Louisiana State Mineral Board v. Albarado

173 So. 2d 5, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 759, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4512
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1965
DocketNo. 1529
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 So. 2d 5 (Louisiana State Mineral Board v. Albarado) 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
Louisiana State Mineral Board v. Albarado, 173 So. 2d 5, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 759, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4512 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

CHRIS T. BARNETTE, Judge pro tem.

This proceeding is a sequel to Dugas v. Powell, 228 La. 748, 84 So.2d 177 (1955). That case finally decided by the Supreme Court, November 7, 1955 (rehearing denied December 12, 1955), after nearly 20 years of litigation, recognized the heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte to be the owners of a certain tract of land, comprising approximately 400 acres in Jefferson Parish on Barataría Island. The heirs, so recognized, were the collateral descendants of Francois Zenon Boutte and numbered more than a thousand.

From 1955 until the instant proceeding was filed, the attorneys who had represented the Boutte heirs to a successful conclusion of their title litigation apparently took no further steps in their behalf. Other persons, however, some of whom are in-tervenors herein, busied themselves in locating and obtaining contracts and powers of attorney from the numerous collateral descendants of Francois Zenon Boutte to assist them in establishing their rights of inheritance and to assist in obtaining development of the property through mineral leases.

In 1952, Act 513 (LSA-R.S. 30:181-30:188) was enacted by the State Legislature for the purpose of making possible a valid mineral lease in a situation such as this. The events leading to the passage of Act 513 of 1952 are fully discussed in Louisiana State Mineral Board v. Abadie, 164 So.2d 159 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1964). Some of the parties involved in that case are also involved in the instant case.

Act 513 of 1952 was repealed in part and amended by Act 358 of 1960. The lease with which we are concerned was executed before passage of the 1960 Act. The later act affects the method of distribution of funds. Act 513 of 1952 provided in substance that when 500 or more persons own property in indivisión, upon petition of 50 or more of them the State Mineral Board shall advertise the property for lease for mineral development in the same manner and according to the procedure required for lease of state-owned land.

Pursuant to the provisions of this act, the Mineral Board, on February 24, 1960, granted an oil, gas and mineral lease covering said property to the California Company. By the terms of the lease a bonus of $103,753.67 was received for the benefit of the Boutte heirs. Since then some additional payments have been received as royalty or interest.

The State Mineral Board refused to deposit the money held by it for distribution among the heirs as provided by Act 513 of 1952 until ordered to do so by the court. Its refusal was based upon its interpretation of Act 358 of 1960. Thereupon Charles C. Jaubert, attorney at law, claiming representation by contract of 151 Boutte heirs, brought a mandamus proceeding against the State Mineral Board in the Nineteenth [8]*8Judicial District Court to compel the Board to deposit in the registry of the Twenty-fourth Judicial Court for the Parish of Jefferson the money it held for the Boutte heirs and invoke a concursus proceeding pursuant to Act 513 of 1952 as amended by Act 358 of 1960. Mandamus was granted as prayed for and affirmed on appeal. State ex rel. Goudeau v. State Mineral Board, 141 So.2d 32 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1962). Thereupon the Louisiana State Mineral Board brought this concursus proceeding and deposited in the registry of the court $106,150.57, being the amount due the Boutte heirs after deducting the fees due the Board under the statute. Appellants-intervenors have appealed from the judgment of the District Court rejecting their interventions and rejecting their rights respectively to participate in said funds, but reserving to them their rights "under any existing assignment of interest, power of attorney, or attorney-client contract.”

We cannot commend too highly the able judge of the trial court for the thorough and painstaking manner in which he undertook to determine the collateral heirs of Francois Zerion Boutte, who had been dead a hundred years. It is interesting to note that when Dugas v. Powell, supra, was before the Supreme Court there were some 1079 listed heirs. In this proceeding below, some 3500 persons claimed to be collateral descendants of Francois Zenon Boutte. The judgment below recognized 1830 heirs and computed their respective interests in the estate to extremely minute proportions. The trial record is voluminous and confused with numerous pleadings and conflicting claims.

Some of these interests, computed on the basis of $100,000.00, are as little as 11 cents and relatively few exceed $100.00. The unusual nature of this proceeding and the practical aspects being considered, many ordinary rules of trial and procedure were relaxed of necessity, and as intended by Act 358 of 1960 (LSA-R.S. 30:187), to the end that a just and practical conclusion could be reached. We find no error in the manner in which the trial below was conducted.

There is no appeal from that portion of the judgment which recognizes the 1830 heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte and fixes the proportionate interest of each in the estate, of which the mineral rights, making possible the above fund on deposit in the registry of the court, are the principal asset.

We have before us for consideration only the claims of the intervenors who have appealed or answered the appeal.

The intervenors, who claim an interest and right to share in the fund on account of various alleged contracts, powers of attorney, and assignments as fees and compensation for services rendered, and the substance of their claims are as follows:

1. Ulysses Pierrottie, claiming under contract and quasi contract for alleged services rendered to the estate of Francois Boutte from 1938 to date of trial. He claims $47,178.64 for expenses and services rendered in locating the Boutte heirs in many states and assisting them in bringing to a successful conclusion their litigation, which he alleges made the present fund possible. In his brief his claim is modified to 10 percent of the fund, plus $10,000.00 for expenses.
2. Felix Pierrottie intervened for $4,-000.00 on the same basis as Ulysses Pierrottie. No appeal was perfected in his behalf, and the judgment below rejecting his claim is final.
3. A. H. Reed (Heirs of); E. Leland Richardson and Jack Voyles, attorneys, claiming 3354 percent of the total fund as attorneys’ fees. Their claim is based on an alleged contract with a committee purporting to represent all the Boutte heirs for the original litigation (Dugas v. Powell, supra).
[9]*94. D. L. Martel, claiming one-fourtli of the above 33}/$ percent under an alleged contract as his share for providing the funds necessary to finance the litigation and other expenses incurred in Dugas v. Powell, supra.
5. Antoine J. Vigneaux, as heir of his deceased father, Ernest J. Vigneaux, claiming 6^/3 percent of the total fund for services rendered by Ernest J. Vigneaux under an alleged contract. The services rendered being in preparing the family tree and generally assisting the attorneys in establishing the identity of the Boutte heirs.
6. Alvin A. Cobb, claiming under alleged powers of attorney an assignment of 30 percent of the funds from 968 heirs. Pie also claims from all the heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte, other than the 968, a percentage based on quantum meruit for services allegedly performed inuring to the benefit of all the heirs.

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Related

Louisiana State Mineral Board v. Albarado
180 So. 2d 700 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1965)

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173 So. 2d 5, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 759, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 4512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-state-mineral-board-v-albarado-lactapp-1965.