LEWLA, LLC v. Unopened Succession of Smith

187 So. 3d 10, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 123, 2016 WL 320617
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 2016
DocketNo. 50,315-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 187 So. 3d 10 (LEWLA, LLC v. Unopened Succession of Smith) 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
LEWLA, LLC v. Unopened Succession of Smith, 187 So. 3d 10, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 123, 2016 WL 320617 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

CARAWAY, J.

11 This case involves the partition of a tract of land that resulted after one co-owner sued the unopened succession of the common ancestor-in-title. That deceased former owner had acquired the property in 1927. The initial licitation suit resulted in judgment and the sheriffs sale of the property to the plaintiff/co-owner who initiated the action. Plaintiffs in the present proceeding, who are out-of-state residents, seek to declare the licitation suit a nullity for the. lack of service of process upon them, The trial court granted an exception of prescription and dismissed the suit since the nullity action was commenced over two years after the sheriffs sale. On other grounds, we affirm the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ claims.

Facts and Procedural History

This action which commenced in 2014 seeks to set aside a prior proceeding from 2010 (hereinafter the “Licitation Suit”) filed by LEWLA, LLC, which'partitioned a tract of land (hereinafter the “Property”) in Claiborne Parish. The Licitation Suit resulted in a judgment and ultimate sheriffs sale of the Property in early 2011 to LEWLA. The plaintiffs (the “Plaintiffs”) in the present action (the “Nullity Action”) now seek to declare the judgment in the Licitation Suit and the resulting sheriffs sale of the Property nullities. The present action was filed in the district court under the same suit number as the Licitation Suit, and pleadings of both actions are before us in this appeal.

1 yThe Plaintiffs in the Nullity Action all reside out of state. It appears1 that as many as 9 of the 13 Plaintiffs were named as defendants in the Licitation Suit along with the Unopened Succession of Willie Smith. ■ We gather, from the title data included in the allegations. of the petition in the Licitation .Suit, that Willie Smith first acquired the property in 1927. There appears to be no dispute that Willie Smith is the common ancestor-in-title to all the parties in both the Licitation Suit and this Nullity Action. The unopened successions of some of Willie Smith’s descendants were [12]*12also named as defendants in the Licitation Suit. The defendants named in the Licitation Suit are as follows:

Unopened succession of Willie Smith
Unopened succession of Drew Smith
Unopened succession of Annie T. Smith
Unopened succession of Wafer Smith
Unopened succession of Leslie Smith
Unopened succession of John S. Smith
Unopened succession of J.T. Smith
Unopened succession of J. Drew Smith
Ludie Mosely Smith Cloman
Johnny Shepherd
Betty Shannon
Margarete Smith
Lola V. Smith White
Gertrude S. Bradley
J.T. Smith, Jr.
Clarice Smith
Esther Matthews
J. Drew Smith, Jr.
Bruce Smith
Diane McGee
Michael Smith

| sThe names of these defendants listed in bold are apparently some of the named Plaintiffs in the Nullity Action.

The Nullity Action alleges that all of the 13 Plaintiffs “are-the heirs of Drew Smith, J.T. Smith, Sr., John Smith, Drew Smith, Jr., and Guy Smith.” From the heirship information alleged in the Licitation Suit, all of these descendants from whom Plaintiffs derived their rights were heirs of Willie Smith. The Nullity Action further alleges that none of the Plaintiffs were served with process in the Licitation Suit or notified of that action in 2010.

LEWLA’s initial suit for licitation alleged a chain of title to the Property , by reference to recorded instruments. The chain reflected a 1927 partition deed purportedly conveying the Property to Willie Smith. The petition then pled the death of Willie Smith and certain of his descendants, which explains the listing of the unopened successions as defendants in the Licitation Suit. The Licitation Suit further alleged that LEWLA owned a one-third undivided interest in the Property and the other named individual defendants owned the remaining two-thirds of the Property, as descendants of Willie Smith and some of his deceased children. Finally, the title information alleged in the Licitation Suit shows a 1995 deed by one of the Smith heirs to a predecessor-in-title to LEWLA, which evidently acquired that interest in 2006.

The Licitation Suit claimed that all of the 13 individual defendants were absentees with their whereabouts unknown. Therefore, an attorney was appointed to represent the absentee and/or nonresident defendants and the unopened successions. The order appointing the attorney also ordered |4that notice of the institution of the partition action be published according to law. The appointed attorney placed two advertisements in the official journal for Claiborne Parish seeking information on the whereabouts of the 22 absentee or nonresident defendants. The curator attorney also filed an answer denying the allegations of the petition.

On November 8, 2010, following trial of the action, a judgment of partition by lici-tation was rendered. The minutes of the proceeding reflect that a “report of the curator was given,” and the judgment states that the plaintiff had “proven up their [sic] case.” No transcript of that November 8, 2010 hearing was filed in evidence in the Nullity Action, nor is it in this appellate record.

On January 19, 2011, the Property was sold at a sheriffs sale, with LEWLA as the purchaser. On February 2, 2011, the [13]*13judgment of homologation was filed, ordering a portion of the funds from the sale delivered to LEWLA, in its capacity as co-owner, and the remaining funds belonging to the absentee defendants deposited in the registry of the court.

In response to this 2014 Nullity Action, LEWLA filed exceptions of no cause of action and prescription. LEWLA argued that the court-appointed attorney in the Licitation Action represented the unopened successions pursuant to law. LEWLA further asserted that said attorney filed an answer, published notices, and made every reasonable effort to contact the absentee defendants. As to the prescription claim, LEWLA argued, pursuant to La. R.S. 9:5622, that this action against the purchaser at the sheriffs sale prescribed two years from the date of the judicial sale.

| ¿The trial court granted the exception of prescription, while declining to rule on the exception of no cause of action.

It is from this ruling that the Plaintiffs appeal.

Discussion

LEWLA was both the plaintiff in the Licitation Suit and the purchaser at the sheriffs sale. Clearly, the two-year prescription statute urged by LEWLA, La. R.S. 9:5622,2 would have application to a third party purchaser who was uninvolved in the partition action as a party and co-owner. Nevertheless, LEWLA was not a third party purchaser and the claim directed against it is a suit for the nullity of'the judgment which it obtained in the Licitation Suit. Accordingly, -considering the proceedings at hand as a nullity action, we will review the nature of the cause of action3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 So. 3d 10, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 123, 2016 WL 320617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewla-llc-v-unopened-succession-of-smith-lactapp-2016.