Iselin v. Lacoste

55 F. Supp. 977, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2331
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 26, 1944
DocketCivil Action No. 10803
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 F. Supp. 977 (Iselin v. Lacoste) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iselin v. Lacoste, 55 F. Supp. 977, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2331 (W.D. La. 1944).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Plaintiffs claim title to a tract of land known as “Diamond Point”, comprising 959.32 acres, more or less, together with 2000 acres of “accretion", more or less, and making a total acreage of 2959.32. The property is described as follows :

“Fractional Section 17, containing 112.28 acres;

“Fractional Section 19, containing 164.24 acres;

“Fractional Section 20, containing 168.12 acres;

“Fractional Section 21, containing 165.91 acres;

“Fractional Section 22, containing 176.35 acres;

“Fractional Section 23, containing 172.42 acres;

“Township 14 North Range 14 East, together with all the accretions thereto belonging, and all improvements thereon situated.”

It is alleged that the lands are situated in the Parish of Madison, Louisiana. Attached to the petition is an exhibit marked “A” as a “deraignment of title” and a United States township map of such fractional sections marked “B,” both of which are “made part of the petition.”

The prayer is for a declaratory judgment decreeing plaintiffs the legal owners in “fee simple” of the lands “being and situate in Madison Parish, Louisiana.”

On May 2, defendant, Arnaud Lacoste, moved for summary judgment under Rule 56 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S. C.A. following section 723c, “dismissing •this action” as a “matter of law” on the grounds that: (1) The complaint does not state a cause of action upon which relief can be granted; (2) that the matter in [978]*978controversy has been settled by “final judgment on the merits” in the Federal courts for the Southern District of Mississippi, in an identical suit between the same parties and affirmed by the Court of Appeals for this circuit, 139 F.2d 887; and (3) that plaintiffs are estopped from asserting a different state of facts here from those alleged and adjudicated in the said former suit.

In the alternative, defendant asked that, if the Court should conclude that he is not entitled to summary judgment on the face of the papers and the exhibits tendered by complainants and himself, that a pre-trial conference be had for the purpose of settling all disputed facts, leaving the matter to be tried only on those which are left in controversy.

On May 13, 1944, plaintiffs filed an amended petition, adopting “all the allegations of the original petition,” and charging in substance that, while they had filed and prosecuted a similar suit in the Federal Courts of Mississippi, as alleged by defendant, asking for “declaratory relief * * * involving the right and title to these presents” (setting forth the same exhibits as are attached to the petition in the present suit), that, “through error and inadvertence of counsel, said suit was filed in Warren County, Mississippi, which court had no jurisdiction over said property, which as shown, was situated in Madison Parish, Louisiana”; and that a motion to dismiss had been filed in that court on the grounds that (1) the complaint there did not state grounds upon which relief could be granted, and (2) that the complaint itself showed plaintiffs had no interest in the subject matter of that' suit because they had previously conveyed all the lands to Mengel and Co. The amended petition in the present case then recites the proceedings in the district and appellate Federal courts for the Southern District of Mississippi, in much the same order as the defendant had done in the present motion for summary judgment. There then follows a rather long and somewhat involved paragraph in the amendment, which, in effect, assails the findings of the Circuit Court of Appeals that the property was situated in Mississippi, notwithstanding plaintiffs’ allegations there, and as conceded by defendant in that suit, much of the language used in the amendment here being argumentative and appropriate to a motion for rehearing before the court, which had rendered that judgment.

In a succeeding paragraph, the amendment recites that the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals had found that the plaintiffs there, who are the same in the present case, had disposed of the lands through the Mengel Co., but that the said holding conflicted “with the allegations of the petition which had been filed on behalf of plaintiffs and in direct conflict with the particular description of said property contained in exhibits annexed to the petition * * * ”; that jurisdiction had been exercised by the Mississippi courts “apparently through the error and inadvertence of plaintiffs’ counsel” in alleging that the property in question there and here was in Mississippi, when “in fact and in law, and as conclusively shown by other allegations,” as well as “by the exhibits the same was situated within the State of Louisiana”; that without any purpose to criticize these courts they had misconstrued “the actual situation, not only because of said error of counsel, but also because of the extremely complicated and confusing state of facts, out of which the said accretion of plaintiffs’ land in Louisiana ensued, and the length of time involved”; that plaintiffs should have “opportunity to prove facts properly alleged, and that notwithstanding inadvertence and partial error, the litigants should not be denied a full and fair hearing, especially where the court, whose decision is relied on, had no jurisdiction, and which so obviously, demonstratively ( ?) and conclusively misconstrued, not only the allegations of the petition before it, but the exhibits and facts thereby thoroughly disclosed to it.”

The case has been submitted on the motion for summary judgment, based upon the allegations and exhibits attached to the bill of complaint on the part of plaintiff, together with copy of the transcript and briefs before the Court of Appeals in the case from the Southern District of Mississippi offered by defendant.

An analysis of the pertinent allegations of the bill of complaint in the Mississippi case shows that plaintiffs set forth their title and submitted substantially the same exhibits as in the present suit, to establish that from the year 1829 “the eastern ends of fractional sections 17 and 19 were submerged by the flow of the Misssisippi and that from about 1867 to 1882, the remaining sections 20, 21, 22 and 23, were sub[979]

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Bluebook (online)
55 F. Supp. 977, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iselin-v-lacoste-lawd-1944.