Kristine Russell, in her capacity as District Attorney for Lafourche Parish v. James V. Cantrelle, in his official capacity as Lafourche Parish President; and Brent Abadie, individually ( 2020 )


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  •                             STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2019 CA 0815
    2018 CW 1762
    KRISTINE RUSSELL, IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS DISTRICT
    ATTORNEY FOR LAFOURCHE PARISH
    VERSUS
    JAMES B. CANTRELLE, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS
    LAFOURCHE PARISH PRESIDENT; AND
    BRENT ABADIE, INDIVIDUALLY
    Judgment Rendered:     MAY 1 1 2020
    On Appeal from the
    17th Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of Lafourche
    State of Louisiana
    No. 136896
    Honorable F. Hugh LaRose, Judge Presiding
    Kristine Russell                                Attorneys for Plaintiff/Appellee,
    District Attorney                               Kristine Russell, in her capacity as
    Joseph S. Soignet                               District Attorney for Lafourche Parish
    Lisa Orgeron
    Assistant District Attorneys
    Thibodaux, Louisiana
    James A. Cobb, Jr.                              Attorneys for Defendant/ Appellant,
    Jennifer C. Deasy                               James B. Cantrelle, Lafourche
    New Orleans, Louisiana                          Parish President, and Brent Abadie,
    Individually
    BEFORE: HIGGINBOTHAM, PENZATO, AND LANIER, JJ.
    PENZATO, I
    James B.     Cantrelle, in his official capacity as Lafourche Parish President,
    and Brent Abadie,       individually, appeal a declaratory judgment and a judgment
    denying a motion in limine. For the following reasons, we dismiss the appeal and
    deny, as moot, the writ application that was referred to this panel.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The Lafourche Parish Government is a political subdivision operating in
    Lafourche Parish and governed by a Home Rule Charter.                   The Home Rule Charter
    provides for the office of the Administrator.               On August 29, 2018, the Parish
    President, James B. Cantrelle, appointed Brent Abadie to serve as Administrator in
    an interim capacity. Subsequently, the Parish President submitted Mr. Abadie to
    the Lafourche Parish Council as his nomination for Administrator in a permanent
    capacity.   A vote on Mr. Abadie' s nomination was held at a special meeting of the
    Council on October 1, 2018, and Mr. Abadie' s nomination failed. Thereafter, the
    Parish President advised the Council that Mr. Abadie would continue to serve as
    interim Administrator.
    On October 19, 2018, Kristine Russell, in her official capacity as District
    Attorney for Lafourche Parish, filed suit against Mr. Cantrelle, in his official
    capacity as the Parish President,            and       Mr. Abadie,    individually ( collectively
    defendants"),    seeking a declaratory judgment finding the actions of the Parish
    President in maintaining Mr. Abadie as interim Administrator to be a violation of
    Article III, Section 3( D)( 5) of the Home Rule Charter.'             The District Attorney also
    i Article III, Section 3( D)( 5) of the Home Rule Charter provides:
    2
    sought      a   preliminary     injunction    enjoining Mr.       Abadie     from     continuing    as
    Administrator and from taking any further action in that role.
    Defendants filed exceptions raising the objections of no right of action, no
    cause of action, and prematurity as to the preliminary injunction portion of the
    suit.'    At a hearing on November 16, 2018, the trial court denied all of defendants'
    exceptions and granted a preliminary injunction enjoining Mr. Abadie                              from
    performing any acts as Administrator. A judgment was signed on December 5,
    2018. 3
    Thereafter,    defendants      answered      the   District   Attorney' s    petition    for
    declaratory judgment and filed a reconventional demand seeking declaratory relief
    A newly elected or re- elected President shall within sixty (60) days after assuming
    office, submit nominations for the Administrator and the heads of all departments,
    except Civil Service, to the Council for confirmation. Within thirty ( 30) days
    after the President makes the nomination, the Council shall vote to confirm or
    reject each nomination by resolution. If a nomination for Administrator or head
    of a department is confirmed by the Council, the person confirmed shall assume
    the office and serve thereafter at the pleasure of the President, unless removed by
    the Council as provided for in this Charter. If a nomination for Administrator or
    head of a department is rejected by the Council, the person rejected shall not
    assume the office to which nominated, and the President shall submit a new
    nomination within sixty ( 60) days after the date of the rejection.       The person
    rejected shall not be eligible for re -nomination for the position involved for a
    period of six ( 6) months after the date of the rejection vote.   The President may
    appoint an interim Administrator or department head who shall serve until a
    permanent Administrator or department head is confirmed. If a vacancy occurs in
    the office of Administrator or any department head after a person has been
    initially confirmed in that position, the President shall submit a nomination to fill
    the vacancy to the Council within sixty ( 60) days after the date on which the
    vacancy occurs. The Council shall act on the nomination within thirty ( 30) days
    thereafter.
    In the exception raising the objection of no right of action, the Parish President asserted that the
    District Attorney was ethically prohibited from suing him, alleging that he was her client
    pursuant to La. R. S. 16. 2( E) and 42: 261( A). In the exception raising the objection of no cause of
    action, Mr. Abadie asserted that the District Attorney had not stated a cause of action against him
    individually, alleging that the suit, on its face, sought a declaration of the meaning of the Charter
    and the Parish President' s decision to keep him as the interim Administrator. Lastly, in the
    exception raising the objection of prematurity, both the Parish President and Mr. Abadie alleged
    that the District Attorney' s request for a preliminary injunction based on entitlement to further
    relief under La. C. C. P. art. 1878 in a declaratory judgment action was premature because a
    declaratory judgment had not been rendered.
    3 Defendants appealed the granting of the preliminary injunction.           This court dismissed the
    appeal as moot. See Russell v. Cantrelle, 2019- 0284 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 2/ 21/ 20), 
    2020 WL 859515
    unpublished). Defendants also sought supervisory review of the denial of their exceptions. By
    order dated January 8, 2019, defendants' writ was referred to the panel to which the yet to be
    lodged appeal was assigned.
    3
    regarding the authority of the Parish President to maintain Mr. Abadie as interim
    Administrator and the role of the District Attorney with respect to the executive
    branch of the Lafourche Parish Government.              Defendants also filed a motion in
    limine seeking to strike the District Attorney' s argument based on purported
    witnesses to the drafting or adoption of the Lafourche Parish Home Rule Charter.
    On January 15, 2019, the matter came before the trial court for a hearing on
    the District Attorney' s declaratory judgment and defendants' motion in limine and
    reconventional demand.          The trial court denied defendants' motion in limine and
    took the remaining matters under advisement.              On February 13, 2019, the trial
    court signed a judgment denying defendants' motion in limine.             On the same date,
    the trial court also issued reasons for judgment and signed a judgment decreeing
    that the actions of the Parish President in maintaining Mr. Abadie as interim
    Administrator following his rejection by the Council for that position, and Mr.
    Abadie' s continued assumption of the office of Administrator since October 1,
    2018, violated Article III, Section 3( D)( 5) of the Home Rule Charter of Lafourche
    Parish;   that declaratory relief regarding whether the Council has authority to
    terminate an interim Administrator appointed by the Parish President, whether the
    Council' s rejection of a President' s nominee can ever terminate that individual' s
    prior appointment as interim Administrator, and whether the Council' s simple
    majority vote to reject Mr. Abadie' s nomination was sufficient to effect his
    termination as interim Administrator could not be granted because a proper party
    had not been joined; and that La. R.S.           16: 2( E)4 appoints the District Attorney of
    Lafourche Parish as the regular attorney and counsel for the parish governing
    4 Louisiana Revised Statutes 16: 2( E) states:
    authority and the District Attorney has a legal relationship with the executive
    branch of the Lafourche Parish Government.               The February 13, 2019 judgment was
    amended by judgment signed April 8, 2019, to indicate the judgment was final.
    Defendants appeal the April 8, 2019 amended judgment and the February
    13,   2019 judgment denying their motion in limine, and also seek review of the
    denial of their exceptions.'      Defendants contend that the trial court erred in:
    1.    Overruling their exception of no right of action because the
    District Attorney is ethically prohibited from suing her client, the
    Parish President; lacks standing; and admitted she has no interest
    in a declaratory judgment interpreting the Home Rule Charter of
    Lafourche Parish;
    2.   Denying Mr. Abadie' s exception of no cause of action because the
    District Attorney' s objective to enjoin him from performing any
    duties of his appointed office does not state a claim against him
    individually;
    3.   Denying      their   exception   of
    prematurity   and   in   issuing   a
    preliminary injunction despite the District Attorney' s failure to
    satisfy the criteria of La. C. C. P. arts. 1878 and 3601;
    4.   Leaving the executive branch of the Lafourche Parish Government
    with no lawyer at all by failing to recognize the nature or
    consequence  of the " legal relationship"  created by La. R.S.
    16: 2( E);
    5.   Refusing declaratory relief to them and misinterpreting the Home
    Rule Charter to erroneously find that their actions following the
    Council' s rejection of Mr. Cantrelle' s nomination of Mr. Abadie to
    serve as permanent Administrator violated the Charter; and
    6.   Denying their motion in limine, which further tainted the trial
    court' s statutory interpretation of the Charter in violation of
    separation of powers principles.
    In the parish of Lafourche, the district attorney shall ex officio and without extra
    compensation, general or special, be the regular attorney and counsel for the
    parish governing authority, the school board, and every state board or commission
    domiciled therein, including levee boards, hospital and asylum boards, education
    boards, and all state boards or commissions the members of which, in whole or in
    part, are elected by the people or appointed by the governor or other prescribed
    authority.
    5 When an unrestricted appeal is taken from a final judgment, the appellant is entitled to seek
    review of all adverse interlocutory rulings prejudicial to him, in addition to review of the final
    judgment appealed. Young v. City of Plaquemine, 2004- 2305 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 11/ 4105), 
    927 So. 2d 408
    , 411.
    Z
    DISCUSSION
    While the instant appeal was pending, an election was held on November 16,
    2019, wherein Archie P. Chaisson, III, was elected Lafourche Parish President.b As
    of January 1,    2020, Mr. Cantrelle no longer held the office of Lafourche Parish
    President.      This court was advised by letter filed January 3,                    2020, that Mr.
    Chaisson, in his official capacity as Lafourche Parish President, no longer wished
    to pursue the pending appeal. In his letter, Mr. Chaisson explained, " Since we will
    be appointing all new Department Heads including the Parish Administrator this
    issue is not applicable to my administration."            Thus, we must consider whether this
    appeal    has   been rendered       moot,    such      that   this   court   lacks   subject   matter
    jurisdiction.
    It is well settled that courts will not decide abstract, hypothetical or moot
    controversies,    or render advisory opinions with respect to such controversies.
    Joseph a Ratcliff, 2010- 1342 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 3/ 25/ 11),           
    63 So. 3d 220
    , 225. A case
    is moot when a rendered judgment or decree can serve no useful purpose and give
    no practical relief or effect.     If the case is moot, there is no subject matter on which
    the judgment of the court can operate.                 
    Id.
        The justiciable controversy must
    normally exist at every stage of the proceeding, including appellate stages;                     and
    when the actual controversy lapses, any judicial pronouncement on the matter
    would be an impermissible advisory opinion. 
    Id.
    For a court to entertain an action for declaratory relief, there must be a
    justiciable controversy and the question presented must be real and not theoretical.
    American Waste &        Pollution Control Company a St. Martin Parish Police Jury,
    
    627 So. 2d 158
    ,        162 ( La.    1993).    Consequently, a declaratory action cannot
    generally be maintained unless it involves some specific adversary question or
    6 This court can take judicial notice of the facts regarding the election of a new parish president.
    See La. C. E. art. 201; Alvin Fairburn & Assocs., LLC v. Grimmer, 2011- 1896 ( La. App. 1 Cir.
    5/ 2/ 12), 
    2012 WL 1550588
    , * 1 n. l (unpublished).
    G'7
    controversy asserted by interested parties and based on existing state of facts.               
    Id.
    A court must refuse to entertain an action for a declaration of rights if the issue
    presented is academic, theoretical, or based on a contingency which may or may
    not arise. 
    Id.
    However, some exceptions to the mootness doctrine have been recognized.
    When a defendant has voluntarily ceased complained -of conduct, a court should
    consider: (   1)    whether there is any reasonable expectation that the alleged violation
    will recur; and/ or (2) whether there are unresolved collateral consequences ( such as
    an outstanding claim for compensatory or other monetary relief). In re C.C., 2015-
    0140 ( La.         App.   1   Cir.   12/ 23/ 15), 
    2015 WL 9435190
    , *      3 ( unpublished), writs
    denied, 2015- 2251 ( La. 12/ 23/ 15), 
    184 So. 3d 687
     and 2016- 0197 ( La. 3/ 4/ 16), 
    188 So. 3d 1055
    , writ not considered, 2016- 1304 ( La. 7/ 12/ 16), 
    194 So. 3d 1130
    .
    In the instant case, the current Lafourche Parish President, Mr. Chaisson, has
    indicated the        issues presented      in the       declaratory judgments    are   no   longer
    applicable.
    Thus, the legal questions arising from the controversy between the
    District Attorney and Mr. Cantrelle, in his official capacity as the Parish President,
    and Mr. Abadie, became moot,               abstract,      or hypothetical when Mr. Chaisson
    assumed the office of Parish President.                 Therefore, there is no subject matter on
    which the judgment of this court can operate.                   See Joseph, 
    63 So. 3d at 225
    .
    Moreover, under the facts presented, there are no circumstances that would warrant
    an exception to the general rule of mootness.              See 
    Id.
    Thus, as the appeal presents no justiciable controversy or claim for relief,
    this court lacks jurisdiction to consider it.               Accordingly, we must dismiss the
    appeal.
    We likewise deny as moot the writ application referred to this panel.
    CONCLUSION
    For the above reasons, this appeal is dismissed and the writ is denied as
    moot.     Costs of this appeal in the amount of $1, 583. 30 are assessed against James
    h
    B. Cantrelle,   in his official capacity as Lafourche Parish President, and Brent
    Abadie, individually.
    APPEAL DISMISSED; WRIT DENIED AS MOOT.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019CA0815

Filed Date: 5/11/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024