Moore v. Shell Oil Company

228 So. 2d 205
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1970
Docket2820
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 228 So. 2d 205 (Moore v. Shell Oil Company) 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
Moore v. Shell Oil Company, 228 So. 2d 205 (La. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

228 So.2d 205 (1969)

Gerene MOORE et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
SHELL OIL COMPANY et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 2820.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

October 30, 1969.
Rehearing Denied December 4, 1969.
Writ Refused February 6, 1970.

*206 William J. Daly, and Warren M. Simon, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Robert B. Shaw and George C. Schoenberger, Jr., Luther E. Hall, John C. Christain and R. K. Milling, New Orleans, Earl H. Willis, St. Martinville, Leon E. Roy, Jr., New Iberia, for defendants-appellees.

Before TATE, SAVOY, and CULPEPPER, JJ.

TATE, Judge.

By this suit, Gerene Moore seeks to be recognized as the owner of a 40% interest in 760 acres of land in St. Martin Parish. She is joined as coplaintiff by her mineral lessee (Reisig). The plaintiffs appeal from the dismissal of their suit upon exceptions pleading estoppel, no right of action, and various prescriptions.

The essential title dispute is between the plaintiff Miss Moore and the defendants Ramos Investment Company, a partnership and its partners. Both claim title through the Berwick Lumber Company, a corporation which acquired the disputed acreage in 1890. For purposes of this appeal, as will be explained, the essential issue is whether prescription bars Miss Moore's attempt to set aside 1915 quitclaim deeds executed by her ancestors in title, from whom by inheritance she allegedly acquired ownership of the property claimed.

(1)

In 1908, Berwick transferred a 60% interest in the property to estates of Robert and Charles Moore, Gerene Moore's ancestors in title. (Miss Moore's claim is founded upon her eventual inheritance of a part of their interest.) However, in 1901, when title was still in Berwick, Robert and Charles Moore had sold by *207 warranty deed to Ramos's predecessor their undivided 50% interest in property including the subject lands. Through operation of the after-acquired title doctrine, White v. Hodges 201 La. 1, 9 So.2d 433, 443, Ramos thus claims that by virtue of this 1901 deed its predecessor acquired title to at least 50% of the property when the Moores acquired it from Berwick in 1908.

In 1915, Gerene Moore's ancestors in title, heirs of Robert and Charles Moore, executed in favor of Ramos's predecessor quitclaim deeds of any interest in the subject lands once owned by Robert and Charles Moore. By these deeds, these heirs (Robert Mitchell Moore and Leah Moore)[1] quitclaimed and transferred to Ramos all their interests in the lands now claimed by Miss Moore. Any interest the present plaintiff, Miss Gerene Moore, might now have in these lands she acquired from these heirs by inheritance.[2]

Based upon these quitclaim deeds, the trial court dismissed the plaintiffs' suit. Sustaining a peremptory exception pleading liberative prescriptions and no right of action, the court held the pleaded prescriptions barred the plaintiffs' right to attack the quitclaim deeds.

(2)

Preliminarily, the plaintiffs-appellants object to their suit being characterized as pleading, along with a petitory action for ownership of the land, actions of nullity or rescission of the 1915 quitclaims (as well as of the 1901 sale) by the plaintiffs' ancestors in title.

We agree, however, with the trial court that the allegation pleading the quitclaim deeds and then attempting to nullify their effect did indeed set out an action to nullify the deeds.

(3)

A further preliminary procedural question is raised by the plaintiffs' objection to the admission of any evidence for the trial of the objections pleaded by the peremptory exception.

Evidence is admissible to support or controvert any of the objections pleaded by a peremptory exception, save only that of no cause of action. LSA-CCP Art. 931. The evidence introduced at the trial of the exception includes all of the title deeds pleaded, as well as a late-recorded appointment of E. W. Dreibholz by Leah Moore as her agent to sell lands to Ramos. The latter document, although executed after the 1915 quitclaim, included a ratification of prior acts by Dreibholz in the name of Leah Moore.

This evidence extraneous to the petition was admissible for the trial of the objections of prescription pleaded. It was not, however, admissible for the trial of exception pleading that Miss Moore had "no right of action" because of the quitclaim executed by her ancestor.

A quitclaim executed to a third person may be admissible to show a want of *208 interest (no right of action). State ex rel. Adema v. Meraux, 191 La. 202, 184 So. 825. However, a quitclaim executed to the defendant or his ancestor is a matter of defense to the merits, properly pleaded by the objection of no cause of action. On this objection, no evidence beyond the showing of the petition can be received. Wischer v. Madison Realty Co., 231 La. 704, 92 So.2d 589.

We can therefore consider the evidence admitted for the limited purpose of determining whether the pleaded prescriptions bar the plaintiffs' actions to annul the 1915 quitclaim deeds.

(4)

A final preliminary procedural issue is: If prescription does bar the plaintiffs' actions to annul these quitclaim deeds, nevertheless does this permit affirmance of the dismissal of their suit for the lands claimed. The plaintiffs' counsel ably argues that this would require a trial on the merits.

A defense to the merits may be raised by an exception pleading no cause of action. LSA-CCP Art. 927(4). This raises the general issue whether any remedy is afforded by law to the plaintiff under the allegations of his petition.

However, as noted, it is tried on the pleadings alone. LSA-CCP Art. 931. For purposes of its determination, all wellpleaded facts of the petition and annexed documents must be accepted as true, with all doubts resolved in favor of the sufficiency of the petition. Elliott v. Dupuy, 242 La. 173, 135 So.2d 54.

The defense here asserted to the cause of action, that the plaintiffs do not own the land because they quitclaimed their interest in it, is thus ordinarily triable on the merits and not by evidentiary threshold exception. Wischer v. Madison Realty Co., 231 La. 704, 92 So.2d 589. Here, however, on the face of the plaintiffs' petition, the plaintiffs have no title if prescription bars attack on the quitclaim deeds.

The petition sets forth the plaintiffs' chain of title, but it also alleges the quitclaim deeds showing that plaintiffs' ancestors in title quitclaimed their interest in the lands now claimed. Cumulated with the petitory action for ownership of the land is the action to annul the quitclaim deeds, which divested the plaintiffs of title unless voided. If the action to annul the quitclaim deeds is prescribed, then the plaintiffs' petition discloses on its face that the plaintiffs have no cause of action to claim the land. Strong v. Haynes, 152 La. 655, 94 So. 322.

However, here the defendants sought to raise the objection by miscaptioning it as one of "no right of Action", whereas under the jurisprudence it is really one of "no cause of action". Nevertheless, the courts may overlook the miscaptioning of a pleading directed at a certain end and construe it in accordance with its purpose, where no substantive unfairness results to the other party. LSA-CCP Arts. 865, 1005, 5051; Succession of Smith, 247 La. 921, 175 So.2d 269; Bellow v. New York Fire & Marine Underwriters, Inc., La.App., 3d Cir., 215 So.2d 350; Reid v. Crain Brothers, La.App., 3d Cir., 134 So.2d 917.

(5)

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228 So. 2d 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-shell-oil-company-lactapp-1970.