Esso Standard Oil Company v. Jordan

92 So. 2d 377, 231 La. 594, 1956 La. LEXIS 1558
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 10, 1956
Docket42717
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 92 So. 2d 377 (Esso Standard Oil Company v. Jordan) 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
Esso Standard Oil Company v. Jordan, 92 So. 2d 377, 231 La. 594, 1956 La. LEXIS 1558 (La. 1956).

Opinions

SIMON, Justice.

Esso Standard Oil Company provoked two concursus proceedings1 to distribute royalty interests due from oil purchased by it for its pipeline, produced from two wells, both of which were drilled and operated by the same lessee under the same mineral lease within a short distance of each other on the same tract of land, known as Pin Hook Plantation, in the Parish of Tensas.

In the instant suit, plaintiff deposited in the registry of the district court the sum of $2,031.60, representing royalty interest due from oil purchased by and delivered to petitioners during the period from March 1, 1951 through the month of August, 1951, which oil was produced from a well located in the SEj4 of the NWJ4 of Section 29, Township 11 North, Range 10 East, Tensas Parish.

In the companion suit, No. 42,718 on the-docket of’this Court, petitioners deposited the sum of $2,563.58, representing royalty interest due from oil purchased by and delivered to petitioners during the period of March 1, 1951 through August, 1951, and which was produced from a well located in the NWJ4 of the NEJ4 of Section 29, Township 11 North, Range 10„ East, Tensas Parish.

Many parties were interpleaded, but we are concerned- only with the two major interests, namely, the Marks Claimants, appellees, and the Jordan Heirs, appellants, the members of each group appearing in the written reasons for judgment of the trial court.2

There is no conflict or dispute among the members within the two respective groups. The controversy is between the Jordan' Heirs, appellants, and the Marks Claimants, appellees.

[599]*599The Marks Claimants assert as basis for their claim of title to the land and/or mineral and royalty rights therein and to the funds on deposit herein two tax sales made in 1931 and 1933 to parties under whom the Marks Claimants hold title, which tax sales were allegedly based on assessments to the last record owners of portions of the plantation lands or undivided interests therein.

The Jordan Heirs assert their ownership by virtue of the alleged nullity of the tax sales, contending that the assessments were not made in the name of the true owner, Henry Jordan, deceased, or that of his heirs; and that notices of delinquencies were not served on either. They claim inheritance from Henry Jordan, the deceased ancestor of appellants.

Appellants also assert the physical possession of said property and the filing of certain lawsuits, which were later dismissed and abandoned, as effecting an interruption or suspension of prescription applicable to tax sales.

To counter the attack on the said tax sales, the Marks Claimants pleaded the peremption or prescription of five years provided in Article 10, Section 11 of the Constitution of 1921, LSA and the laws of registry, contending that they acquired titles in good faith and in full reliance on the public records. The appellees deny that the Jordan Heirs are the legitimate heirs of the' deceased Henry Jordan.

Appellants filed a plea of lis pendens, which was overruled below. _They also filed reconventional demands for judgment for other and different funds than those deposited, which demands were stricken and dismissed as not bearing upon the issue presented in these two companion proceedings.

Appellees further pleaded as res judicata and judicial estoppel the judgment rendered by us on appeal in the case of Magnolia Petroleum Company v. Marks, 225 La. 805, 74 So.2d 36, which pleas were denied by the lower court.

Inasmuch as both concursus suits presented the identical issue, and the evidence relating thereto was the same, they were consolidated for purposes of trial.

After trial below, judgments were rendered in favor of the Marks Claimants, from which the Jordan Heirs perfected separate appeals to this Court.

Both suits have also been consolidated for purposes of determination by us; and, inasmuch as these appeals appear in two different records bearing two different numbers on our docket, we shall render separate decrees.

Stripped of all irrelevant and lateral tangibles, the primary question presented in these two appeals is the validity vel non of the tax sales of 1931 and 1933.

The record discloses that Pin Hook Plantation consists of the NEj4 and all of NWJ4 [601]*601lying East of Choctaw Bayou in Section 29 and S1/2 of SE}4 lying East of Little Choctaw Bayou in Section 20, Township 11 North, Range 10 East, Parish of Tensas.

The record further discloses that by act of December 10, 1887, Henry A. Garrett conveyed to Henry Jordan the following property:

“All that portion of the NEJ4 of the NE14 of Section 29, T 11, Range 10 East, which lies East of what is known as ‘Big Choctaw’ Bayou, containing fourteen .50 acres of land, being the same 14^ acres surveyed by A. L. Hopkins, Parish Survey- or, on the 30th Nov. 1887, for said Jordan, to which and the accompanying process verbal due reference is hereby made.”

In the Magnolia case, supra, we concluded that by said act of December 10, 1887, Henry Jordan actually purchased the NE14 of the NW14 instead of the NEJ4 of the NE14, because only the NWj4 was east of Big Choctaw Bayou and thus conformed with the description as to location hereinabove stated. We further concluded that at the time the deed was executed calling for the NE14 of the NEJ4- of Section 29, that said quarter section had been sold by Martin Guthrie to Perry Jordan; that the NEJ4 of the NWJ4 was the property actually purchased by Henry Jordan and that he took actual possession thereof and possessed the same undisturbed through many years.

It appears from the record that by deed dated May 21, 1928, one, Fred Skinner, made an assignment to Mrs. Bessie S. Goldman of certain judgments rendered in the suits — N. B. Hunter v. Abe Jordan, N. B. Hunter v. Thomas Jordan, and N. B. Hunter v. Perry Jordan — and an assignment of a tax subrogation of Henry Jordan, the aforementioned judgments having been acquired by Fred Skinner from N. B. Hunter and which was subsequently executed upon by a seizure and sale. At said public sale Fred Skinner acquired the interest of the Jordan judgment debtors. Thereupon, he sold and conveyed these interests to Mrs. Goldman, in addition to the tax assignments covering the property owned by Henry Jordan. This deed of May 21, 1928 was duly placed of record by registry in the conveyance records of Tensas Parish, the situs of the property involved.

The property was thereupon assessed to Bessie S. Goldman for taxes on the'Tensas Parish assessment roll for 1930. Upon her failure to pay the taxes so assessed, said property was seized by the tax collector, advertised, and, after giving to the delinquent tax debtor the notice required by law, sold by the tax collector to L. M. Spencer by deed dated October 3, 1931 and duly placed of record.

The assessment on which the sale to L. M. Spencer was based described the property as follows: ,

[603]*603A part of Pin Hook Plantation; all of NW14 of Section 29 lying East of Choctaw-Bayou, and the SEJ4 of Section 20 lying East of Little Choctaw Bayou, Township 11 North, Range 10 East, containing 60 acres; also an undivided half interest in NEJ4 of Section 29, and the NW54 of NE14 of Section 19, Township 11 North, Range 10 East, containing 110 acres.

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Esso Standard Oil Co. v. Marks
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Esso Standard Oil Company v. Jordan
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Bluebook (online)
92 So. 2d 377, 231 La. 594, 1956 La. LEXIS 1558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esso-standard-oil-company-v-jordan-la-1956.