Knapp v. Dupont

89 So. 631, 149 La. 491, 1921 La. LEXIS 1462
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1921
DocketNo. 24456
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 89 So. 631 (Knapp v. Dupont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knapp v. Dupont, 89 So. 631, 149 La. 491, 1921 La. LEXIS 1462 (La. 1921).

Opinion

O’NIELL, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment ordering a partition of a tract of land, or two adjacent tracts, alleged by plaintiff to be owned by him and defendants jointly. The partition was ordered to be made by licitation; that is, by a sale of the property at public auction and a division of the proceeds.

Answering the appeal, plaintiff prays that, the judgment be amended by condemning the defendants to pay all court costs, instead of taxing each party for his proportion of the costs.

■ In his petition plaintiff claimed a third interest in the land, having bought it from [493]*493W. B. McCormick, who had bought from defendants. Plaintiff admitted that defendants were the owners of the remaining two-thirds interest in the land. He alleged that it was mineral land, being in the proven gas field of Terrebonne parish, and that it could not be conveniently divided in kind.

Before answering the petition, defendants filed an exception, claiming that the suit should be held in abeyance until the determination of a petitory action then pending, entitled A. M. and J. C. Dupont v. I. N. Knapp and the Atlas Oil Company, No. 8115 of the docket of the district court, the suit being a contest over the two-thirds interest claimed by the exceptors. They alleged that Arthur Knapp had bought the outstanding third interest in the property with knowledge of the pendency of the petitory action, notice of which had been recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages. They alleged that Arthur Knapp was a near relation of I. N. Knapp, defendant in the petitory action, and had bought the outstanding third interest in the land for the purpose of circumventing and defeating the petitory action, by forcing a sale of the land before the question of title could be decided, and that Arthur Knapp had no real or personal interest in the land, and. had acted in the matter solely in the interest of I. N. Knapp, and in furtherance of a conspiracy between the Knapps to have the property sold at a time when, because of the pending litigation over the two-thirds interest, outsiders could not safely bid at an auction sale, and there would therefore be no competition in the bidding. They averred that the purpose and object of the alleged conspiracy, therefore, was to commit a fraud upon the law. The exception was overruled.

Answering the petition, defendants admitted that they owned two-thirds interest in the land, but demanded strict proof of plaintiff’s ownership of the other third interest. They denied that the land could not be conveniently divided in kind. They repeated the allegations which had been made in their exception to the suit. And they prayed that, if plaintiff should succeed in proving his alleged ownership of an undivided third interest in the property, the partition should be deferred until the determination of the petitory action between them and I. N. Knapp and others, and, if a partition should be ordered, it should be made by a division of the land in kind.

In his written opinion the district judge gave three distinct reasons for overruling defendants’ exception to the suit. His first reason was that the exception could not be sustained as a plea of lis pendens, because: (1) The petitory action and the partition suit were not pending in different courts of concurrent jurisdiction; (2) the parties to the two suits were not the same; and (3) the two suits had not the same object or the same cause of action. The second reason given for overruling the exception was that defendants could not question, and the court should not consider, the motive which might have influenced the plaintiff in the exercise of what seemed to be his legal right. The third reason given for overruling the exception was that the fear'expressed by the exceptors that the property might be sacrificed if sold at public auction was premature, because the court might decide to order a division of the property in kind. In that connection the judge said that the allegation in plaintiff’s petition that the land could not be conveniently divided in kind might be contradicted by positive proof that the land could be conveniently divided in kind, in which event the court would order such division.

On trial of the case on its merits the judge sustained plaintiff’s objection to defendants! introducing in evidence the record or pleadings in the petitory action. The judge also sustained plaintiff’s objection to defendants’ introducing in evidence the depositions of plaintiff, being his answers to interroga[495]*495tories propounded to him, as oil cross-examination, by defendants’ counsel, for the purpose of proving that he had no real or personal interest in the matter and was only interposed for the purpose charged in defendants’ exception and answer to the suit. Inasmuch as plaintiff had already introduced his evidence to prove that the land could not be "conveniently divided in kind, the rulings, excluding all evidence going to show that it would be unfair to offer the property for sale at public auction at that time, were, in our oxúnion, inconsistent with the main reason which the judge had given for overruling the exception to the suit; that is, that it was then premature. The judge did not give any written reason for his final decree ordering an immediate sale of the land, except to say that it was “by reason of the law and the evidence being in favor thereof.”

Counsel for appellee argue that the right of each and every 'co-owner to demand a partition of property held in indivisión is absolute, may be exercised at any time, and is not subject to any defense except to require proof of the plaintiff’s interest in the property. They rely upon articles 12S9, 1304, and 1328 of the Civil Code, viz.:

“Art. 1289. No-one can be compelled to hold property with another, unless the contrary has been agreed upon; any one has a right to demand the division of a thing held in common, by the action of partition.”
“Art. 1304. The action of partition can not be prescribed against, as long as the thing remains in common, and such community is acknowledged or proved.
“Thus, though coheirs have- enjoyed their-hereditary effects in common for an hundred years and more, without making a division, any of them can, at any time, sue for a partition.” ,
“Art. 1328. The judge, before whom the action of partition is brought, is bound to pronounce thereon in a summary manner, by which is always meant with the least possible delay and in preference to the ordinary suits ponding before him.”

Counsel for appellee also cite and rely upon the rulings in Reynolds v. Reynolds, 43 La. Ann. 1118, 10 South. 303, and in Land v. Smith, 44 La. Ann. 931, 11 South. 577. The question presented in the case before us-was not decided or put at issue in either of the cases cited. In Reynolds v. Reynolds the-court dismissed the appeal because, after the-judgment had been rendered ordering a partition, from which the ajipeal was taken,, the parties had consented that the partition should be made by a public sale' of the property and a division of the proceeds. The first-paragraph of the syllabus is not 'quite approximate, viz.:

“The right of co-owners of property to demand a partition thereof is absolute; and, where the co-ownership is admitted, an appeal does not lie from a simple decree of partition.”'

The second paragraph exxilains the ruling,, viz.:

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 631, 149 La. 491, 1921 La. LEXIS 1462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knapp-v-dupont-la-1921.