Placid Oil Co. v. Lafargue

308 So. 2d 314, 1975 La. App. LEXIS 3754
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1975
DocketNo. 10127
StatusPublished

This text of 308 So. 2d 314 (Placid Oil Co. v. Lafargue) 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
Placid Oil Co. v. Lafargue, 308 So. 2d 314, 1975 La. App. LEXIS 3754 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

BLANCHE, Judge.

Defendants-appellants, George W. Dodge et al., and Mrs. Ophelia Thibodaux et al., appeal an adverse judgment of the Seventeenth Judicial District Court in this con-cursus proceeding which was invoked by Placid Oil Company. The defendants-ap-pellees, Mrs. Lula Isabel Beauvais La-fargue et al., were declared to be owners of the receipts placed on deposit by Placid Oil Company.

The controversy involves the ownership of the East One-Half of the Northeast One-Fourth of Section 60, Township 15 South, Range 15 East.

The chain of title of the Dodge group originated in a deed dated January 20, 1913, to Napoleon Cypress Company, Ltd., from Mrs. Erita Boudreaux, widow of Leo Thibodaux, and Edgard Aucoin, tutor ad hoc of the Thibodaux minor children. Napoleon Cypress was liquidated and the transfer of assets was made to the shareholders who are represented herein by George W. Dodge.

The chain of title of the Thibodaux group originates from Leo Thibodaux, and it is their contention that the sale from Edgard Aucoin, tutor ad hoc of the minor children of decedent, Leo Thibodaux, to Napoleon Cypress, insofar as it affects the interests of the minor heirs of Leo Thibo-daux was null and void. The nullity of the sale is sought on the grounds that the family meeting which authorized the sale of the minors’ interest in Thibodaux’s succession was not convened in accordance with the requirements of the Louisiana Civil Code.

The chain of the Lafargue group originates in a tax deed dated May 30, 1914, for unpaid taxes for the year 1913 which were assessed to Leo Thibodaux on the assessment rolls of the Parish of Lafourche. The Lafargue group was declared by the trial court to be the owner of the subject property by virtue of a valid tax title and, therefore, entitled to the receipts on deposit under a valid mineral lease agreement with Placid Oil Company.

Both the Dodge and Thibodaux groups contend that the trial judge erred when he failed to recognize the tax deed to the La-fargue group was null and void. It is their contention that the subject property was dually assessed in Assumption and La-fourche Parishes and that payment was made in the Parish of Assumption for taxes due for the year 1913 prior to the payment of the taxes by the Lafargue group and the adjudication to them of the property in Lafourche Parish. Both groups of [316]*316appellants cite Article 10, Section 11 1 of the Louisiana Constitution of 1921 in support of their contention that a tax sale can be set aside at any time by a showing that said taxes were, in fact, paid prior to the tax sale. Appellants also cite Booksh v. A. Wilbert Sons Lumber & Shingle Company, 115 La. 351, 35 So. 9 (1905), for the proposition that such nullity results notwithstanding that such taxes were paid under a dual assessment in different parishes as the result of a common error in assessment.

On the trial of the matter the Dodge and Thibodaux groups filed identical exceptions of improper venue and lack of jurisdiction to the concursus proceeding on the ground that the property is located in Assumption Parish and that under Articles 80 and 4653 of the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure the Parish of Lafourche does not have jurisdiction over a proceeding involving immovable property located in Assumption Parish. The exceptions were overruled by the trial judge and only the Thibodaux group appealed.

The Dodge group additionally asserts that the sale of the Thibodaux minor children’s interest in the property in the succession proceedings of Leo Thibodaux was not irregular and, therefore, the Thibodaux group has no claim to the subject land of the deposit.

The trial judge, in declaring the validity of the tax sale to the Lafargue group, reasoned as follows:

“The chain of the Hubert Lafargue, et al Group originates in a tax deed dated May 30, 1914, for unpaid taxes of 1913 assessed in the name of Leo Thibodaux in Lafourche Parish, by the Sheriff and Tax Collector of the Parish of La-fourche to the ancestor in title of the Lafargue Group. The Dodge Group and the Thibodaux Group contend that this tax deed is null and void because the property was dually assessed for 1913 on the tax rolls of Assumption Parish and taxes were paid under that assessment on December 11, 1913.
“Mr. Felix Dolese sold the property in question on April 29, 1911 to Mr. Leo Thibodaux and said deed recited that the property was located in the Parish of Lafourche. On September 20, 1911, there was an act of correction to Mr. Felix Dolese and Mr. Leo Thibodaux clarifying the intention of the parties that Mr. Leo Thibodaux had acquired all of the East Half (Ei/2) of the Northeast Quarter (NEj4) of Section Sixty (60), Township Fifteen (15) South, Range Fifteen (15) East.
“The 1913 Assessment Roll of La-fourche Parish shows eighty (80) ar-pents, being the East Half (Ei/2) of the Northeast Quarter (NE;4) of Section Sixty (60), Township Fifteen (15) South, Range Fifteen (15) East as being assessed in the name of Leo Thibodaux. The Dodge Group and the Thibodaux Group in support of their contention that the property was dually assessed introduced an exhibit marked for identification ‘Dodge #9’. An examination of this instrument reveals that it is a certificate issued by a Deputy Sheriff and Tax Collector in and for Assumption Parish, Louisiana, which certifies that all taxes for the years 1910 through 1915 on the properties therein described have been paid. The 1910 certificate shows property assessed to Felix Dolese and being forty (40) acres in the East Half {El/i) of the Northeast Quarter (NEJ4) of Section Sixty (60), Township Four[317]*317teen (14) South Range Fifteen (15) East. For the years 1911 and 1912 property description is the same, except for identifying the Township as Fifteen (15) rather than Fourteen (14). In 1913 the assessment appears in the name of Felix Dolese and is described as being twenty-three (23) acres in the East Half (E(4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE(4) of Section Sixty (60), Township Fifteen (15) South, Range Fifteen (15) East. The same identification and name is used for the years of 1914 and 1915.
“The Dodge Group and the Thibodaux Group did not introduce the assessment rolls of Assumption Parish for the year 1913 and based their claim of dual assessment solely upon this exhibit. No evidence was adduced to show that Felix Dolese owned only this property and no evidence was adduced to explain why the property was changed in description between the year of 1912 to 1913 from forty (40) acres to twenty-three (23) acres. It is significant that from the exhibits filed herein that it can at least be determined that Mr. Felix Dolese also owned the West Half (Wi/¿) of the Northeast Quarter (NEj4) of Section Sixty (60), Township Fifteen (15) South, Range Fifteen (15) East. (Dodge 5A). The Court is of the opinion that this certificate does not prove a dual assessment on the property in dispute herein. The assessment of Lafourche Parish was legally correct and enforcable.
“Consequently, in view of a valid assessment and a tax sale and considering the constitutional provisions for prescription and peremption, this Court concludes that the title to the property in question is vested in the Lafargue Group and as such they are entitled to a portion of the proceeds on deposit with this Court.” (Reasons for Judgment, Record, pp. 293-295)

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Bluebook (online)
308 So. 2d 314, 1975 La. App. LEXIS 3754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/placid-oil-co-v-lafargue-lactapp-1975.