Meraux & Nunez, Inc. v. Gaidry

132 So. 401, 171 La. 852, 1931 La. LEXIS 1600
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 30270.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 132 So. 401 (Meraux & Nunez, Inc. v. Gaidry) 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
Meraux & Nunez, Inc. v. Gaidry, 132 So. 401, 171 La. 852, 1931 La. LEXIS 1600 (La. 1931).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is an action in jactitation against J. Wilfred Gaidry and the Industrial City Com *855 pany, both residents of New Orleans, and a large number of purchasers of lots of ground from the Industrial City Company, the Gaidry Land Company, and others. The land to which plaintiff asserts'title is lots 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11 of fractional section 25, in township 12 south, range 12 east, southeastern land district of Louisiana. It is located in the parish of St. Bernard, near the battlefield of New Orleans, in the immediate rear of the once contemplated village of Versailles, and contains 300.09 acres. The land is marsh land, some of it being very marshy.

Under the titles under which plaintiff claim's, the land, though divided into large lots, each containing a number of acres, is not divided into blocks and streets, but each lot abuts the other, though recently it has been plotted into blocks and streets by Gaidry, the Industrial City Company, or their authors in title, which plaintiff refers to as imaginary blocks and streets, as .they do not, in fact, appear on the land.

The contention of plaintiff is that it is the ' owner of the land in contest here, and is, and has been in the actual, exclusive, and uninterrupted possession, of it, under its title, and through its authors in title, for more than thirty years. Its contention is also that Gaidry and the Industrial City Company, acting together, have beclouded and slandered its title, for the last several years, by selling lots, out of imaginary squares, bounded by imaginary streets, which have not, in fact, existed on the land. The contention is also that the action of Gaidry and the Industrial City Company has damaged it in the sum of §713.20, the cost of a survey, which the action of these parties has made necessary, in order to enable it to ascertain the extent of the slander, and also in the sum of $1,000 attorney's fees for prosecuting this suit. All of the known alleged innocent purchasers of lots were made parties to the suit, as well as Gaidry and the Industrial City Company. The demand is that all of such titles as defendants might. plead against plaintiff^ or which might be exhibited by plaintiff as titles against it, be declared to be clouds and slanders upon its title, and, as such, that they be canceled and erased from the conveyance records of St. Bernard parish. The demand is further for judgment against Gaidry and the Industrial City Company, in solido, for the $1,713.20 damages, mentioned above.

Defendants filed exceptions of vagueness, and Gaidry and the Industrial City Company also filed an exception to the.jurisdiction of the trial court, ratione p'ersonse, in so far as plaintiff’s suit seeks damages against them. The court overruled these exceptions, and defendants, then reserving the benefits of them, filed their answers. These answers deny each of the contentions of plaintiff, and especially deny that plaintiff and its authors in title were, or had been, in the actual and open possession of the property, and by amended answers, which were not allowed, but which should have been in the interests of justice, it is averred, in the alternative, that, if it be found that plaintiff was in possession of the property, then, in that event, defendants are the owners of it, and defendants then set forth their title thereto, the effect of the afnendments being to change what otherwise would have been a straight demand into an alternative demand.

The effect of defendants’ alternative averments and prayers was to convert the action of jactitation into a petitory action, as relates to the assertion of title by them. Against the title pleaded ,by defendants, plaintiff pleaded what it terms an exception of want of registry of a sheriff’s deed, through which defendant claims title, and also exceptions of the prescriptions of ten and thirty years, acqui *857 rendí causa. Other exceptions were pleaded, hut which we do not find it necessary to mention here.

The exceptions of vagueness rest upon the ground that plaintiff’s petition does not set forth the last date of any act or deed done or caused to have been done by which Gaidry or the Industrial City Company, or any of the defendants, slandered plaintiff’s title. These exceptions are filed upon the theory that, in order to maintain the action of jactitation, it must appear that the slander was committed within the year, prior to the filing of suit. Were we to rule that this theory is correct, nevertheless such ruling would be of no avail to defendants in this case. It is tbe theory of plaintiff’s petition that Gaidry and the Industrial City Company are the slanderers of plaintiff’s title, and that the' purchasers of lots from them were innocent third persons. The'petition sets forth a continuing slander of plaintiff’s title by the making of a number of deeds to various persons, during the past several years, prior to the institution of this suit, and by showing the fact of their recordation, and, by an amended petition, filed before the exceptions were tried, showing that one of these deeds was recorded about three months -before the suit was filed, a reference to the deed showing that it was made - a few days earlier. AYe think that plaintiff’s petition shows a continuing slander up to the time the suit was filed, and, so, thinking, consider, as the trial judge did, that the petition is sufficiently specific not to be amenable to the objection of vagueness.

As to defendants’ exception to the jurisdiction of the court, ratione personae, and also as to plaintiff's exception of want of registry of the sheriff’s deed in the conveyance records, the conclusions we have reached on other phases of the case make it unnecessary that we pass upon those exceptions.

When the pleas of prescription of ten and thirty years, which are pleaded by plaintiff against defendants’ alternative demand, asserting title in themselves, were fixed for trial, defendants objected to the pleas of prescription being heard until it first be ascertained that plaintiff had the right to maintain the action in jactitation by showing that it was in the actual possession of the property, which fact -defendants had denied before pleading title in the alternative. The objection was overruled. It may be that defendants had a technical right to urge this objection, but they were not injured by the ruling. As would be expected, the evidence on the pleas of prescription would show whether plaintiff was in possession when its suit was filed, and for how long. As a matter of fact the evidence shows that plaintiff was in possession then, and for a long time before. Hence, the ruling did not result in injury.

As part of the inquiry into the pleas of prescription, filed by plaintiff, it is necessary to inquire into the deeds, relied upon by it to show title. The property in contest was once owned by John McDonogh by undisputed title. The cities of Baltimore and New Orleans were legatees in McDonogh’s will. Following McDonogh’s death, by unquestioned title, the land, in dispute, in a partition between the two cities, fell to the city of Baltimore. On April 5, 1859, the city of Baltimore sold the land, in contest, to Joseph Pearce for $280.17, part, of which was paid cash, and the balance was made payable on terms of one, two, three, and four years, secured by special mortgage and vendor’s lien on the property sold, the mortgage containing the pact de non alienan *859 do.

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Bluebook (online)
132 So. 401, 171 La. 852, 1931 La. LEXIS 1600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meraux-nunez-inc-v-gaidry-la-1931.