Gaudet v. Lawes

197 So. 2d 723, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5671
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 13, 1967
DocketNo. 6963
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 197 So. 2d 723 (Gaudet v. Lawes) 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
Gaudet v. Lawes, 197 So. 2d 723, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5671 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

BAILES, Judge.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the district court denying the plaintiffs-appellants a declaratory judgment recognizing them to be the owners of certain property in Assumption Parish, and also denying their plea, alternatively, for an ordinary judgment recognizing them to be the owners of such property. For the reasons which are set forth below, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.

The plaintiffs, 126 in number, brought this action against the heirs of W. H. Lawes and their mineral lessee, Union Producing Company, seeking a declaratory judgment recognizing the plaintiffs to be the owners of the North Half of the Southeast Quarter, Section 36, Township 13 South, Range 12 East, and all of Fractional Section 31, Township 13 South, Range 13 East, less and except the upper eight arpents and the lower fourteen arpents of said fractional section, all in Assumption Parish, Louisiana, and alternatively, they pray for an ordinary judgment recognizing them to be the owners of said property.

Defendant-appellee, Union Producing Company, lessee of the other defendants-appellees, by virtue of a release of all its rights under the mineral lease it acquired from the other defendants, has filed a motion in which it asked to be dismissed from this suit. No objection was raised to this motion by the plaintiffs. Therefore, the motion is granted, and accordingly, Union Producing Company is dismissed from this action.

All parties hereto acknowledge that their claims of title originate from one Bertrand Saux (the name sometimes in the documents in evidence in the record being spelled Saus, Sauce or Sause), who was the patentee of Fractional Section 31, and who acquired the North Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 36 by a partition with Marcelin Rodry (or Rodrigue), with whom he had previously owned the entire Southeast Quarter (SE }4) of Section 36 in indivisión.

By successive conveyances made in 1853, Bertrand Saux conveyed the lower 14 ar-pents of Fractional Section 31 to Joseph Fleury and Jean Bubser, the upper six arpents of this fractional section to Augus-tin Bertelotte, and the lower two arpents of the upper eight arpents of the fractional section to Marcelin Rodri, thus leaving, in the name of Bertrand Saux, a tract of land containing approximately 20 acres, comprised of the lower six arpents of the upper 14 arpents of Fractional Section 31, which, together with the North Half of the Southeast Quarter of said Section 36, of the said townships and ranges, makes up the property in dispute herein.

After trial on the merits in the district court, the judge a quo found that the plaintiffs had failed to sustain the burden of proving the required heirship, and dismissed their suit, with prejudice.

There is no doubt, in view of the evidence before us in this record, that some of the plaintiffs herein have sustained the burden of proving heirship. We believe it will best serve the purpose of this decision to assume, arguendo, that plaintiffs have established heirship to the common ancestor, Bertrand Saux. The resolution of the other issues raised by the plaintiffs are determinative of this action and will show that the defendants must prevail.

The record before us shows that some time prior to 1888, Bertrand Saux died. In the year 1888, the subject property was sold to the State of Louisiana for nonpayment of taxes due for the year 1887. In 1891, the State of Louisiana transferred the property to the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District, and in 1899, the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District conveyed the property to Desire Sauce. In 1918, W. H. Lawes acquired an undivided one-half interest in the subject property from the widow and heirs of Desire Sauce. In 1921, the remaining one-half interest in the property, [726]*726which was assessed to the Estate of Desire Sauce, was sold to W. H. Lawes at a tax sale for the non-payment of 1920 taxes.

As is shown by the reported case of Gonzales v. Saux (1907) 119 La. 657, 44 So. 332, certain children of Bertrand Saux instituted suit against Desire Saux (Sauce), the purpose of which was to effect a partition by licitation and to establish the validity of the title to the subject property. Contrary to the allegation of the plaintiffs in their original petition in this action that the tax sale from the Estate of Bertrand Saux to the State of Louisiana in 1888 was nullified by judgment of the court in Gonzales v. Saux, supra, the fact is that the Supreme Court of this State put at rest any question of the validity of the said tax sale of the subject property to the State of Louisiana in 1888. The Supreme Court therein held that the heirs of Bertrand Saux had the right to redeem the subject property within twelve months from the date the tax deed shall have been recorded in the records of Assumption Parish (the tax deed had not theretofore been recorded in the public records). Subsequent to the finality of the judgment rendered in Gonzales v. Saux, supra, it appears that the heirs of Bertrand Saux made an effort to effect a redemption of the property. This so-called act of redemption will be discussed infra.

It should be mentioned that Desire Sauce, in addition to having acquired title to the subject property from the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District in 1899, acquired an undivided one-fourth interest in subject property in 1898 from Antoine Saux, a son of Bertrand Saux.

In view of the transfers affecting the subject property from 1888 down to and including the tax deed by which W. IT. Lawes acquired the one-half interest of the Estate of Desire Sauce in the property, the claim of the heirs and descendants of Bertrand Saux, as such, to the said property must stand or fall, be sustained or rejected, on the validity of the procedure of redemption of the property reserved to> them by the Supreme Court of this State-in the case of Gonzales v. Saux, supra. Further, the claim of the heirs of Desire Sauce to the subject property must stand" or fall on the sufficiency or insufficiency-of the tax deed by which W. IT. Lawes-acquired the above mentioned one-half interest, or the resolution of the question of adverse possession of the property by the defendants as opposed to that of certain of the heirs of Desire Sauce.

The defendants-appellees defend their claim to title to the property by pleading the valid acquisition of the property by Desire Sauce from the Atchafalaya Basin-Levee District, the purchase of an undivided' interest in said property from the widow and heirs of Desire Sauce, the acquisition-of the other or remaining one-half interest at the tax sale in 1921 for non-payment of the taxes for the year 1920 by the Estate of Desire Sauce, exceptions of prescription of ten and thirty years. In pleading the-validity of the 1921 tax sale, defendants-contend that the five year peremption under Article 10, Section 11 of the Constitution of 1921 is applicable; and they further plead that the plaintiffs are estopped by laches and the presumption of omnia rite.

On the other hand, plaintiffs-appellants-argue that the five year peremption, above cited, is inapplicable for the reason that the description of the property in the tax salé-is too vague to support the validity thereof, and further argue payment of the taxes-by Lawes, the co-owner is equivalent to-payment for the tax debtor, the other co-owner.

We will now proceed to a consideration of the respective positions of the parties. First, we will consider the purported redemption of the property by the heirs of Bertrand Saux in 1910 prompted by the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Gonzales v. Saux, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 2d 723, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaudet-v-lawes-lactapp-1967.