Jean Tardan v. California Oil Company and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited, Paul Louis Marcel Larregain v. California Oil Company and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited

323 F.2d 717
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1963
Docket19573_1
StatusPublished

This text of 323 F.2d 717 (Jean Tardan v. California Oil Company and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited, Paul Louis Marcel Larregain v. California Oil Company and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jean Tardan v. California Oil Company and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited, Paul Louis Marcel Larregain v. California Oil Company and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited, 323 F.2d 717 (5th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

323 F.2d 717

Jean TARDAN et al., Appellants,
v.
CALIFORNIA OIL COMPANY and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited,
Appellees.
Paul Louis Marcel LARREGAIN et al., Appellants,
v.
CALIFORNIA OIL COMPANY and Dulac Cypress Company, Limited, Appellees.

Nos. 19572, 19573.

United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.

Oct. 16, 1963, Rehearing Denied in No. 19573; Dec. 16, 1963.

Amos L. Ponder, Jr., New Orleans, La., for appellants Tardan and others.

Cyril F. Dumaine, Arthur F. Dumaine, Amos L. Ponder, Jr., New Orleans, La., for appellants Larregain and others.

Andrew McCollam, Jr., L. K. Benson, Jack W. Thomson, Jr., New Orleans, La., for appellee California Oil Co., Milling, Saal, Saunders, Benson & Woodward, New Orleans, La., of counsel.

Before RIVES and CAMERON, Circuit Judges, and BOOTLE, District Judge.

CAMERON, Circuit Judge.

The question presented to us in these two appeals is whether appellants' (plaintiffs') attorneys, who assert interests in plaintiffs' claims, and certain royalty claimants, whose interests are carved out of appellee California Oil Company's lease from appellee Dulac Cypress Co., Ltd. (defendants) are indispensable parties to these two actions. By order filed April 30, 1962, the two actions were consolidated by the court below for the purpose of argument and briefs. This was done upon motion of appellants and the failure of the appellees to object thereto.1

The appellants claim that the plaintiffs in the two actions combined are the lawful owners of the real property described in the two complaints, and they seek a decree declaring them so to be; they pray that the defendants be declared and adjudged to have no right, title or interest in the property; and that each set of plaintiffs be adjudged to be the owners of their respective shares and be put in possession of same; that the defendants be ordered to render an accounting to plaintiffs for all bonuses, rentals and royalties received and for all oil, gas and other minerals and other things of value removed, taken, produced or appropriated from said property; and that money judgment be rendered in favor of appellants and against appellees for the value of all the oil, gas and minerals so removed; and for general relief.

Appellants in both cases claim that they are residents and citizens of foreign countries; that appellee Dulac Cypress Company, Ltd. is a Louisiana corporation and is the record owner of the property, and that appellee California Oil Company is Dulac's mineral lessee.

Appellants in the Tardan case claim as heirs of Jules Lapene who obtained from the State of Louisiana in 1859, by patent, an undivided interest in the property described; and appellants in the Larregain case claim as heirs of Auguste Ferre who received by like patent the remaining undivided interest in the said lands.

California and Dulac filed in the Tardan case a motion to dismiss the action or, alternately, for a summary judgment, asserting that the action filed was petitory, and was based upon the contention that the sheriff's sale under which appellees claim was illegal and void, which contention, appellees assert, is wholly without merit as appears from certain legal proceedings copies of which were attached as exhibits to the complaint or were offered in evidence as exhibits. On August 14, 1961, California and Dulac moved in the Tardan case to dismiss the action for want of indispensable parties consisting of a large number of persons listed in an affidavit filed with the motion, all of whom claim rights and interests in the oil, gas and minerals under the mineral lease given by Dulac to California. November 30, 1961, the court below made a minute entry denying the motion of Dulac and California to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim and for summary judgment, and granting their motion to dismiss the action for want to indispensable parties unless the asserted owners of overriding royalty interests in the property should be joined as parties to the suit within sixty days. Thereupon, all parties proceeded to file interrogatories, motions for protective orders, etc., and on January 13, 1962, California and Dulac filed their answer. As a part of the disclosures made in response to interrogatories, an affidavit was filed that the various parties plaintiff had executed a written employment contract with the law firm of Dumaine and Dumaine, a copy of which was attached. Pertinent portions of the employment contract are copied in the margin.2

February 7, 1961, in Tardan the court below made a minute entry granting the objections of Dulac and California to certain interrogatories and continuing for one week their own motion to require plaintiffs to answer interrogatories.

Immediately thereafter, on February 9th Dulac and California moved the court to establish the finality of dismissal of the Tardan action for want of indispensable parties, reciting that the order of the court requiring that the royalty claimants be joined as indispensable parties had not been complied with and representing that, in answer to their interrogatories, the contract between the Tardans and the attorneys Dumaine had been produced, and that the attorneys were indispensable parties and, if they were joined, a want of diversity of citizenship would result, thus destroying the court's jurisdiction.

On February 15, 1963, the court made a minute entry that the motion of California and Dulac to dismiss the action be granted, and on February 20th, judgment was entered in Tardan providing:

'The above case came on for hearing at a former day on motion of defendants for the dismissal of this action for failure to join as parties the owners of overriding royalty interests, in compliance with the order made herein on November 30, 1961 and entered herein on December 4, 1961 and also to dismiss for failure to join Cyril F. Dumaine and Arthur F. Dumaine as additional indispensable parties; and it appearing that defendant's motion is well founded on both grounds, and plaintiffs' counsel having also advised the Court that Cyril F. Dumaine and Arthur F. Dumaine will not be joined as parties because their joinder would destroy the diversity of citizenship jurisdiction of the Court;

'It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that there be judgment herein in favor of defendants California Oil Company and Dulac Cypress Company, Ltd. dismissing this action at plaintiffs' cost.'

The appellees in case No. 19573, hereinafter known as Larregain, rely on the same points as the appellees in Tardan and, in addition, they raise other points. The final judgment in Larregain was entered February 21, 1962, the day after the final judgment in Tardan. It recites that Larregain is dismissed for the additional reason that appellants had failed to join Oliver H. Dabezies and Maurice Coutot as indispensable parties.

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Bluebook (online)
323 F.2d 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jean-tardan-v-california-oil-company-and-dulac-cypress-company-limited-ca5-1963.