Muff v. Algermissen

198 So. 2d 742, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5336
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1967
DocketNo. 6981
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 So. 2d 742 (Muff v. Algermissen) 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
Muff v. Algermissen, 198 So. 2d 742, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5336 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a petitory action which was brought by the plaintiffs, who are the children and heirs of William J. Muff, deceased, against the defendants, Clara Muff Alger-missen and her husband, Charles Alger-missen; the heirs of Joseph L. Muff; and the heirs of Benjamin Muff. In this suit, the plaintiffs sought to be decreed the owners of two hundred acres of land in Tangipahoa Parish on the basis of a tax sale of the subject property to William J. Muff in 1939 for the 1938 taxes due the State of Louisiana. At that time the property was assessed in the name of Catherine Muff.

Prior to her death in 1918, and during her widowhood, Catherine Muff acquired the subject property. At the time of her death, Catherine Muff was survived by Clara Muff Algermissen, Benjamin Muff, John Muff, Joseph Muff, and William J. Muff. The plaintiffs are the children of William J. Muff, and the defendants are Clara Muff Algermissen and the children of Benjamin Muff and Joseph Muff. John Muff, subsequent to his mother’s death, sold his interest in the property to Clara Muff Algermissen and her husband.

In their petition, the plaintiffs alleged that the defendants were guilty of laches in that they were apprised of the necessity of paying taxes on the property, that they had disavowed any interest in either paying or contributing to the payment of taxes for a number of years, and that it was not until 1959 when the defendants were informed that oil had been discovered near the property that their interest was aroused, resulting in Charles Algermissen paying the 1963 taxes in the name of Joseph L. Muff, et al. The plaintiffs contend that the passage of such an inordinate length of time during which the defendants did not pay or contribute their proportionate share of the taxes and other circumstances which denote a complete lack of interest in the rights and ownership, and a failure to exercise any oi the rights usually attended to ownership having estopped the defendants from claiming title and the re-investiture thereof.

In their answer and reconventional demand, the defendants denied that they hac lost the right to their interest in the title to the property, that they were entitled to be recognized as the owners of their respective interests despite the tax sale, and that the purchase of the property in 1939 for the 1938 taxes by William J. Muff inured to their benefit as well. As stated above, Mrs. Catherine Muff, the common antecedent of both plaintiffs and defendants, purchased the subject property in 1914. She died in 1918 while domiciled in the State of Nebraska and was survived by the five children previously named. When this case was' tried, Clara Muff Algermissen was the only living child. The record reflects that William J. Muff, the father of the plaintiff, died in 1953.

[744]*744For an indeterminate period of just a few years after the death of Catherine Muff, her son-in-law, Charles Algermissen, administered her estate property, which included a farm located in Nebraska. About 1922 it was apparently decided by the family that William J. Muff would undertake to handle the estate property, and until 1948 he continued to act in the capacity of a manager or administrator of the Nebraska farm property, collecting the rents, and paying the taxes and expenses out of the revenue. He performed this same function with reference to the Louisiana property until the taxes for 1938 became due. The various defendants testified that they always considered and thought that the managerial and administrative duties, such as payment of taxes, collection of revenues, etc. were being exercised and handled by William J. Muff.

The plaintiffs in their answer to the defendants’ reconventional demand averred that the defendants refused to pay the taxes on the Louisiana property in 1934. Hubert G. Muff, one of the plaintiffs, and the only plaintiff witness who professed any knowledge of a conversation which allegedly took place between his father, William J. Muff, and Mr. Algermissen and his wife with reference to contribution on the Louisiana property taxes, testified that it was about 1937 when his father requested help from Mr. and Mrs. Algermissen in defraying the Louisiana property taxes. At that time, Mr. Muff testified that he heard Mr. Alger-missen, in the presence of Mrs. Algermissen, reply in substance that the Louisiana property wasn’t worth anything, and that he wasn’t going to pay any more taxes. Mr. Algermissen initially on cross-examination could not recall any such discussion, and on direct examination denied specifically that the conversation ever took place.

In his written reasons for judgment, the Trial Judge made the following observations :

“We find that William J. Muff con-cededly acted in a fiduciary or trust capacity for his co-heirs by handling their interests in Catherine Muff’s property from 1922 through 1948 as pertains to the Nebraska property at which time it was sold and the proceeds divided pro rata between the heirs and from 1922 through 1937 as pertains to the Louisiana property. In 1939 for the 1938 taxes William J. Muff bought in his individual name the remaining Louisiana property assessed in the name of Catherine Muff. According to the plaintiffs from the date of his tax purchase in 1939 to his death in 1953 the property was treated by William J. Muff as belonging to him individually, and thereafter, to the present date, plaintiffs consider they own the property as heirs of their father. They especially plead estoppel based upon asserted laches on the part of the defendants.
With the exception of the equivocal and indefinite testimony of Hubert G. Muff, one of the plaintiffs, who stated that he, at the age of about 19 years, heard a conversation at his home in Nebraska around the year 1937 in which his father brought up the question of the payment of the Louisiana taxes to Charles M. Algermis-sen and his wife, Clara Algermissen, with Mr. Algermissen refusing or being unwilling to advance any funds for this purpose, the record is barren of any other evidence indicating that William J. Muff intended to discontinue handling the Louisiana property in the same way that he handled his mother’s Nebraska property until 1948. It is true that the Algermissen denial of the occurrence of this conversation and the topics discussed varied in its degree of clarity and firmness in different segments of the subject testimony. However, plaintiffs with respect to the other defendants weakly claim that Mr. Alger-missen was thought to be an agent for Harold B. Muff, his wife, and the heirs of Joseph L. Muff. There is absolutely no shred of evidence that these latter persons were ever informed about the alleged need for tax contributions, the impending tax sale to William J. Muff or that they would thereby be divested of [745]*745their title interests in the property. To the contrary Harold B. Muff pointed out that neither his uncle, William J. Muff, nor anyone else had ever called on him for funds to help defray the Louisiana taxes or for that matter the Nebraska taxes; that he had never been told about the tax sale by his uncle or the plaintiffs, and it never occurred to him that there might not be enough revenue from the estate properties to defray the taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 2d 742, 1967 La. App. LEXIS 5336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muff-v-algermissen-lactapp-1967.