Danos v. Waterford Oil Company

225 So. 2d 708
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1969
Docket7754
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 225 So. 2d 708 (Danos v. Waterford Oil Company) 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
Danos v. Waterford Oil Company, 225 So. 2d 708 (La. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

225 So.2d 708 (1969)

Guillaume DANOS, Sr., Administrator of the Succession of Bazelike Mire, Wife of and Urbin Danos, also known as Urbain Danosse
v.
WATERFORD OIL COMPANY et al.

No. 7754.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

July 2, 1969.
Rehearing Denied August 28, 1969.

*710 William J. White, Gretna, and William J. Daly, New Orleans, for appellant.

Peltier & Peltier, by Harvey Peltier and Donald L. Peltier, Thibodaux, and Milling, Saal, Saunders, Benson & Woodward, by Lawrence K. Benson, J. B. Miller and F. Frank Fontenot, New Orleans, for Waterford Oil Company; Chaffee, McCall, Phillips, Burke, Toler & Sarpy, by E. Harold Saer, Jr., and B. Lloyd Magruder, New Orleans, for Texas Crude Oil Co. and another.

Lancelot P. Olinde, New Orleans, for Humble Oil & Ref. Co.

Before LANDRY, SARTAIN and MARCUS, JJ.

LANDRY, Judge.

This is a petitory action by Guillaume Danos, Sr. (Administrator), Administrator of the Successions of Urbin Danos, also known as Urbain Danosse, who died in 1890, and his wife Bazelike Mire Danos, who died in the year 1879, to establish title in said successions to certain real property situated in Lafourche Parish and for an accounting of the revenues derived therefrom by defendants, the present record owners and mineral lessees of the property in dispute. The lower court dismissed plaintiff's suit after sustaining defendants' dilatory exceptions of lack of procedural capacity to sue and failure to join necessary parties. From said judgment Administrator has appealed. We affirm the judgment rendered below.

The basic issue in this action is one of law, namely, whether appellant's appointment as Administrator was valid, thereby entitling said Administrator to represent decedents' successions. In essence, the lower court held Administrator's appointment invalid as decedents' successions had ceased to exist long before letters of administration were issued therein to Administrator in 1958.

This present action is the latest in a series of suits in both the Federal Courts and the courts of this state. The object of the several suits is to claim title to certain marshlands situated in Lafourche Parish and to obtain for the benefit of decedents' estates the proceeds and revenues from mineral lease and development therefrom. In essence the claim is based on certain transactions involving Urbin Danos, Sr. (Urbain Danosse) who acquired the property by patent from the State of Louisiana in 1867.

It is conceded Urbin Danos, Sr. was married but once and then to Bazelike Mire, the date of the marrage antedating Danos' acquisition of subject property which formed part of the community existing between said spouses. In 1872 Urbin Danos, Sr. sold to one of his children, Urbin Danos, Jr., a tract of land measuring two arpents by forty arpents, being a portion of the land patented to him by the State in 1867. The transfer reserved to the elder *711 Danos a right of way over the property conveyed. Bazelike Mire Danos died, intestate, in 1879; her surviving spouse, Danos, Sr., followed her in death, intestate, in 1890. Subsequent to the purchase from his father, the Junior Danos sold portions thereof to his father-in-law, Joseph Guidry. In 1905, Danos, Jr. and Joseph Guidry jointly conveyed to North Louisiana Land Company all title acquired by Danos, Jr., in all lands inherited by Danos, Jr. from his deceased father. By mesne conveyances, the lands acquired by North Louisiana Land Company became the property of defendant herein, Waterford Oil Company.

Of the marriage between Urbin Danos, Sr. and his said wife, eight children were born, namely: J. Guillaume Danos, Henry Danos, Urbin Danos, Jr., Marguerite Danos, wife of Pierre C. Autin, Mathilde Danos, wife of Philippe Plaisance, Elise Danos, wife of Edmond C. Guidry, Adele Danos, wife of Felicien Guidry, and Gustave Danos.

J. Guillaume Danos died May ____________, 1873, (sic in the record), intestate, having never married and leaving no issue. His succession, opened June 5, 1878, lists as his sole surviving heirs at law his father, Urbin Danos, Sr., his mother, Bazelike Danos, and his hereinabove named seven brothers and sisters, of whom, Gustave Danos is recited to be a minor. No succession proceedings were ever opened to settle the estates of Urbin Danos, Sr. and his spouse until an administration thereof was provoked by plaintiff in 1958.

Defendant's title to subject property emanating through Urbin Danos, Jr. and Joseph Guidry apparently remained unchallenged until 1954 and 1955, in which years two actions in jactitation were filed in Lafourche Parish by Administrator and 184 other persons, all allegedly heirs of the elder Danos and his wife. Both said jactitory actions were dismissed on pleas of thirty years' prescription and title to the disputed lands confirmed in defendant Waterford. Thereafter Administrator instituted proceedings in the United States District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana, as Administrator of the Successions of Mr. and Mrs. Urbin Danos, Sr. The Federal District Court dismissed Administrator's said action because of a lack of procedural capacity to sue as representative of the successions involved. Said judgment of dismissal was affirmed by the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals on April 30, 1959. See 266 F.2d 76.

In this action defendants have filed dilatory exceptions of lack of procedural capacity, non-joinder of necessary parties and vagueness; defendants also interposed peremptory exceptions of prescription, no right and no cause of action.

The trial court found it unnecessary to pass on defendants' peremptory exceptions inasmuch as it dismissed this action after sustaining the exceptions of lack of procedural capacity and non-joinder of necessary parties. As hereinabove indicated the lower court was of the view appointment of an administrator for decedents' successions was invalid inasmuch as the estates had long since been accepted unconditionally by all the heirs and there were no longer any successions in existence to administer. Our learned brother below also concluded the appointment as Administrator was obtained purely as a matter of convenience for the filing of this action. He was of the further opinion there was no need of an administration herein and that the proper parties to bring this action are the heirs of decedents. Appellant's suit was therefore dismissed below and a 90 day period permitted for the heirs to intervene as parties plaintiff.

In this court defendants moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground the judgment of dismissal below was an interlocutory decree and therefore not appealable. This court on April 14, 1969, 225 So.2d 707, held the judgment final and appealable and denied the motion to dismiss.

*712 The stated purpose of this action is to recover, on behalf of the heirs concerned, property which was ostensibly conveyed by their ancestor in title 86 years prior to appointment of an Administrator of their estates and 68 and 79 years, respectively, after the death of the decedents concerned. In contending for the right of administration under the circumstances, Administrator cites and relies upon La.C.C.P. Article 685 which authorizes succession representatives to prosecute all actions to enforce the rights of a decedent or his succession while the estate is under administration, and that the heirs or legatees need not be joined therein.

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Bluebook (online)
225 So. 2d 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danos-v-waterford-oil-company-lactapp-1969.