Court Opinion

ID: 9408368
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-07-12 16:06:54.25325+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:20:43.479402
License: Public Domain

STATE OF LOUISIANA

                                COURT OF APPEAL

                                  FIRST CIRCUIT

                                 NO. 2022 CA 1276

                                CYNTHIA PERCLE
i

                                     VERSUS

                       LAFOURCHE PARISH GOVERNMENT

                                           Judgment Rendered:   JUL 12 2023

       APPEALED FROM THE SEVENTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
                     IN AND FOR THE PARISH OF LAFOURCHE
                               STATE OF LOUISIANA
                              DOCKET NUMBER 139747

               HONORABLE JOHN E. LEBLANC, JUDGE PRESIDING

    Christopher H. Riviere                 Attorneys for Plaintiff A
                                                                   - ppellee
    Todd M. Magee                          Cynthia Percle
    Thibodaux, Louisiana

    Michael G. Gee                         Attorneys for Defendant -Appellant
    Mallory Fields Maddocks                Lafourche Parish Government
    Thibodaux, Louisiana

           BEFORE;      McCLENDON, HOLDRIDGE, AND GREENE, JJ.
GREENE, J.

      In this case, the defendant, Lafourche Parish Government ( LPG),      appeals a

judgment that declared a tract of land as having the same characteristics as fastiands

and declared that no Coastal Use Permit was required for the property.      LPG also

filed a peremptory exception raising the objection of peremption with this Court.

The plaintiff, Cynthia Percle, filed an opposition to the exception and filed a motion

to remand the matter for a trial on the exception. After review, we grant the motion

and remand the matter.

                    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

      Ms. Percle owns approximately 21 acres of immovable property in Lafourche

Parish located at 848 Choctaw Road in Thibodaux, Louisiana. Ms. Percle' s property

contains a 1. 359 acre portion that is located within the 256 -acre Banane Camp

Drainage Area, a forced drainage system with ring levees maintained by LPG. LPG

previously built the levee system without proper authorization from the U. S. Army

Corps of Engineers or the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources ( DNR),

Office of Coastal Management.

      In early 2018, Ms. Percle cleared the 1. 359 acre portion of the property to

develop a residential homesite. On April 18, 2018, LPG made a field investigation

of the property and determined that the impacted area was part of a forced drainage

system and was a cypress forest habitat.

      LPG instructed Ms. Percle that she needed to complete and submit an after -

the -fact Coastal Use Permit application. On February 1, 2018, Ms. Percle submitted

a Coastal Use Permit application to DNR.       On that same day, DNR determined that

the application was a matter of local concern and that the application would be

processed by the Lafourche Parish Office of Coastal Zone Management.

       On June 17, 2019, Ms. Percle requested that LPG evaluate her property and

all property within the levee system for fastlands status.     Ms. Percle noted that

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DNR' s Strategic Online Natural Resources Information System ( SONRIS)            maps

showed that the neighboring areas within the levee protection system were marked

as fastlands. On June 26, 2019, LPG responded that her request had been forwarded

to DNR and that based on DNR' s response, the area was not considered fastlands.

LPG further stated that "we will continue to process your application as before. [ We]

will be sending you a letter with the next steps in processing your application."

      On July 2, 2019, LPG' s Office of Coastal Zone Management sent a letter to

Ms. Percle stating that it had determined compensatory mitigation was required for

the loss of the 1. 359 acres of cypress forest habitat resulting from the proposed use.

The letter further stated that the Coastal Use Permit Application on file indicated

Ms. Percle was both the applicant and the sole landowner of the impact site and

advised that additional information might be required to fully evaluate a mitigation

proposal.   LPG' s Office of Coastal Zone Management sent Ms. Percle a second,

nearly identical letter on October 16, 2019.

      Ms. Percle filed a petition for judicial review of the Coastal Use Permit issue

on November 18, 2019. Ms. Percle maintained that LPG had issued prior decisions

that directly conflicted with its decision regarding her property.   She maintained that

the only distinction between her property and the other property was the ongoing

issues from the unauthorized construction of the Banane Camp Drainage levee

system by LPG. Ms. Percle asked for a judicial declaration that the property had the

same characteristics as fastlands and had no connection to and no significant direct

impact on coastal waters, and thus a Coastal Use Permit was not required. Ms. Percle

asked that LPG be ordered to reimburse her for all reasonable expenses and pay her

damages, attorney fees, legal interest, and costs.   She also requested all general and

equitable relief provided by law.

      LPG filed an answer generally denying the allegations, raising affirmative

defenses, and maintaining that if the district court determined that Ms. Percle had

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failed to exhaust her administrative remedies, judicial relief was precluded, and the

petition   was premature.          LPG prayed that the petition and cause of action be

dismissed with prejudice at Ms. Percle' s costs, and, alternatively, if judgment were

rendered in favor of Ms. Percle, that any recovery be reduced in proportion to her

fault, the fault of a third party, and her failure to reasonably mitigate her damages.

LPG also asked for all general and equitable relief.

        The matter was submitted to the district court for judicial review.                         After

review, the district court rendered judgment in favor ofMs. Percle and against LPG.'

The district court decreed that the 1. 359 acres at issue had the same characteristics

as fastlands.     It also decreed that the land had no connection to and no significant

direct impact on coastal water, and therefore, a Coastal Use Permit was not required.

LPG was cast for costs of the proceedings. LPG filed a suspensive appeal from that

judgment.

        LPG filed a peremptory exception raising the objection of peremption with

this Court, asserting that it notified Ms. Percle by mail on July 2, 2019, of its final

decision requiring a permit for the unauthorized clearing of cypress forest habitat.

LPG maintains that the date of filing of Ms. Percle' s petition for judicial review,

November 18, 2019, was not within the 30 -day period from the date of mailing of

notice of the final decision in accordance with La. R.S. 49: 214.35( E). Thus, LPG

asserts that Ms. Percle' s right to file for judicial review expired prior to her filing.

I We note that the judgment and reasons for judgment were contained in the same document, contrary to
the mandate of La. C. C. P. art. 1918( 6).   Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 1918( B) states that
 w]hen written reasons for the judgment are assigned, they shall be set out in an opinion separate from the
judgment." ( Emphasis added.)    Thus, a judgment should not include reasons for judgment. Furthermore,
an appeal lies only from the judgment, not from the reasons. Greater New Orleans Expressway Comm' n
v. Olivier, 2042- 2795 ( La. 11{ 8/ 03), 860 So. 2d 22, 24. However, a judgment that is complete in every
respect is still valid despite the inclusion of the written reasons, Conley v. Plantation Management
Company, L.L.C., 2012- 1510 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 516113), 117 So.3d 542, 547, writ denied, 2013- 1300 ( La.
9120/ 13), 132 So. 3d 178.

2i its reasons for judgment, the district court noted that LPG caused the problem for Ms. Percle and
unnecessarily refused to recognize its fault or address the issue.
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       Ms. Percle opposed LPG' s exception and filed a motion to remand the matter

for a trial on the exception. Ms. Percle maintains that the matter should be remanded

to the district court for trial of the exception as no final decision has been made by

LPG, and thus the judicial review period provided in La. R.S. 49: 214. 35( E) never

started.   Ms, Percle asserts that a remand would allow her to introduce evidence into

the record to show that LPG has not issued a final decision.

       Peremptive statutes are strictly construed against peremption and in favor of

the claim. Of the possible constructions, the one that maintains enforcement of the

claim or action, rather than the one that bars enforcement, should be adopted. Rando

v. Anco Insulations Inc., 2008- 1163 ( La. 5/ 22/ 09), 16 So. 3d 1065, 1083. Appellate

review is limited to the record. La. C.C. P. art. 2164.    This Court cannot consider

evidence submitted in connection with a peremptory exception filed for the first time

in this Court.    Vanguard Vacuum Trucks, L.L.C. v. Mid-America Resources

Corp., 2017- 0434 (La. App. 1 Cir. 1111117),    233 So. 3d 87, 89. Ms. Percle is entitled

to demonstrate that no final decision was made by LPG.        We find that the interests

of justice demand that we remand the matter to permit the parties to develop

evidence on the peremption issue.      See La. C.C. P. art. 2164; Vanguard Vacuum

Trucks, L.L.C., 233 So -3d at 89.

                                    CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, we grant the motion to remand the matter to the

district court.

       MOTION GRANTED; MATTER REMANDED.

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