Haas Land Company v. O'QUIN
This text of 187 So. 2d 208 (Haas Land Company v. O'QUIN) 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.
Opinion
The HAAS LAND COMPANY, Ltd., Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
David Baker O'QUIN, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*209 Bennett & Laborde, by Ben C. Bennett, Jr., Marksville, for defendant-appellant.
Laborde, Lafargue & Brouillette, by C. E. Laborde, Jr., Marksville, Fruge & Foret, by J. Burton Foret, Ville Platte, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before TATE, HOOD and CULPEPPER, JJ.
TATE, Judge.
This is a possessory action. On the basis of an allegation in the defendant's answer, the plaintiff moved for and was granted judgment on the pleadings without a trial on the merits.
The question for decision is whether a statement in one of the allegations of the defendant's answer had the effect of judicially confessing the plaintiff's possession, so as to entitle the plaintiff to judgment in its favor.
To summarize the statutory context of this litigation:
A possessory action such as the present is a real action brought by the actual or recently-evicted possessor of immovable property to be maintained in or restored to possession. LSA-C.C.P. Arts. 3655-3662. In contrast, the petitory action seeks recognition of title in favor of a plaintiff who is not in possession of claimed property. Arts. 3651-3653.
In the real actions, the possessor as statutorily defined, Arts. 3658, 3660, has very real advantages: (1) In the possessory action, he need prove only his possession for more than a year within the requisite period of suit in order to have his right to possession maintained against the defendant, Art. 3658, with his title to the property not being at issue, Art. 3661; (2) In the petitory or other real actions, a party claiming against a possessor must make out a title good as against the world, not simply a better title, Arts. 3653, 3654.
*210 At issue here is the application of LSA-C.C.P. Article 3657. This code provision forbids the cumulation of the petitory and the possessory actions, and it provides for the conversion of a possessory into a petitory action when a party asserts title.[1]
The plaintiff company's petition alleges that: The plaintiff possesses a described 13-acre tract, having gone into possession of it immediately following its purchase in 1908. On June 19, 1964, the defendant O'Quin recorded an alleged title to the property, being a state patent. On May 6, 1965 and following, the defendant exercised acts of possession of the tract. The petition's prayer seeks recognition of the plaintiff's right to possession of the described property. The suit was filed on May 11, 1965.
The defendant O'Quin's answer generally denies the plaintiff's possession. It also affirmatively alleges that the defendant has been in actual corporeal possession since 1957, further admitting recordation of the 1964 patent deed. The prayer of the answer, in full, is: "Wherefore, defendant prays for judgment in his favor and against the defendant [obviously meaning the `plaintiff'], rejecting Plaintiff's demands at its costs."
In support of a judgment, on the pleadings in its favor, the plaintiff contends that the defendant asserted title in himself and has thereby judicially confessed the plaintiff's possession and thus converted the suit into a petitory action. This contention is based solely upon Article 3 of the defendant's answer, which in reply to Article 3 of the plaintiff's petition ("Plaintiff possesses, as owner, the following described immovable property * * *") alleges:
"The allegations of Paragraph 3 of Plaintiff's petition are denied and defendant affirmatively alleges that he is the owner and possessor of the property described in said paragraph 3 of Plaintiff's petition by virtue of a [1964] patent acquired from the State of Louisiana * * * [Patent described.]"
The italicized phrasing is an isolated and incidental allegation in the defendant's answer. Within the statutory meaning and intent, as we will show, this allegation did not constitute a formal assertion of title sufficient to convert the possessory suit by the plaintiff into a petitory action by the defendant.
The application of the second paragraph of LSA-C.C.P. Art. 3657 is at issue. This second paragraph provides (the full article is quoted at Footnote 1):
"When, except as provided in Article 3661(1)-(3),[2] the defendant in a possessory *211 action asserts title in himself, in the alternative or otherwise, he thereby converts the suit into a petitory action, and judicially confesses the possession of the plaintiff in the possessory action." (Italics ours.)
It is to be noted that, under this Code article, pleadings to permit introduction of evidence to prove the defendant's possession as owner expressly do not constitute an assertion of title converting the suit into a petitory action.
Here, in the context of the entire answer, the defendant O'Quin denied the plaintiff company's possession and asserted his own possession since 1957, possession following 1964 being under a claim of ownership by reason of the state patent. At worst inadvertent, at best inartistic and ambiguous, the allegation that the defendant "is the owner and possessor of the property * * * by virtue of a patent", etc., can, in the light of the entire pleading, be considered equivalent to the somewhat similarly worded but acceptable allegation that the defendant "is the possessor as owner of the property * * * by virtue of a patent", etc.
In reaching this conclusion, we especially take into consideration the prayer of the defendant's answer, which simply sought the dismissal of the plaintiff's possessory action that is, it did not assert or seek recognition of the defendant's title to the property.
A possessory suit to try the right to possession is not converted into a petitory action to try title by incidental allegations of ownership by a party, where the pleadings as a whole and especially the prayer show that possessory and not petitory relief is what is sought. Foscue v. Mitchell, 190 La. 758, 182 So. 740; Coleman's Heirs v. Holmes' Heirs, La.App. 3 Cir., 147 So.2d 752; Phillips v. West, La.App. 1 Cir., 144 So.2d 173.[3] In disposing of a contention similar to the present, it was stated in the first-cited opinion at 182 So. 742: "In determining whether a suit is a jactitation [now, possessory] suit or a petitory action, the averments of the petition and the answer must be construed in connection with their respective prayers, which fix the character of plaintiff's action and the nature of the relief sought by the defendant."
To be contrasted with the present incidental allegation of ownership, is the situation where the defendant's answer in a possessory suit formally claims title against the possessor, which thus has the statutory effect of converting the suit into a petitory action. See Official Revision Comment (e) to Article 3657. The cases relied upon by the present plaintiff-appellee concern such instances, and their holdings are thus distinguishable from the present. In Board of Trustees of Ruston Circuit, M E Church, South v. Rudy, 192 La. 200, 187 So. 549, the defendants admitted the plaintiff's possession but claimed certain reversionary rights under the title; in Barrow v. LeBlanc, La.App. 1 Cir., 35 So.2d 469, the defendant by alternative demand specifically pleaded prescriptive title.
Earlier we emphasized the significant importance of the status of the possessor in real actions.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
187 So. 2d 208, 1966 La. App. LEXIS 5224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-land-company-v-oquin-lactapp-1966.