Papworth v. Truxton Corp.

357 So. 2d 1198, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 3295
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1978
DocketNo. 8836
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 357 So. 2d 1198 (Papworth v. Truxton Corp.) 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
Papworth v. Truxton Corp., 357 So. 2d 1198, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 3295 (La. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinions

SCHOTT, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Ann Elizabeth Breen, Orr Adams and Frank McLoughlin have appealed from a judgment maintaining exceptions and dismissing their “Action to Remove Cloud from Title.”

In the original petition filed in January, 1973, by Mary C. Papworth, she alleged that she was the owner of certain property in Jefferson Parish as the sole surviving heir of her father (Harry Papworth), mother, sister and two brothers whose succession proceedings had been opened in Jefferson Parish. Attached to her petition were copies of affidavits of death and heirship and wills filed in these succession proceedings but no copies of judgments of possession. She further alleged that her father acquired the property in 1901, sold it in 1905 and reacquired it in 1924 and that he, his predecessor, Metairie Ridge Nursery, and his heirs and successors have had possession of the property for over thirty years.

As to defendants, she alleged numerous sales, judgments of possession, quit claim deeds and other transactions as links in chains of title back to a tax sale to Henry Zander in October, 1925, which she alleges was null and void because it resulted from a dual assessment for the same property on which taxes were paid in the name of Me-tairie Ridge Nursery Company in January, 1925. As to each one of these transfers, including all sales and judgments of possession as well as the 1925 tax sale to Zander, plaintiff alleged that each recordation was casting a cloud on her title and she prayed that they all be cancelled and erased from the public records.

The petition drew several dilatory exceptions, including one of vagueness with respect to the property description but this was disposed of by an amending petition conforming the description to a 1975 survey, copy of which was annexed.

Mary C. Papworth died in June, 1973, and for a time the nominal plaintiff in the case was the executor of her succession, but in December, 1976, an amending petition was filed by Ann Elizabeth Breen, Orr Adams and Frank McLoughlin, in which they alleged themselves to be the owners of the property, Breen having inherited a one-half interest from Mary C. Papworth by virtue of a judgment of possession in her succession proceedings dated February 14, 1974, and Adams and McLoughlin having had transferred a one-half interest to them by Mary C. Papworth on December 9, 1971. These new plaintiffs reiterated all of the allegations and the prayer of the original petition, adding the allegation that the property involved here is a part of a tract patented by the United States to one Angelique Aury and to her heirs on January 15, 1964, and annexing a copy of such patent. It recited that it was based on an 1836 confirmation of a claim to the land by Angelique Aury.

Defendants responded by renewing peremptory exceptions of no right of action and no cause of action previously asserted before Breen, Adams and McLoughlin became parties with the principal thrust of the exceptions being that the allegations 'failed to establish a perfect unbroken chain of title from the plaintiffs back to the sovereign. These exceptions were submitted to the trial court on the basis of the pleadings, memoranda and arguments of counsel but no evidence was taken.

In his reasons for judgment, the trial judge stated that plaintiffs had no interest in the property because there was no chain of title leading up to the interest of Mary C. Papworth in the documents on file. He noted that none of the documents filed in these proceedings from the successions of the ancestors of Mary C. Papworth included a transfer of the property to her. Nevertheless, in his judgment he sustained “the peremptory exception of no cause or right [1200]*1200of action to the original petition, as amended” and dismissed plaintiffs’ action as of non-suit.

Plaintiffs contend that the trial judge erred in deciding the question of their title on the basis of the pleadings rather than taking evidence because they were thereby deprived of placing in evidence the complete records of the succession proceedings. Relying on Wischer v. Madison Realty Company, Inc., 231 La. 704, 92 So.2d 589 (1957) they contend that the initial inquiry for the court was whether or not they state a cause of action and if so they are entitled to a trial on the merits in which evidence of title could be taken. We accept that approach for our purposes here and will initially consider the judgment of the trial court maintaining the exception of no cause of action.

Plaintiffs rely on Verret v. Norwood, 311 So.2d 86 (La.App. 3rd Cir. 1975) writs refused 313 So.2d 842, La., for the proposition that they have alleged all of the elements necessary to bring an action to remove cloud from their title. In that case the court held that the necessary allegations to bring the action to remove cloud were, 1) plaintiff claims ownership of the immovable or real right, 2) defendant has recorded an instrument casting a cloud on plaintiff’s title, 3) there be a proper description of the property, and 4) plaintiff desires a cancellation of the recorded instrument from the public records. We agree with plaintiffs that their petition as amended contains these elements but we do not believe that plaintiffs’ problem ends here.

From the opinion in the Verret case we see that plaintiffs pled ownership of the disputed land through their patent from the State of Louisiana as well as possession. They sought to have cancelled from the public records several mineral leases executed and granted by defendants affecting the land. In holding that plaintiffs had properly brought an action to remove clouds from their title the court, with expressed reluctance, followed the teaching of the Supreme Court in Walmsley v. Pan American Petroleum Corporation, 244 La. 513, 153 So.2d 375 (1963). An analysis of the Walmsley case along with all of the Supreme Court cases which created and nurtured the concept of an action to remove cloud from title demonstrates that the court in Verret properly applied the concept to the pleadings there present, but the same analysis demonstrates clearly that plaintiffs do not state a cause of action to remove clouds from their title.

In discussing the pleadings filed in the Walmsley case the court rejected the argument that plaintiffs were pleading a petito-ry action under the guise of an action to remove a cloud as follows, at 153 So.2d 378:

“Reference to paragraph 15, without referring to the preceding paragraphs which set forth the facts of plaintiffs’ ownership and the fact of defendants’ execution and filing of the offending lease, does not disclose the true meaning of that allegation. A reasonable construction of the allegation in paragraph 15, read in connection with the preceding paragraphs, indicates that it is no more than a statement that plaintiffs, as the owners of the property under the chain of title set forth, are entitled as a matter of law to have the instrument executed by defendants cancelled from the records as constituting a cloud on and slander of plaintiffs’ title. It is necessary in connection with plaintiffs’ action to remove a cloud from title that they allege a basis for such a demand. Here they have alleged their perfect record ownership and that allegation is made merely to serve as a basis for their right to have the cloud removed from their title. Rudd v. Land Co., 188 La. 490, 177 So. 583 (1937).” (Emphasis ours)

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357 So. 2d 1198, 1978 La. App. LEXIS 3295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/papworth-v-truxton-corp-lactapp-1978.