Fried v. Edmiston

40 So. 2d 489, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 503
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1949
DocketNo. 19265.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 So. 2d 489 (Fried v. Edmiston) 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
Fried v. Edmiston, 40 So. 2d 489, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 503 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

This is an action to quiet title to two certain pieces of real estate which plaintiffs allege that one of them (Mrs. Una Claire Durel Fried) bought from the State of Louisiana on May 27th, 1944, and which they also allege had been previously adjudicated to the State of Louisiana for unpaid taxes. One of the said parcels, numbered 43, with which we are not concerned, had previously been owned by Liberty Realty and Securities, Inc., and the other parcel, numbered 44, had previously been owned by and assessed in the name of S. V. Edmiston. This parcel of land is described as follows: "A certain portion of ground and improvements thereon in the Third District of the City of New Orleans, in Square bounded by Crete, Rear Line, Gerson Avenue and Henry Streets, designated as lot No. 44 in Square No. 4 (P.H.); said lot No. 44 measures 32 feet front on Henry Street by depths of 100 feet; said property adjudicated to the State on November 7, 1931, for unpaid taxes of 1930, in the name of Liberty R. S. Co."

The allegation was made that Edmiston was an absentee and unrepresented and that no curator had been appointed to represent him and that, therefore, it was necessary that a curator ad hoc be appointed. A curator ad hoc was appointed. *Page 490

The suit was originally filed as a proceeding authorized by Act 106 of 1934, but while it was pending in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, the Supreme Court of Louisiana, in Doll v. Meyer, 214 La. 444, 38 So.2d 69, held that the statute may not be availed of to quiet title to real estate which, having been adjudicated to the State, has been sold by the State to a private owner.

When that decision was rendered plaintiffs, by supplemental petition, alleged that the proceeding was authorized by and that they desired to proceed under authority of Act 38 of 1908. They also alleged that a curator ad hoc had already been appointed in accordance with the original petition, and they prayed that the supplemental petition be served on the said curator ad hoc. Mr. S. Roccaforte was appointed curator ad hoc, and he filed answer commendably raising every possible controvertible issue.

All of these issues have been thoroughly discussed in a written opinion of the Honorable Louis H. Yarrut, Judge of Division "C" of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, who rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs, confirming the title of Mrs. Una Claire Durel Fried to the property in question. From this judgment the curator ad hoc has appealed.

We are so thoroughly convinced of the soundness of the views which the district judge has set forth that we have decided to adopt them as our own. We could not add to them and any attempt to do so might detract from them. These reasons now follow.

"This is a proceeding in rem and not in personam. A proceeding to quiet a tax title is one in personam against the former proprietors who have been cited, but where they are unknown and are represented by a curator ad hoc, as is the case here, a judgment can have no legal effect beyond the confirmation of the tax sale so made. Roussel et al. v. Railways Realty Co. et al., 132 La. 379 [61 So. 409, 833]. When first filed, this was a proceeding to confirm a tax title under Act 106 of 1934.

"Under the provisions of Act 237 of 1924 (as amended), Mrs. Fried, on May 27, 1944, bought from the State a portion of ground made up of two adjoining parcels (previously acquired by the State for delinquent taxes), namely, Parcel Pt. 43 and Lot No. 44, in Square No. 4, Park Heights Subdivision, New Orleans. Parcel Pt. 43 measures fourteen feet front on Henry Street and was adjudicated to the State in the name of Samuel V. Edmiston for the 1929 taxes; Lot No. 44 has been adjudicated to the State for the 1930 taxes in the name of Liberty Realty and Securities Company.

"The two former owners were cited as defendants, the Liberty Realty and Securities Company by service on its Vice-President, W. H. Talbot; and Samuel V. Edmiston, an absentee, through Salvador Roccaforte, an attorney at law, appointed by the Court.

"Judgment recognizing Mrs. Fried as owner of Lot No. 44 went by default against the Liberty Realty and Securities Company.

"While the matter was pending against the absentee, Edmiston, the Supreme Court, on November 8, 1948 (Doll v. Meyer [214 La. 444], 38 So.2d 69), decided that Act 106 of 1934 was inoperative for the confirmation of a tax title emanating from the State.

"In view of the above decision of our Supreme Court, a supplemental and amended petition was filed, in which plaintiff enlarged the averments of her original petition, by setting forth that the property in question (Parcel Pt. 43) was vacant and that defendant, Edmiston, is an absentee, and that the validity of her title should be established under Act 38 of 1908 as against any claims or pretensions of the absentee former owner Edmiston, represented by a curator ad hoc. The curator ad hoc filed an exception of no right or cause of action, and with full reservation of said exceptions, filed an answer denying all allegations.

"The issues presented to the Court are:

"(1) Is defendant Edmiston properly represented by the curator ad hoc;

"(2) Is plaintiff entitled to a judgment recognizing her as owner, if the allegations of her original and supplemental petitions are proved? *Page 491

"I hold that the defendant, Edmiston, is an absentee, since no one has been appointed to administer his affairs, and he has no agent in this State to represent him. The Sheriff's return shows that he cannot be found.

"An action to establish a tax title to real estate, under Act 38 of 1908, is not new in our jurisprudence. Davidson v. McDonald, 131 La. 1047, 60 So. 679, is a case in point; incidentally it involved the validity of a tax title. See also Settoon v. Sharp [La. App.], 19 So.2d 342; Saucier v. [E.] Sondheimer Co., 212 La. 490, 32 So.2d 900; Veltin v. Haas,207 La. 650, 21 So.2d 862; Wooley et al. v. Louisiana Central Lumber Co. et al., 204 La. 801, 16 So.2d 360. The pertinent part of Act 38 of 1908 reads: '* * * in all cases where two or more persons lay claim to land by recorded title and where neither of said claimants are in the actual possession of the land so claimed; either of the claimants may bring suit against one or all the adverse claimants, and for that purpose may join one or more adverse claimants in the same suit as defendants, to have the titles to the land adjudicated upon by the court having jurisdiction of the property, * * * and this action shall be known as the action to establish title to real estate, and the judge shall decide which of the claimants are the owners of the land in dispute, * * *.'

"Mrs. Fried claims and proves ownership of parcel Pt. 43, based on a patent from the State. The defendant, Edmiston, as alleged and proved, has a recorded title to said parcel, having purchased said property in 1926, which was sold to the State for taxes. Further, it is alleged and proved that neither the plaintiff, Mrs. Fried, nor the absentee defendant, Edmiston, is in possession of said parcel Pt. 43. 'The plaintiff's petition clearly discloses that this is a suit to try title to property under the provisions of Act No.

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Related

Doll v. Succession of Acker
112 So. 2d 757 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)
Doll v. Dearie
41 So. 2d 84 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 2d 489, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fried-v-edmiston-lactapp-1949.