Bagby v. Clause

251 So. 2d 172, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6181
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1971
DocketNo. 8249
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 251 So. 2d 172 (Bagby v. Clause) 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.

Bluebook
Bagby v. Clause, 251 So. 2d 172, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6181 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinions

TUCKER, Judge.

This is a suit in which the plaintiffs sought to be decreed the owners of certain property lying and being situated in the Parish of Assumption alternatively alleging that they were entitled to a declaratory judgment, decreeing their ownership, or to the relief granted under the possessory action, or through the petitory action. The trial judge declared the suit to be a petito-ry action on the basis that the evidence adduced at the trial showed the defendants to be in actual, physical and corporeal possession of the property. Note TR 55 in which plaintiffs-appellants seek to be declared owners of the subject tract in Assumption Parish described as Section 12, Township 15, South, Range 13 East, containing approximately 150 acres. Defendants claim ownership of the same tract, in which the only difference is that the range number in their acquisition is given as 15 instead of 13. The defendants allege this discrepancy to be a mere typographical error. As alternative defenses to a good ti-[174]*174tie, translative of ownership, they plead prescriptions of ten (10) and thirty (30) years. The defendants also urge the judgment of the Twenty-Third Judicial District Court, Parish of Assumption, quieting their tax title, as being protective and dispositive of their title ownership.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, Clarence H. Clause, Mrs. Clara C. Triche, Mrs. Phillip Bar-deaux, Leonce G. Caballero, Rene P. Caballero, Mrs. Louise C. Guillot, Numa C. Caballero, Jr., and Mrs. Faustine C. Hebert, dismissing the suit of plaintiffs, Logan H. Bagby, Jr., Romayne Seymour Baker, Doris Jikaku Noble and Guy Michael Noble.

Both plaintiffs and defendants acquired and rely upon deeds and/or conveyances from common authors in title, namely, Joseph and Villior Aucoin. It is undisputed that the tract in question was the only parcel of land which the Aucoins owned in Assumption Parish. On June 28, 1928 the subject property was sold at tax sale to Clarence H. Clause and Mrs. Numa Caballero for the failure of the Aucoins to pay the taxes levied against them for the year 1927. The public record, as depicted by this tax sale, incorrectly described the property in question as “150 acres, being Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Section 12, T. 15 S.R. 15 E. — denuded”. The property actually lies in Range 13 East and not in Range 15 East. Plaintiffs claim that, since this public record description contained an error, it was not effective as to third persons.

Plaintiffs’ predecessor in title, Raymond Riesen, acquired his claim to the same tract of land by quit claim deed in 1935. This quit claim deed accurately described the property as “Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Section 12, Township 15, South, Range 13 East”. (See exhibits P-1 — P-4). In 1936 the said Raymond Riesen conveyed an undivided one-fourth interest in the property to Logan H. Bagby, Jr., one of the present plaintiffs-appellants (Exhibit P-5), and in 1940, an undivided three-fourths interest in the same property to Minerva Petroleum Company (Exhibit P-6), the predecessor in title of the remaining plaintiffs, Mrs. Baker and Mr. and Mrs. Noble, who inherited it in 1951 (Exhibit P-7). All of these conveyances were properly descriptive of the property involved. The present plaintiffs did not exercise any possession or claim over the property except to file a suit similar to the present one in 1960 (which was subsequently abandoned), to grant oil, gas and mineral leases to Union Oil Company of California in 1960 (Exhibit P-9), to pay taxes, and to file the present suit.

One of the basic contentions of the defendants, the resolution of which is not essential to the outcome of this decision, is the fact that in 1949, in connection with negotiations toward leasing the land for minerals, the defendants were informed about the error in the range number contained in their tax sale description. Whereupon, the defendants retained counsel and attempted to obtain quit claims from the Aucoins and their heirs. When they were unsuccessful in this quest, defendants filed suit entitled “Mrs. Clara Solar Caballero, et al. v. Mrs. Joseph Aucoin” No. 6869 on the docket of the 23d Judicial District Court (D-15). The Aucoins and their heirs were made parties to the suit. The plaintiffs in the instant suit were not made parties, because defendants here allegedly did not know them. That suit, Docket No. 6869, was brought to quiet their tax title under the provisions of L.S. A.-R.S. 47:2228. A judgment was rendered in due course quieting the tax title and correcting the description to read “Range 13 East.” Appellants claim that this judgment does not have the effect of being res judicata to them inasmuch as they were not made parties to the suit. The parties here are met with seemingly conflicting language in the case of Stockbridge v. Martin, 162 La. 601, 110 So. 828 (1926), holding that proceedings brought under the subject statute are res judicata against all claimants, even those not parties to the suit, and the case of Uthoff v. [175]*175Thompson, in 176 La. 599, 146 So. 161 (1933) holding such proceedings are not res judicata against claimants not parties to the suit. Defendants seek to distinguish these two cases by pointing out that in Stockbridge as here, all of the parties had a common author in title, whereas in Uth-off there were separate and distinct chains of title in the opposing claimants. The trial judge here chose not to base his decision on the judgment in the 1950 suit, and this court agrees with the lower court that the determination should be made on the title description issue as hereinabove set forth (T.R. 57).

In like manner it will not be necessary for this court to delve into the counter positions of plaintiffs and defendants with respect to whether or not defendants have established title to the subject property under prescriptive title by their having proved the essential elements to claim the property by means of ten years’ acquisitive prescription and/or thirty years liberative prescription. It is, however, noted that the defendants produced evidence at least suggestive of the conditions and requirements necessary to meet the tests of a ten year acquisitive prescriptive title, and further, that the trial court, while not deciding the case on the basis of a thirty year prescriptive title, noted that the evidence adduced by the defendants was sufficient to adjudge that defendants had acquired a thirty year prescriptive title under the rulings in Hill v. Richey, 221 La. 402, 59 So.2d 434. Let it be clearly understood that the plaintiffs-appellants are adamant and cogent in meeting the prescriptive issues head on, and in advancing their position that the defendants have not established by the evidence offered that either prescriptive period is judicially applicable here.

Again we revert to the issue of public registry, and the determination of whether or not defendant-appellants are entitled to rely upon their tax deed admittedly containing an error in the description of the property in dispute, as conveying to them a legal and valid title unassailable by the plaintiffs. The application of the legal principles and precepts enunciated in Quatre Parish Company, Inc. v. Beauregard Parish School Board, 220 La. 592, 57 So.2d 197 (1952), and other cases hereafter cited of similar import, to the facts of the instant litigation will now be confronted. Great reliance is placed by the plaintiffs on the Quatre Parish

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Bagby v. Clause
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Bluebook (online)
251 So. 2d 172, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bagby-v-clause-lactapp-1971.