegations that La. Acts
    2017,   No.    171 ( Act        171),   addressing certain hospital service district board
    membership, is unconstitutional and illegal. We affirm.
    With an effective date of August 1, 2017, the Louisiana legislature passed
    Act 171, which states:
    Section     1.     Notwithstanding    any   provision   of law   to    the
    contrary,   the governing authority of any parish with a population
    greater than sixteen thousand and less than seventeen thousand,
    according to the latest federal decennial census, shall have a hospital
    service district board governed by five commissioners, who shall be
    qualified voters and residents of the parish and shall possess the
    following qualifications: one commission member who shall possess
    financial expertise as the officer or owner of a bank or group of banks
    in the parish, one commission member who                  shall possess legal
    expertise as a licensed attorney in good standing in the parish who
    shall  not  be employed by the district attorney' s office, one
    commission member who shall possess medical expertise and is a
    licensed practitioner at the hospital service district hospital in the
    parish,   one   commission member who              shall possess   business    or
    accounting expertise and is a licensed certified public accountant or
    who holds a master' s degree in business administration and practices
    in the parish, and one commission member who shall have managerial
    expertise and is employed by a manufacturer located in the parish of
    products made from pulp wood or other fibrous substances with more
    than two hundred employees. The commissioners shall be appointed
    by a majority vote of the police jury of the parish for six year terms.
    In addition to Dr. Simmons and the Jackson Parish Branch of the NAACP, this lawsuit was also
    commenced with Maxie Monroe and John McCarty as party plaintiffs. But Monroe was
    subsequently dismissed at her request, and in the second amending petition, McCarty was not
    identified as a party plaintiff.
    2 The original petition named Governor Edwards as the sole defendant. After Attorney General
    Landry intervened to represent the interests of the State, Governor Edwards was dismissed from
    the lawsuit in his individual capacity.
    V
    Section 2.   The police jury of the parish shall ensure that all
    necessary appointments are made such that the commission members
    appointed pursuant to this Act shall assume their responsibilities on
    August 1, 2017.
    Mindful that the sustaining of an objection of no cause of action and
    dismissing of a petition is proper only when the allegations of the petition itself
    clearly showing that plaintiffs do not have a cause of action, we note that the
    burden of proof is with the mover of the exception and our review of a judgment
    sustaining an exception of no cause of action is reviewed by an appellate court de
    novo. See Louisiana Pub. Serv. Comm' n v. Louisiana State Legislature, 2012-
    0353 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 4/ 26/ 13), 
    117 So. 3d 532
    , 537 ( en banc).
    Local or Special Law:
    On appeal, citing La. Const. Art. III, §12B, 3 plaintiffs contend that the trial
    court erred in its conclusion that Act 171 was not a special or local law. The trial
    court stated:
    T] he fact that [ Act 171 ] is not unconstitutional [ as] a special or local
    law, the [ Louisiana] Supreme Court has already decided this issue in
    Deer Enterprises, LLC v. Parish Council of Washington Parish,
    2010- 0671 ( La. 1/ 19/ 11),     
    56 So. 3d 936
    ], and I have explained how
    potentially other parishes could fall within [the ambit of Act 171 ], and
    potentially they could fall outside of it, and that the [ act] utilizes the
    correct census under our law.
    The Deer Enterprises court explained:
    The   prohibition    against    certain   local    and   special   laws    is
    intended to reflect a policy decision that legislative resources and
    attention should be concentrated upon matters of general interest, and
    that purely local matters should be left to local governing authorities.
    The terms " local"      and " special"    are used in contradistinction to the
    term "   general."    General laws are those that operate equally and
    uniformly      upon    all   persons     brought       within   the   relations    and
    circumstances for which they provide or that operate equally upon all
    persons of a designated class founded upon a reasonable and proper
    classification. The ultimate distinction between public or general laws
    and local or special laws is that the former affect the community as a
    whole, whether throughout the State or one of its subdivisions; and the
    latter affect private persons, private property, private or local interests.
    3 La. Const. Art. III, §12B provides, " The legislature shall not indirectly enact special or local
    laws by the partial repeal or suspension of a general law."
    3
    When the operation of a law is limited to certain parishes, it is
    immediately suspect as a local law. A statute is generally considered
    to be local if it operates only in a particular locality or localities
    without the possibility of extending its coverage to other areas should
    the requisite criteria exist or come to exist there. However, a law is
    not local, even though its enforcement may be restricted to a particular
    locality or localities, where the conditions under which it operates
    simply do not prevail in other localities. Thus, a law is not local if its
    coverage can extend to other localities or areas. Generally, a law that
    applies to localities within a certain population is not a local law
    because other localities potentially can meet the population trigger
    and become subject to the particular law.
    Deer Enterprises, 
    56 So. 3d at 942
     ( citations and quotations omitted).
    The operation of Act 171 is presently limited to the parish of Jackson by
    virtue of its population.    It is therefore immediately suspect as a local law.
    However, as noted by the trial court, the provisions of Act 171 may extend its
    application to other parishes if the requisite criterion comes to exist there, i.e., if
    those parishes fall within the population range. It is also possible that Jackson
    Parish may expand or contract beyond the reach of Act 171. Because the triggering
    criterion is the range of 16, 000 residents, which is tied to the latest decennial
    census, and the 2020 census is nearing, a shift in the act' s coverage in the future
    appears possible. Indeed, according to plaintiffs, recent statistics show a decline in
    the population of Jackson Parish since the 2010 census. The elastic application of
    Act 171 and the fluid nature of population dynamics militate against finding it is
    prohibited as a local law.
    In contrast to a local law, the Deer Enterprises court provided the following
    explanation of a special law:
    A special law confers special privileges or imposes peculiar
    disabilities or burdensome conditions in the exercise of a common
    right upon a class of persons arbitrarily selected from the general body
    of those who stand in precisely the same relation to the subject of the
    law. A special law is generally one that operates on and affects only a
    fraction of the persons or a portion of the property encompassed by a
    classification, granting privileges to some persons while denying them
    to others. In other words, a law is special if it affects only a certain
    Ll
    number of persons within a class and not all persons possessing the
    characteristics of the class. A special law is directed to secure some
    private advantage or advancement for the benefit of private persons.
    The prohibition on special laws represents an important safeguard
    against the abuse of legislative power on behalf of special interests.
    Deer Enterprises, 
    56 So. 3d at
    543- 44 ( citations and quotations omitted).
    The objects and purposes of hospital service districts and the governing
    bodies include ownership and operation of hospitals for the care of persons
    suffering from illnesses or disabilities which require that patients receive hospital
    care; the administration of other activities related to rendering care to the sick and
    injured or in the promotion of health which may be justified by the facilities,
    personnel, funds and other requirements available; the promotion and conducting
    of scientific research and training related to the care of the sick and injured insofar
    as such research and training can be conducted in connection with the hospital;
    participation so far as circumstances may warrant in any activity designed and
    conducted to promote the general health of the community; and the cooperation
    with other public and private institutions and agencies engaged in providing
    hospital and other health services to residents of the district. See La. R.S. 46: 1052
    relative to hospital service districts created by police juries of parishes).
    In light of the objects and purposes of hospital service districts, Act 171 does
    not appear to affect " the exercise of a common right," and does not bear the
    significant distinction of securing private advantages for private persons. Thus, the
    trial court correctly implicitly determined that Act 171 is not aimed at special
    interests.
    Moreover, to the extent that plaintiffs are asserting that Act 171 subjects
    those parishes that meet the population criterion to a different set of rules simply
    because of demographic distribution which, they maintain, shows a patent grant of
    privileges to some while denying them to others,            we find no merit in this
    R
    contention. As noted by the Deer Enterprises court, a privilege is a special legal
    right, exemption, or immunity granted to a person or class of persons; an exception
    to a duty. A privilege grants someone the legal freedom to do or not to do a given
    act.   Deer Enterprises, 
    56 So. 3d at 944
    . Because Act               171   includes defined
    qualifications for commissioners, none of which Dr. Simmons and ostensibly all
    other African American residents of Jackson Parish possess, a privilege has been
    bestowed on those that meet the criteria. But the fallacy of plaintiffs' assertion is
    that no citizen has an inherent right to an appointment on a hospital service district
    board. It is the members of the Jackson Parish Police Jury who determine those it
    will appoint to the Jackson Hospital Service District. Therefore, Act 171 does not
    deny or grant the privilege of appointing members to the hospital service district
    board. That right remains with the parish police jury.
    Lastly, based on the allegations of plaintiffs'           petition and their assertions
    before the trial court and now on appeal, they have simply failed to identify any
    special interests"   that are served by Act 171. Accordingly, Act 171 is not an
    unconstitutional abuse of legislative power.
    Prohibited Retroactive Application:
    Plaintiffs assert that Act 171 is a substantive law that is retroactive in its
    application because it relies on the 2010 census. However, a clear reading of Act
    171 shows that the population criterion is based on " the latest federal decennial
    census,"
    rather than merely the 2010 census. See and cf. State v. Brazley, 2000-
    0923 ( La. 11/ 28/ 00), 
    773 So. 2d 718
    , 721 ( enactment was unconstitutional where it
    specified the " 1990 U.S. Decennial Census,"             a fixed determination).
    According to La.     C. C.   art.   6, "   In the absence of contrary legislative
    expression,    substantive    laws     apply           prospectively   only.   Procedural   and
    interpretative laws apply both prospectively and retroactively, unless there is a
    m
    legislative expression to the contrary." Additionally, La. R.S.                     1: 2 provides that
    n] o Section of the Revised Statutes is retroactive unless it is expressly so stated."
    To determine whether a law should be retroactively applied, courts must first
    ascertain whether the legislature expressed its intent regarding retrospective or
    prospective application. If the legislature did so, the inquiry is at an end. If the
    legislature    did    not,   the    court     must   classify the       enactment    as    substantive,
    procedural,     or    interpretive.    Notwithstanding          this   analysis,   even     where     the
    legislature has expressed its intent to give a law retroactive effect, the law may not
    be applied retroactively if doing so would impair contractual obligations or disturb
    vested    rights.    MACWCP H LLC v. Williams, 2017- 0004 ( La.                        App.     1st Cir.
    9/ 15/ 17), 
    231 So. 3d 665
    , 669, writ denied, 2017- 1750 ( La. 12/ 5/ 17), 
    231 So. 3d 624
    .
    Plaintiffs    maintain      that     because     Dr.    Simmons       was    an     appointed
    commissioner of the Jackson Parish Hospital Service District Board who had not
    completed his term,' the application of Act 171, requiring the specified criteria for
    commissioners         appointed to      the    hospital   service      district board,     operated    to
    retroactively impair contractual obligations or disturb him of his vested rights.
    In its oral reasons for judgment, the trial court stated:
    T] here is no vested right in an appointed position. It is an appointed
    position that can be dissolved in a number of ways over the objection
    of the appointee....
    There is no vested right under our federal constitution or under
    our state constitution to an appointed position to a body. There being
    no   vested    right,   there is no concern about whether [ Act 171 ] is
    retroactive.
    The appointment to a public office is not a contract. Boyer v. St. Amant, 
    364 So. 2d 1338
    ,     1340 ( La.    App.       4th Cir.), writ denied,        
    365 So. 2d 1108
     ( La.    1978).
    4 See La. R.S. 46: 1053( BB) (" In the parish of Jackson, the Jackson Parish Hospital Service
    District shall be governed by a commission composed of seven members. The additional
    members provided for by this Subsection shall be appointed by the police jury for initial terms of
    six years each and their successors shall serve six- year terms.").
    I
    Additionally, it is well settled that a person elected to a public office has no vested
    prospective right that prevents a legislative branch, or other proper authority, from
    abolishing the office. See Hoag v State ex rel. Kennedy, 2001- 1076 ( La. App. 1 st
    Cir.   11/ 20/ 02),   
    836 So. 2d 207
    , 220 ( en Banc),           writ denied, 2002- 3199 ( La.
    3/ 28/ 03),   
    840 So. 2d 570
    . Accordingly, as a matter of law, Act 171 did not impair
    any contractual obligations affecting Dr. Simmons -- or any other potential African
    American appointee --        in either maintaining the appointment as a commissioner to
    Jackson Parish Hospital Service District Board or as to any emoluments of that
    appointment. And for the same reasons, neither Dr. Simmons nor any other African
    American resident of Jackson Parish was deprived of a vested right.
    Violation of the Voting Rights Act of 1965:
    Plaintiffs aver that by eliminating his appointment, Act 171 eliminated the
    opportunity for African Americans to participate in the electoral process in
    violation of the Voting Rights Act. According to 52 U.S. C.A. § 10301( a):
    No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard,
    practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State ... in a
    manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any
    citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color, or in
    contravention of the guarantees set forth in ... this title.
    In addressing this assertion by plaintiffs, the trial court stated:
    Act 1.71]    does not violate the Voting Rights Act, as there is no
    elected   position    associated   with [ plaintiffs'    claims].   There   is   no
    general voting on this issue. It is the [ police jury] that makes the
    appointment. It is not an elected position.... There is no right to have
    a vote on these matters from the general population.
    Plaintiffs have failed to allege any facts that could support a finding that they were
    entitled to vote on the appointment of the commissioner for the Jackson Hospital
    Service District Board so as to support a violation of the Voting Rights Act.
    Equal Protection Violation:
    Plaintiffs claim that Act 171 violated their equal protection rights. See La.
    Const. Art. I, § 3; U.S.   Const. Amendment 14. They urge that because Act 171
    applies only to Jackson Parish, it treats the parish differently from all other
    parishes with hospital service districts.
    Generally, the state constitutional guarantee of equal protection mandates
    that state laws affect alike all persons and interests similarly situated. The equal
    protection clause, however, does not require absolute equality or precisely equal
    advantages. It is possible for parties to be treated differently without violation of
    equal protection rights. Equal treatment of all claimants in all circumstances is not
    required.   The law merely requires equal application in similar circumstances.
    Where the challenged classification is based on grounds other than discrimination
    because of birth, race, age,   sex,   social   origin, physical   condition, or political     or
    religious ideas, the law creating the classification is presumed to be constitutional.
    Thus,   the party challenging the constitutionality of the law has the burden of
    proving it unconstitutional by showing the             act   fails   to   serve   a   legitimate
    government purpose. Dale v. Louisiana Secy of State, 2007- 2020 ( La. App. 1st
    Cir. 10111107), 
    971 So. 2d 1136
    , 1143 ( per curiam).
    Initially, we question whether the population criterion set forth in Act 171 is
    alike and similarly situated to persons and interests in other hospital service
    districts so as to require the state constitutional guarantee of equal protection. But
    even assuming arguendo that is does, because Act 171 is not based on any suspect
    classification, it requires only that the legislature' s enactment serve a legitimate
    governmental purpose. The powers and duties of commissioners to hospital service
    district boards include representing the public interest in providing hospital and
    medical care in the district; providing advice to the police jury and the hospital
    E
    director on problems concerning the operation of the hospital and other facilities;
    making, altering, amending, and promulgating rules and regulations governing the
    conduct of the hospital; conducting hearings and passing upon complaints by or
    against any officer or employee of the district; reviewing and modifying, or setting
    aside any action of the officers or employees of the district which the commission
    may determine to be desirable or necessary in the public interest; appointing, with
    the approval of the medical staff, a director of the hospital and performing such
    other duties as may now or hereafter be required by law; appointing the necessary
    standing and special committees that may be necessary to carry out the purposes of
    the hospital service district;   establishing rates of pay for the use of facilities
    provided by the district; and entering into lease agreements with recognized and
    duly constituted nonprofit associations that are primarily engaged in the operation
    of hospitals.   See   La. R.S.   46: 1055 ( relative   to   the   powers   and   duties   of
    commissioners of hospital service districts created by police juries of parishes).
    Given the objects and purposes of hospital service districts, see La. R. S. 46: 1052,
    as well as the duties required of a hospital service district commissioner, we can
    readily discern that the particularized qualifications of commissioners to the
    hospital service district board of parishes with populations of 16, 000 is legitimately
    served by the appointments of persons with specialized areas of expertise.
    Therefore, plaintiffs have failed to allege an equal protection violation.
    Due Process Violation:
    Plaintiffs suggest that Act 171 violated their substantive due process rights,
    suggesting that their rights to vote and participate in the electoral process are
    fundamental for which they cannot be deprived. See La. Const. Art. I, § 2; U.S.
    Const. Amendments 5 and 14.
    10
    A statute violates notions of substantive due process when it does not bear a
    real and substantial relationship to an appropriate governmental objective. The test
    is whether the regulation is reasonable in relation to the goal to be attained and is
    adopted in the interest of the community as a whole. Dale, 971 So.2d at 1143.
    The barebones allegations of fact contained in plaintiffs' petition do not state
    how or when they were denied the right to vote or otherwise participate in the
    electoral process. Act 171 clearly bears a real and substantial relationship with the
    goals of hospital service district boards. See e. g., La. R.S. 46: 1052 and 1055.
    Additionally, a reasonable relationship exists between the hospital service districts'
    goals and the provisions of Act 171, which specifies certain qualifications for
    particularized expertise of the appointed commissioners. Accordingly, plaintiffs
    have failed to allege any substantive due process violations.
    After a thorough review of the allegations of plaintiffs' petition, we agree
    with the trial court that plaintiffs have failed to state a cause of action entitling
    them to either injunctive or declaratory relief. Subsequent to an earlier amendment
    of their petition, the trial court allowed plaintiffs to amend their petition a second
    time, after a hearing on September 7, 2017. Although La. C. C. P. art. 934 permits
    amendment of the petition when the grounds of the objection pleaded by the
    peremptory exception may be removed, on appeal, plaintiffs do not contend that
    they are entitled to another amendment, and we find no error in the trial court' s
    dismissal of all their claims against defendants. See Rombach v. State ex rel. Div.
    of Admin., 2015- 0619 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 12/ 23/ 15),   
    2015 WL 9464500
    , * 7, writ
    not considered, 2016- 00214 ( La. 4/ 4/ 16), 
    190 So. 3d 1200
    .
    11
    DECREE
    For these reasons, the trial court' s judgment is affirmed. Appeal costs are
    assessed against plaintiffs -appellants, Dr. Herbert Simmons and the Jackson Parish
    Branch of the NAACP.
    AFFIRMED.
    12
    DR. HEBERT SIMMONS, ET AL.                                               2018 CA 1436
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    VERSUS
    COURT OF APPEAL
    JOHN B. EDWARDS, GOVERNOR                                     STATE OF LOUISIANA
    OF THE STATE OF LOUISIANA
    LCH, J., dissenting.
    I disagree with the majority' s opinion that Act 171 is not a local or special
    law.    Despite the act' s population criterion of "a population greater than sixteen
    thousand     and   less than    seventeen   thousand,   according to the latest federal
    decennial census,"    which is presently limited to Jackson Parish by virtue of its
    population, I find that the legislative history indicates that the legislature intended
    Act 171 to be a local law and operate in the particular locality of Jackson Parish.
    See State v. Brazley, 2000- 0923 ( La. 11/ 28/ 00), 
    773 So. 2d 718
    , 721- 22.
    Legislation is the solemn expression of legislative will, and, therefore, the
    interpretation of the law involves, primarily, the search for the legislature' s intent.
    Motorola, Inc. v. Associated Indem. Corp., 2002- 0716 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 4/ 30/ 03),
    
    867 So. 2d 715
    , 719.       Intent expressed at the appropriate legislative committee
    meetings is an aid to the courts in determining the true legislative intent and
    purpose behind the law.        Bridges v. Smith, 2001- 2166 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 9/ 27/ 02),
    
    832 So. 2d 3075
     311, writ denied, 2002- 2951 ( La. 2/ 14/ 03), 
    836 So. 2d 121
    .
    The broadcast archived video of the        Senate Committee on Health and
    Welfare for April 26, 2017, reflects, with regard to Act 171 ( Senate Bill No. 219),
    that the bill was presented by its author, Senator James R. " Jim" Fannin, who
    explained that the bill dealt with certain hospital service districts:
    I]t is a population of between 16, 000 and 17, 0000, and
    you know, it' s a hospital in my parish, where I live.
    We' ve had many issues through the years even when I
    was president of the police jury. It' s a rural hospital, and
    I think all of you know what challenges today that rural
    hospitals,   along with many                  other   hospitals   have,
    financially.' [ Emphasis added.]
    Senator Fannin also presented his bill before the House Committee on
    Health and Welfare.                 The archived video for May 18, 2017, reflects that Senator
    Fannin testified:
    This bill does two things:               it changes the number of
    hospital board members in a service district with a parish
    population 16 to 17, 000, which is only one parish in the
    state. And the five board members that will be on the
    board,      it    puts   a   criterion   inby which the
    place
    qualifications that they would have to have in order to be
    appointed by the police jury. The policy jury appoints the
    seven now.    The policy jury would continue to appoint
    them, it would just be five instead of seven. And those
    five would have to have qualifications in order to be
    appointed by the jury."' [ Emphasis added.]
    Act 171 specifically requires that " one commission member who shall have
    managerial expertise and is employed by a manufacturer located in the parish of
    products made from pulp wood or other fibrous substances with more than two
    hundred employees."                 This provision only applies to Jackson Parish. As Senator
    Fannin pointed out in the committee meeting as he was explaining his bill, this
    provision was placed in the legislation only because the local paper mill had to be
    within a certain distance from the hospital emergency room.                             Senator Fannin
    wanted someone from the paper mill on the hospital service board for the Jackson
    Parish Hospital.
    It is clearly evident that the legislature intended Act 171 to apply to Jackson
    Parish, and more specifically, to the hospital service board for the Jackson Parish
    Louisiana State Senate, Senate Broadcast Archived Videos, " Health and Welfare" ( April 26,
    2017),    6: 13- 6: 51,   http:// senate. 1a. gov/video/ videoarchive. asp?v= senate/ 2017/ 04/ 042617H—W_ 0
    last accessed July 18, 2019).
    2 Louisiana House of Representatives, Archived Video, " Health and Welfare" ( May 18, 2017).
    4: 49- 5: 28,
    http:// house. louisiana.gov/H_Video/ VideoArchivePlayer. aspx?v=house/ 2017/ may/ 0518_ 17_ HW
    last accessed July 18, 2019).
    2
    Hospital located in Jonesboro,       to which Senator Fannin repeatedly referenced
    when discussing the specifics of his bill. For these reasons, I find that Act 171 is a
    local law in violation of La. Const. Art. III, § 12.     1 find that the plaintiffs have
    asserted a valid cause of action.3
    Further, the plaintiffs have set forth a cause of action of racial discrimination
    in alleging that this bill targeted one African-American for removal from the
    hospital service board for the Jackson Parish Hospital in violation of the Louisiana
    Constitution.
    I would reverse the trial court' s sustaining of the defendants'      peremptory
    exception raising the objection of no cause of action and reinstate the plaintiffs'
    claims for injunctive and declaratory relief.
    3 The House of Representatives and Senate Archived Videos prove conclusively that Act 171
    was intended to be a local law.
    3
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2018CA1436

Filed Date: 8/7/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024