Dauterive v. Opera House Ass'n

46 La. Ann. 1316
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1894
DocketNo. 1467
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 La. Ann. 1316 (Dauterive v. Opera House Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dauterive v. Opera House Ass'n, 46 La. Ann. 1316 (La. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

The averment of plaintiff’s petition is, that he is the owner of an undivided one-third interest in a certain described lot of ground, with the improvements thereon, situated in the city of New Iberia, having a front of sixty-four (64) feet on the southwest side of Main street, with a .depth of about one hundred and seventy (170) feet, bounded northwest or above by lot of Mrs. Widow Johnson, northeast by Main street, and southwest by property of the estate of William Robertson, deceased, or assigns.

That he acquired the ownership of said property by a donation inter vivos from Mrs. Joseph Dubuclet, plaintiff’s great-grandmother, his brother and sister owning jointly with him one-third each, and petitioner specially disavows any title or claim of ownership thereof, as having been derived by inheritance from his father or mother, or from any other person whomsoever, same having been illegally disposed of by his father, B. D. Dauterive.

That he has never been divested of his right, title and interest, as above set forth, in the aforesaid property; and “that all proceedings by which it is claimed and pretended he has been (divested) are absolutely null and void and in no manner or sense binding on him.”

That at the time it is claimed he was divested of ownership and possession of said property, by reason .of certain illegal acts, he was a minor of tender years, and that the attempt to deprive him. of Ms property, as well as the manner of doing same, were absolutely null and void for the following reasons, viz.:

[1318]*13181. Because the court in which all the proceedings were had was without jurisdiction ratione materias et personas.

2. Because there never was legally appointed to him a tutor and under-tutor, and no law authorizing their appointment to be made while his father and mother were living.

3. Because the family meeting.which advised the sale of the property in which he has an interest was null and void ab initio.

4. That the appointment of an under-tutor ad hoc who concurred in the recommendation of the family meeting was absolutely null and void, and his concurrence in no manner binding on his rights of property.

5. Because the family meeting in their proces verbal assign no reasons or necessity for the sale.

6. Because the application for the sale, and the order thereon based, was an attempt to defraud petitioner and deprive him of his property.

7. Because no party in interest demanded a partition.

8. Because the proceedings of the aforesaid family meeting were never legally homologated, the court being without jurisdiction to homologate same.

9. Because your petitioner being, at the time, a minor, was unrepresented in the proceedings purporting to divest him of his property.

10. Because the proceedings purporting to partition this property, in which he had an interest, were inaugurated under a law that had no application to the subject matter thereof.

Then follows this general sweeping allegation, viz.:

Petitioner alleges that the orders of court, and all proceedings had in the premises, looking to the consummation of the same, by which it was attempted to deprive him of his property, are absolutely null and void, because your petitioner was not represented in any of them. '* * * Because there was no necessity for the sale. * * * That the attempt to divest his title was unwarranted and illegal, and the result of a fraudulent conspiracy; and that he received no portion of the proceeds of sale — if any were paid.”

He further avers that all the nullities and defects above set forth are fundamental, absolute, radical nullities, and that he could not, by reason thereof, have been, nor was be divested of his title and ownership therein.”

[1319]*1319It is further averred that the aforesaid property is wrongfully and illegally in the possession of defendant as owner; and that its possession is and was ab initio in bad faith, entitling petitioner to rents and revenues at the rate of five dollars per month from--18Y9, until the final determination of this suit.

His prayer is for citation and judgment in conformity to the foregoing allegations.

In limine the defendant excepted to the want of proper parties defendant, and prayed the suit be dismissed; and, reserving the benefit of its exceptions, it answers, averring that it is the legal and bona fide owner of the property by title translative of property, and for a valuable and adequate consideration — setting forth the causes and circumstances of sale, and, amongst others, that the price was duly paid, and enured to the benefit of the plaintiff, who has, in this, and various other ways, ratified the same.'

The plea of a want of a previous tender is urged. “Defendant avers that the plaintiff is estopped by word, deed, act and record from claiming the property in question in this suit, all of which estoppels defendant specially sets up in defence.”

He also pleads the prescription of one, four, five and ten years.

He further pleads and avers that, if any of the proceedings, judgments and transfers through which it claims be illegal or defective, and null, that any and all such illegalities, or nullities, are only relative, and can not be collaterally attacked, or brought into question, except by a direct action.

The defendant then alleged that it derived title from an association of persons, firms and corporations, composing the social person styled O. W. Georges & Oo. — enumerating them individually and severally — by a written and duly recorded deed of sale, in 1888, which contained a stipulation of full warranty.

It shows that each and every one of the members of said association are the warrantors of its title to said property, and that it desires to call each of said persons in warranty, to defend this suit; and that it is entitled to have against each of said warrantors the same judgment that may be rendered against it, as defendant in this suit.

There is then a demand in reconvention, the specifications of which are, in substance, that there is now situated on said premises an opera-house building, and all the appurtenances thereto belong[1320]*1320ing: such as fencing, outbuildings, walks, pipes, gas-fixtures, and other valuable and permanent improvements. That said building contains, in addition to the opera house proper, two stores and a hall, and that the cost of material and price of workmanship therein was thirty thousand dollars — same having been erected during the years 1887-88.

It is also averred that an annual expenditure of two hundred and fifty dollars is necessary for current repairs, and that the buildings have been kept regularly insured at a large cost annually, say three hundred and fifty dollars per annum.

That it has also been put to a large expense annually for taxes, say one hundred and fifty dollars per annum.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 La. Ann. 1316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dauterive-v-opera-house-assn-la-1894.