Dugas v. Powell

1 So. 2d 677, 197 La. 409, 1941 La. LEXIS 1053
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 31, 1941
DocketNo. 35887.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1 So. 2d 677 (Dugas v. Powell) 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
Dugas v. Powell, 1 So. 2d 677, 197 La. 409, 1941 La. LEXIS 1053 (La. 1941).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

This is a suit brought by 1,079 individuals to establish title to real estate; under Act 38 of 1908. The tract of land involved is situated in the Parish of Jefferson, and,’ it is alleged that neither plaintiffs nor defendants are in actual physical possession, of the property.

In addition to the original, plaintiffs filed two supplemental petitions. These petitions are quite lengthy, covering about 200 pages of the record. We need not discuss plaintiffs’ allegations in detail further than to say that they alleged, in substance, that the tract of land which they claim was owned by Francois Zenon Boutte when he-died intestate in the year 1863, and they' *413 trace his title through mesne conveyances back to an act of purchase dated July 8,' 1705, and allege that the various acts of transfer are recorded in the conveyance records of Jefferson Parish, where the land is situated.

Plaintiffs alleged that they are the true and lawful owners of the property, having acquired it by inheritance from the said Francois Zenon Boutte, they being his sole and only heirs.

At length and in detail, plaintiffs set out the fractional interest owned by each of them. The suit is brought against 162 named individuals who, plaintiffs allege, claim to own specified fractional interests in the said land, and against Edgar H. Powell and Alexis and A. Morgan Brian, who, plaintiffs allege, claim to have acquired interests in the property by purchase from the 162 first-named individuals. They alleged that:

* * * said defendants base their claims upon a purported judgment, dated June 26, 1936, rendered' in the Proceedings No. 11,842 of the docket of this Court, recorded in the Clerk’s office of Jefferson Parish, in Conveyance Book 129, at Folio 598, and that Alexis Brian and A. Morgan Brian, both of the Parish of Orleans, State of Louisiana, claim to be the owners, jointly, of a 571/2304 interest in the said property, by virtue of a purported deed from the said Edgar H. Powell, dated June 26th, 1936, recorded in Conveyance .Book 129, at Folio 607.”

Edwin P. Brady was made a defendant in the suit, plaintiffs alleging that he claims to have acquired certain interests in the property from the Brians.

In the original petition, plaintiffs alleged that the 162 named individuals were represented in this state by Brian & Brian, attorneys, and they prayed that those individuals be cited through their agents and attorneys in fact. The citation addressed to those individuals was served on the Brians. Thereafter, the Brians filed in court a pleading in which they denied that they represented the 162 individuals. Counsel for plaintiffs acquiesced in the pleading filed by the Brians, and the suit against that group of defendants was dismissed. No further effort was made to cite those individuals, so that the suit, as it is now presented, is against Powell, the Brians, and Edwin P. Brady only.

In their first supplemental petition, counsel for plaintiffs added some 60 or 70 names to the original list of claimants, and this gives rise to certain exceptions filed by the defendants Powell, the Brians, and Brady.

Defendants filed a plea to the jurisdiction of the court ratione personae, an exception of misjoinder and non-joinder of parties, an exception to the citation, an exception of vagueness, and an exception of no cause of action.

The trial judge in his written reasons for judgment mentioned these exceptions and said:

“ * * * and the Court being of the opinion that the exceptions are well taken, and well founded in law and in fact and should be maintained, and more particular *415 ly the exception of no cause or right of action should be maintained.”

It was ordered that the exceptions, “and more particularly the exception of no cause of action”, be maintained and the suit dismissed. From this judgment plaintiffs appealed.

The trial judge in his written reasons for dismissing plaintiffs’ suit laid special emphasis on the exception of no cause of action, and that is the exception which is especially stressed in this court. This exception is predicated upon the contention that plaintiffs may not advance their claim to ownership of the property as heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte without first bringing a direct action to set aside the judgment mentioned by them in their pleadings, as quoted above. The contention of counsel for defendants is that the validity of that judgment cannot be collaterally attacked in an action of this kind.

The only reference which plaintiffs made in their petitions to that judgment is the allegation that:

“ * * * said defendants base their claims upon a purported judgment, dated January 26, 1936, rendered in the Proceedings No. 11,842 of the docket of this Court, recorded in the Clerk’s office of Jefferson Parish, in Conveyance Book 129, at Folio 598.”

Counsel for defendants argued orally before the court, and it is stated in brief, that, until directly attacked, that judgment must be recognized “to the exclusion of the plaintiffs’ claims as the alleged heirs of the deceased Boutte”

Neither the judgment referred to nor the proceedings leading up to its rendition are in this record. Plaintiffs did not make them a part of their petition by reference or otherwise. They go no further than to state that defendants base their claim to title on that judgment.

We are informed by counsel, not by the pleadings filed, that the judgment -referred to was rendered in an ex parte proceeding brought by the 162 individuals mentioned above to have themselves recognized as the heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte, and that they were recognized as such and decreed to be the owners of the property.

In passing on the merits of an exception of no cause of action, courts may consider only the well-pleaded facts set out in the petition. But, conceding that the judgment referred to did recognize the named individuals as the heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte and, therefore, the owners of the property involved, our opinion is that it was not necessary for plaintiffs to attack that judgment in a direct action before bringing their suit.

In Davidson v. McDonald et al., 131 La. 1047, 60 So. 679, it was held that an action in which plaintiffs seek to recover, and pray to be decreed the owners of, real estate, and which purports to be brought under Act 38 of 1908, differs from the petitory action only in the allegation that defendant is not in possession, and that such action does not differ from the petitory action in the matter of the obligation of the plaintiffs to establish the title set up by them.

*417 In Metcalfe et al. v. Green et al., 140 La. 950, 74 So. 261, it was held that Act 38 of 1908, being an act to authorize suits to establish title to real estate, contemplates a suit in which the litigants come before the . court on equal terms and subject only to the ordinary rules in regard to the burden of proof.

In Griffing et al. v. Taft, 151 La. 442, 91 So. 832, 833, it was held that:

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Bluebook (online)
1 So. 2d 677, 197 La. 409, 1941 La. LEXIS 1053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dugas-v-powell-la-1941.