Abramson v. Piazza
This text of 198 So. 2d 565 (Abramson v. Piazza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Steven N. ABRAMSON, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
Charlie PIAZZA, Defendant and Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*566 C. E. Laborde, Jr., and Edwin L. Lafargue, of Laborde & Lafargue, Marksville, for plaintiff-appellant.
Maxwell J. Bordelon, Marksville, for defendant-appellee.
Before CULPEPPER, TATE and FRUGE, JJ.
CULPEPPER, Judge.
The plaintiff, Steven N. Abramson, filed this petitory action against the defendant, Charlie Piazza, seeking recognition of plaintiff's ownership of approximately 3 acres of land. Defendant's answer asserted ownership by acquisitive prescription. After a trial on the merits, the district judge rendered an "Opinion" sustaining defendant's acquisitive prescription. The plaintiff appealed.
*567 We do not reach a consideration of this appeal on its merits because no final judgment has been read and signed by the district judge in open court.[1] The record contains only an instrument denominated "Opinion", consisting of 5 pages and giving in detail the district judge's written reasons. This opinion concludes as follows:
"THEREFORE, the Court rules and holds that the defendant's special defense of acquisitive prescription of ten (10) years and thirty (30) years is proper and well taken.
"LET THERE BE FORMAL JUDGMENT HEREIN, denying the demands of the plaintiff at his costs.
"DONE, READ & SIGNED in open Court at Marksville, Louisiana, on this 15th day of April, 1966.Earl Edwards J U D G E"
This "Opinion" is not a final judgment. In the first place, the concluding language quoted above shows clearly that the district judge did not intend this to be a final judgment. Instead, he contemplated the presentation and signing of a final judgment at a later date.[2]
Furthermore, even if we were to consider this as an attempt by the district judge to combine his written reasons and the final judgment in one instrument, this is prohibited by the mandatory language of LSA-C.C.P. Article 1918, which reads as follows:
"A final judgment shall be identified as such by appropriate language. When written reasons for the judgment are assigned, they shall be set out in an opinion separate from the judgment."
Official Revision Comment (b), under LSA-C.C.P. Article 1918, states that "The requirement of separate judgments and reasons for judgments in the second sentence will avoid the problem presented in Anderson v. Nugent, 16 So.2d 282 (La.App. 1944)." In the cited case, Anderson v. Nugent, which was decided before the adoption of our new Code of Civil Procedure in 1960, the question was whether the document, which contained both the judge's written reasons and a decree, could be considered as the final judgment. The many cases cited therein show the confusion caused by this issue under former Code of Practice Articles.
The obvious purpose of LSA-C.C.P. Article 1918, which is new in our law, is to suppress this confusion and to give certainty to what constitutes the final judgment and particularly to the date on which it is rendered. The effective date of the final judgment becomes critically important in ascertaining: the commencement of procedural delays, such as new trial, appeal, etc.; the computing of periods of prescription; and in the establishment of property rights in the judgment.[3]
Although admittedly dicta, our brothers of the First Circuit reached this same conclusion in Davis v. Underwriters at Lloyds of London, 142 So.2d 803 (1st Cir. 1962). The judgment at issue was rendered before the adoption of our new Code of Civil Procedure, but the court there said: "Under present law as expressed in Article 1918 of the LSA-Code of Civil Procedure, a judgment must be separate from the written reasons therefor."
It is our conclusion that to suppress the problems which arose under prior law, as mentioned above, LSA-C.C.P. 1918 *568 now makes it mandatory that the written reasons for judgment "shall be set out in an opinion separate from the judgment." Hence, the written reasons in this case cannot be considered as the final judgment. The result is that no final judgment has yet been rendered, read and signed in these proceedings. This appeal must therefore be dismissed.
For the reasons assigned, this appeal is dismissed without prejudice at the cost of plaintiff-appellant.
Appeal dismissed.
Decision on Rehearing
En banc.
In our original decision we dismissed the appeal because the record before us did not contain a final judgment of the district court. After our decision, the parties, by joint motion, supplemented the record to include a final judgment of the district court which was rendered, read and signed in open court on April 29, 1966 but, through inadvertence, was omitted from the original appellate record.
We granted plaintiff's motion for rehearing to save the time and expense of another appeal and will now proceed to a decision of the case on its merits.
As stated in our original opinion, the plaintiff, Steven N. Abramson, filed this petitory action against the defendant, Charlie Piazza, seeking recognition of plaintiff's ownership of 3.616 acres of land in the city of Marksville, Louisiana. The defendant possessor concedes plaintiff's record title, but asserts ownership by the acquisitive prescriptions of 10 and 30 years.[1] The district judge sustained defendant's special pleas of acquisitive prescriptions of 10 and 30 years and dismissed plaintiff's suit.[2]
Essentially, plaintiff's contentions on appeal are: (1) That the fence in question, to which defendant asserts that he and his author in title have had possession for over 30 years, has actually been in its present location only since about 1942, a period of less than 30 years. (2) Alternatively, even assuming the fence has been in its present location since 1926, defendant's author in title possessed only as lessee until about 1942 and hence there has not been 30 years adverse possession as owner.
The facts are that plaintiff is the record owner of Lot 1 of the Cannon Partition of 1882, containing 62 acres approximately. Adjoining this property on the east is Lot 4 of the Cannon Partition of 1882, containing about 14 acres, record title to which is now owned by the defendant, Piazza. The strip of land in dispute contains 3.616 acres off the east side of Lot 1 and is enclosed by a barbwire fence, which, instead of being on the true line between Lots 1 and 4, is 189 feet west of the true line on the north end and about 50 feet west on the south end. This is the fence in dispute.
A brief description of the chain of title to each tract is necessary to understand the evidence. In 1882, Lester Cannon, Sr. acquired both Lots 1 and 4 of the Cannon Partition. With the exception of small tracts sold off, not applicable here, he owned these two lots until his death in 1925. *569 By will, he left Lot 1 to his son, Lester Cannon, Jr. and Lot 4 to Howard Cannon. In 1926 Howard Cannon sold Lot 4 to Sam Piazza who died in 1946 leaving the property to his heirs. In 1947 these heirs entered into a partition in which the defendant, Charles Piazza, acquired Lot 4. As to Lot 1, it was sold in 1965 by Lester Cannon, Jr. to the plaintiff, Steven N. Abramson.
The evidence does not show who first built the fence in question.
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