K. Nigel FOX v. Joseph T. DUPREE, III, et al.
No. 93 CA 0120.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
December 29, 1993.
Writ Denied March 25, 1994.
633 So.2d 612
Before WATKINS, SHORTESS and FOGG, JJ.
Raymond P. Ladouceur, New Orleans, for defendants and appellants Joseph T. Dupree, III, Steven Todd Miller and Coastal Corrosion Control, Inc.
OPINION
SHORTESS, Judge.
Joseph T. Dupree, III, Steven Todd Miller, and Coastal Corrosion Control, Inc. (defendants), filed a reconventional demand against K. Nigel Fox (plaintiff) alleging violations of the Louisiana Loan Brokers’ statute.1 The trial judge considered defendants’ reconventional demand as one unfair trade practice claim and dismissed the petition based on a one-year prescriptive term.2 In oral reasons, the trial judge stated: “[A] year is a year. And I sustain the exception of prescription. I think it‘s all one area, and I think it‘s prescribed.”
Defendants contend the trial court legally erred by interpreting the Loan Brokers’ statute as providing only one cause of action with
Louisiana Revised Statute 51:1915 provides:
A. Violation of any of the provisions of this Chapter shall constitute an unfair practice under
R.S. 51:1405(A) .B. If a loan broker uses any untrue or misleading statements in connection with a loan brokerage contract, fails to fully comply with the requirements of this Chapter, fails to comply with the terms of the contract or any obligation arising therefrom, or fails to make diligent effort to obtain or procure a loan on behalf of the prospective borrower, then, upon written notice to the broker, the prospective borrower may void the contract, and shall be entitled to receive from the broker all sums paid to the broker, and recover any additional damages including attorney‘s fees.
C. Any contract for loan brokering services is unenforceable against the prospective borrower and a violation of this Chapter if it contains any provisions whereby the prospective borrower agrees to waive any requirements of this Chapter.
D. The remedies provided herein shall be in addition to any other remedies provided for by law.
E. Loan brokers must provide substantiation for advertising claims or other representations made to solicit business upon request of a district attorney, the attorney general or the director of the office of consumer protection.
The statute expressly allows an unfair trade practice action in subsection A; subsections B and C provide contractual remedies, and subsection D states that the remedies provided are in addition to any other remedies provided by law. Clearly, a party is not limited to only one cause of action. The statute allows contractual and tort remedies, and any other remedies provided by law. Defendants’ reconventional demand alleges both contract and tort claims, including rescission of the fee agreement, rescission of the option contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and misrepresentation. The trial court erred in dismissing all of these claims under the one-year prescriptive term provided for private actions for unfair trade practices in
The trial court also erred in dismissing any unfair trade practice claims as prescribed. An unfair trade practice claim “prescribes” one year from the transaction or act which gives rise to the right of action.
Plaintiff‘s alleged failure to comply with the bond filing and disclosure requirements of the Loan Brokers’ statute was a continuing violation of the statute. Every day he was not in compliance with the law, plaintiff violated the statute. The law provides that a violation of the statute is an unfair trade practice.
The trial judge committed legal error by dismissing defendants’ reconventional demand
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
