Causeway Land Co. v. Karno
This text of 317 So. 2d 661 (Causeway Land Co. v. Karno) 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
In this possessory action defendants have appealed from a judgment which declared plaintiff the lawful owner of the immovable property in question and further declared invalid a counter letter in favor of one of the defendants. We reverse on the basis that the issues as to the validity of the counter letter and the ownership of the property were not before the trial court.
Plaintiff’s petition alleged that it had possessed the property as owner by virtue of an act of sale passed and recorded in June, 1971, and that defendants’ recordation of the invalid counter letter in March, 1972 constituted a disturbance in law. Plaintiff prayed to be maintained in possession and to be awarded damages.
In answer defendants denied plaintiff had ever possessed as owner because at all pertinent times they had possessed the property as owner by virtue of the counter letter. By reconventional demand they asserted this possession and prayed that they be maintained in possession and awarded damages.
[663]*663At the trial on the merits there was no evidence whatsoever introduced to show that either plaintiff, plaintiff’s ancestor, defendants or anyone else had ever exercised corporeal possession of the property, which was a lot of vacant land.
The only possession protected by the possessory action is “corporeal possession” or “civil possession . . . preceded by corporeal possession.” C.C.P. art. 3660; Yiannopoulos, Louisiana Civil Law Treatise-Property, § 138 (1966); Ree Corp. v. Shaffer, 261 La. 502, 260 So.2d 307 (1972).
In this case neither plaintiff nor plaintiff in reconvention alleged or proved corporeal possession of the property by anybody at any time. Neither, therefore, is entitled to the relief afforded by the pos-sessory action.
The record contains evidence bearing on the validity of the counter letter.1 However, when plaintiff attempted to introduce the counter letter and other evidence in an effort to show the document invalid, defendants timely objected to any evidence of ownership, other than for the purpose of proving possession since the petition had only asserted a possessory action. The counter letter was admitted, as well as considerable evidence bearing on the validity of the document.2
We are compelled to disregard this evidence in view of defendants’ timely objection. Plaintiff chose to utilize the posses-sory action, in which the Code of Civil Procedure specifically limits the relief which can be granted. Defendants moreover carefully avoided converting the proceeding to a petitory action and chose to seek, on their own behalf by reconventional demand, the limited relief provided by the possessory action. Thus, neither party was willing by the pleadings to make ownership an issue.3 In view of the codal limitation on the relief available in the posses-sory action, we reluctantly decline to review the evidence in the record as it bears upon the issue of ownership, especially since a party defending a possessory action may be prejudiced if in reliance on the pleadings he fails to introduce evidence bearing on ownership.4
We conclude that the express and exclusive use of the possessory action by both parties (although neither proved the type of possession protected by the posses-sory action) precludes a court from granting any relief except that provided in the codal articles governing possessory actions. The judgment determining ownership must therefore be set aside.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is annulled and set aside. Each par[664]*664ty is granted the right to file additional pleadings and to present additional evidence hearing on the dispute between the parties, whether by petitory, action or by other procedure deemed appropriate. Assessment of costs will await final disposition of the matter.
Judgment set aside, case remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
317 So. 2d 661, 1975 La. App. LEXIS 3480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/causeway-land-co-v-karno-lactapp-1975.