STATE OF LOUISIANA
COURT OF APPEAL
FIRST CIRCUIT
2022 CA 0684
2022 CW 0960
FLORIDA GAS TRANSMISSION COMPANY, LLC
VERSUS
TEXAS BRINE COMPANY, LLC, ET AL.
Judgment Rendered: MAR 0 8 2023
Appealed from the
23rd Judicial District Court
In and for the Parish of Assumption
State of Louisiana
Docket Number 34,316
The Honorable Thomas J. Kliebert, Jr., Ad Hoc Judge Presiding
Leopold Z. Sher Attorneys for Appellant/Relator
James M. Garner Texas Brine Company, LLC
Peter L. Hilbert, Jr.
Darnell Bludworth
New Orleans, Louisiana
Travis J. Turner
Gonzales, Louisiana
Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux
Lake Charles, Louisiana
Roy C. Cheatwood Attorneys for Appellee/Respondent
Kent A. Lambert Legacy Vulcan, LLC
Adam B. Zuckerman
Leopoldo J. Yanez
Colleen C. Jarrott
Matthew C. Juneau
Lauren Brink Adams
New Orleans, Louisiana
BEFORE: WELCH, WOLFE, and GREENE, JJ.
W 0 1-( e., '--r, cwp ca o'
- ' Rs .
PER CURIAM:
This is one of many appeals arising from the August 2012 sinkhole that
appeared near Bayou Come in Assumption Parish. Here, Texas Brine Company,
LLC, challenges the district court' s January 6, 2022 partial summary judgment that
dismissed with prejudice its fraud and concealment/ omission claims against
Legacy Vulcan, LLC, due to issue preclusion.
In Pontchartrain Natural Gas System v. Texas Brine Company, LLC,
2022- 0594 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 1/ 20/ 23), So. 3d ( 2023 WL 334027), another
panel of this court considered and decided the same issues raised in this appeal,
and affirmed an identical partial summary judgment rendered by the same district
court judge, on the same date, concerning the same parties, and dismissing the
same claims. After careful review, we find no material distinctions between the
evidence and arguments raised in this appeal and those presented in
Pontchartrain, including whether issue preclusion under res judicata applies
when certain contractual claims have not yet been adjudicated, whether Legacy
Vulcan proved all of the elements of issue preclusion, and whether exceptional
circumstances would justify relief from the effects of res judicata. Under the law
of the circuit doctrine, we are bound to follow Pontchartrain and affirm the
January 2, 2022 partial summary judgment. See Crosstex Energy Services, LP v.
Texas Brine Company, LLC, 2022- 0447 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 11/ 4/ 22), So. 3d
2022 WL 16705744, * 2), writs denied, 2022- 01768 ( La. 2/ 7/ 23),
So. 3d ( 2023 WL 1793 824) and 2022- 01769 ( La. 2/ 7/ 23), So. 3d ( 2023
WL 1793449); Labarre v. Occidental Chemical Company, 2019- 0624 ( La. App.
1 Cir. 2/ 19/ 20), 2020 WL 813269, * 1 ( unpublished).
Texas Brine also filed a writ application with this court (2022 CW 0960) that
was referred to this panel for review, seeking review of the district court' s July 19,
2022 denial of its motion for partial summary judgment regarding Legacy Vulcan' s
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liability as an intentional tortfeasor for Texas Brine' s damages. As in
Pontchartrain, we decline to exercise our supervisory jurisdiction and deny the
writ. See Pontchartrain, So. 3d at n. 1.
This summary disposition is issued in accordance with Uniform Rules -
Courts of Appeal, Rule 2- 16. 2( A)(2) and ( 6). All costs of this appeal are assessed
to Texas Brine Company, LLC.
JANUARY 6, 2022 JUDGMENT AFFIRMED; WRIT DENIED.
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STATE OF LOUISIANA
COURT OF APPEAL
FIRST CIRCUIT
2022 CA 0684
2022 CW 0960
FLORIDA GAS TRANSMISSION COMPANY, LLC
VERSUS
TEXAS BRINE COMPANY, LLC, ET AL.
WOLFE, J., concurring.
Av
Bound by the law of the circuit doctrine to follow this courts decision in
Pontchartrain Natural Gas System v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, 2022- 0594
La. App. 1 Cir. 1/ 20123), So. 3d ( 2023 WL 334027), I am constrained to
concur in the result reached by the majority. I write separately to express that I
respectfully disagree with the legal analysis and determination in Pontchartrain that
res judicata bars litigation of Texas Brine' s contractual fraud claims against Legacy
Vulcan.
Texas Brine concedes that Legacy Vulcan' s tortious fraud and withholding of
information was addressed during Phase One; however, I find that those claims were
addressed only to the extent that they affected the tortious allocation of fault between
the parties, which was the stated ,scope of Phase One ----"determining what caused
the sinkhole to form and which parties, if any, were at fault under any theory of law
for causing the formation of the sinkhole." Those claims were not essential to the
determination of the Phase One liability judgment and were considered only in
relation to an affirmative defense. Thus, I would find that Texas Brine' s claims
against Legacy Vulcan for contractual fraud and intentional omission/ concealment
regarding inducement into and performance of various contracts and operating
agreements were not conclusively adjudicated by the district court during the Phase
One liability trial. At the very least, I would find that there is some doubt as to
whether or not these contractual fraud claims were conclusively adjudicated during
Phase One, which precludes summary judgment.
With regard to Texas Brine' s writ application that was referred to this panel
for review in conjunction with this appeal, 1 find that the district court was correct
in its denial of Texas Brine' s motion for partial summary judgment. Based on three
isolated references to Legacy Vulcan' s " intentional" withholding of various emails,
documents, and reports that appear in this court' s Phase One liability opinion, Texas
Brine claims Legacy Vulcan was adjudicated an intentional tortfeasor. See
Pontchartrain Natural Gas System v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, 2018- 1249
La. App. 1st Cir. 12/ 30/ 20), 317 So. 3d 715, writs denied, 2021- 00382, 2021- 00386
La. 6/ 8/ 21), 317 So.3d 323. Thus, Texas Brine moved for summary judgment,
arguing that Legacy VuIcan' s " intentional" actions preclude application of the
comparative fault principles set forth in La. Civ. Code art. 2323 and that Texas Brine
is entitled to judgment finding Legacy Vulcan responsible for 100% of Texas Brine' s
damages.
Intent" refers to the consequences of an act rather than to the act itself,
meaning that a person ( 1) consciously desires the physical result of his act, whatever
the likelihood of that result happening from his conduct; or (2) knows that result is
substantially certain to follow from his conduct, whatever his desire may be as to
that result. See Bazley v. Tortorich, 397 So. 2d 475, 481 ( La. 1981). While in the
Phase One liability opinion this court referenced Legacy Vulcan' s withholding of
certain documentation and omission of email paragraphs as " intentional," this court
did not adjudicate Legacy Vulcan an intentional tortfeasor as Texas Brine suggests.
This court made no finding that Legacy Vulcan consciously desired the formation
of the sinkhole or knew to a substantial certainty that the sinkhole would occur.
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Rather, this court affirmed the district court' s allocation of 15% comparative fault
to Legacy Vulcan, which establishes the fallacy of Texas Brine' s current argument.
Texas Brine is not entitled to summary judgment holding Legacy Vulcan liable as
an intentional tortfeasor for Texas Brine' s damages; therefore, I believe the district
court' s July 19, 2022 ruling was correct.
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