Goertz v. Menard

168 So. 747, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 291
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1936
DocketNo. 1587.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 168 So. 747 (Goertz v. Menard) 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
Goertz v. Menard, 168 So. 747, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 291 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge ad Hoc.

This is a jactitation suit in which plaintiff, alleging himself to be the owner and in possession of a certain tract of land described at length in his petition and being situated in the parish of St. Tammany, claims that the defendant has slandered his title thereto by having caused to be recorded in the conveyance records of the parish a certain act of sale to defendant by the sheriff of the parish in the succession proceedings of Mathilda Cummings, deceased, and by also causing to be recorded in the conveyance and mortgage records an affidavit of defendant declaring that plaintiff is not the owner of said property, but that he (defendant) is the owner thereof. He alleges that the order of the clerk of court under which the property was sold by the sheriff in the said succession proceedings is null, void, and of no effect for the reason that when said order was issued the property already belonged to him (plaintiff), he having acquired said property in the year 1922 and Mathilda Cummings having died in the year 1925. In the alternative he alleges that the order of the clerk of court ,to sell the said property, being an order to sell to pay debts, is null for the reason that no list of debts was annexed to the application for the order to sell said property for the purpose of paying said debts. He alleges damages in the sum of $500 and also claims $250 as attorney’s fees. He prays for judgment for said damages and attorney’s fees and that defendant be ordered either to disclaim title to the said property or else assert such rights as he may have against said property, and finally that the inscription of said title and affidavit be ordered erased from the records.

Defendant’s first plea was an exception of misjoinder based on the ground that defendant’s title complained of by plaintiff only conveyed to defendant an undivided five-eighths in the property and that defendant’s co-owners in indivisión whom he names in his exception should have been made parties defendant with him. The exception was overruled, and although a bill was reserved no complaint on account of said ruling is urged before this court. Where no error in the ruling of the lower court on an exception is pointed out and urged by neither argument nor brief, the ruling will be presumed to be correct and to have been accepted as such and the point raised by the exception abandoned. This course was recently followed by this court in the case of Witson v. Joseph, 158 So. 661.

What has just been said regarding the exception of misjoinder will also apply to the exception of no cause or right of action which was the next plea filed by defendant. The exception was based upon failure of the petition to allege malice. The court sustained it as to claim for damages but reserved to plaintiff the right to amend which was done. Defendant makes no complaint in this court on account of said ruling, and it will be presumed that defendant either accepts the ruling as correct or has abandoned the point raised by the exception. Plaintiff amended his petition supplying the allegation of malice.

Defendant’s next plea bears no particular name or style. The plea challenges the right of plaintiff to maintain his action on the ground that plaintiff was not in possession of the property, the contention being that possession of the property in the plaintiff is a necessary requisite before plaintiff can maintain the action of jactitation. The court heard testimony on the question of possession and overruled the plea assigning well-considered written reasons.

Without discussing further the character of the plea or whether or not it should have been referred to the merits as being a defense,to be pleaded by answer rather than by exception, after having reviewed the testimony, we agree with the able judge of the lower court that the acts of possession by plaintiff shown by the testimony show sufficient possession in plaintiff to maintain the possessory action.

•According to the testimony, plaintiff cut and removed about seven cords of wood from the land. Witness Robert Rain- *749 ey, who bought some of the wood, testified that he hauled it off the property and that it was stacked on the land before being hauled. Octave Cummings worked for Rainey and cut the wood. He was married to Mathilda Cummings and knows the property well. Also the testimony shows that plaintiff leased the property for mineral rights on two different occasions, once to Roxana Petroleum Company and another time to other parties. The plaintiff had the property watched at certain times and he paid the taxes on it up to the date of filing his suit. All of these constitutes acts of possession sufficient to maintain the possessory action. See Miller v. Albert Hanson Lumber Company, 130 La. 662, 58 So. 502, and Perry v. Board of Commissioners, 132 La. 415, 61 So. 511.

In his answer defendant urges that plaintiff is estopped from asserting title to the property for the reason that he stood by and allowed the property to be sold in the proceedings had in the succession of Mathilda Cummings without protest although he had knowledge thereof personally or through his attorney. He then sets up the following contentions: (1) He denies that plaintiff is the owner of the property, and asserts that he (defendant) is the owner thereof by virtue of his purchase at the said succession sale of a five-eighths interest, and that plaintiff is without right to attack in a collateral manner the judgment rendered in said succession proceedings. (2) Pie urges that plaintiff’s alleged title acquired at tax sale under 1921 assessment made in name of “Unknown Owners” is null for the following reasons: (a) That the tax sale is based on an assessment in name of “Unknown Owners,” when as a matter of fact the owners were known to the assessing authorities; (b) that the description under which the property was carried on the assessment rolls was too vague and indefinite to sufficiently identify the property so as to make a valid adjudication for nonpayment of taxes; (c) in the alternative, that if the alleged tax title acquired by plaintiff does cover property claimed by defendant, plaintiff’s said tax title is without effect for the reason that the title to the property at that time was vested in the state of Louisiana under an adjudication to the state for the unpaid taxes of the year 1883, and again under an adjudication to the state for the unpaid taxes of the year 1899, both of which adjudications to the state being duly recorded in the conveyance records of St. Tammany parish and no redemption from said tax adjudications to the state having been effected; and (d), also in the alternative, that plaintiff’s alleged tax title is null and void for the reason that when he became the purchaser, by his own admissions, he was acting as the agent of the tax debtor, Mathilda Cummings, taking title in his own name to protect her title to said property. He alleges that the title to said property which vested in the state under the adjudications for nonpayment of taxes continued in the state until defendant redeemed said property from said adjudications in the year 1928, which completed defendant’s chain of title which he sets up in detail.

The district judge in a written opinion discusses practically all of the defenses and disposes of them all adversely to the defendant rendering judgment for plaintiff as prayed for, except as to damages and attorney’s fees which were rejected. Plaintiff has answered the appeal praying for an amendment to the judgment as respects claim for damages and attorney’s fees.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 747, 1936 La. App. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goertz-v-menard-lactapp-1936.