Ree Corporation v. Shaffer

246 So. 2d 313
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 16, 1971
Docket8240
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 246 So. 2d 313 (Ree Corporation v. Shaffer) 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
Ree Corporation v. Shaffer, 246 So. 2d 313 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

246 So.2d 313 (1971)

REE CORPORATION
v.
Richard Conway SHAFFER et al.

No. 8240.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 15, 1971.
Rehearing Denied April 19, 1971.
Writ Granted June 16, 1971.

*314 Kenneth Watkins, of Watkins, Watkins & Walker, George Arceneaux, of Duval, Arceneaux & Lewis, Houma, for appellant.

Frank Wurzlow, of Ellender, Wright & Wurzlow, Houma, for appellee.

Before LANDRY, ELLIS and BLANCHE, JJ.

*315 LANDRY, Judge.

Defendants, Richard Conway Shaffer, Elise Shaffer Niemeyer, Edith Shaffer Burrows, Ora Nelms Shaffer and Lorraine K. Shaffer, duly qualified tutrix of the minors, Barbara Ann Shaffer, Thomas Alexander Shaffer, III, and Katherine Ann Shaffer, appeal the judgment of the trial court recognizing plaintiff's right to possession, pursuant to a possessory action brought by plaintiff, of disputed property, situated in Terrebonne Parish, canceling certain oil, gas and mineral leases granted on subject property by defendants to Placid Oil Company, and compelling defendants to assert adverse claims of ownership of the disputed tracts within sixty days of the date of judgment under penalty of being forever barred from claiming title to the properties in controversy. The judgment of the lower court was silent as to plaintiff's claims for damages for alleged loss of rentals, bonuses and royalties allegedly attributable to recordation of the leases from defendants to Placid.

Failure of the trial court to grant plaintiff's claims for damages must be considered a rejection thereof. Brady v. American Insurance Co., La.App., 198 So.2d 907; La-Hitte v. Acme Refrigeration Supplies, Inc., La.App., 192 So.2d 172. Inasmuch as plaintiff has neither appealed nor answered defendants' appeal, the issue of damages is not before us. LSA-C.C.P. art. 2133; Middleton v. Rheem Mfg. Co., La.App., 34 So.2d 271. We reverse the judgment rendered below and dismiss plaintiff's action.

Plaintiff's petition alleges that plaintiff is the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the following described property:

"A Certain Tract of Land situated in the Parish of Terrebonne, Louisiana, measuring twelve (12) arpents front on the right descending bank of Bayou Little Caillou, comprising the whole of Section 79 and 80 and the upper two arpents of Section 81, Township 20 South, Range 18 East (Tr. 10)."

Subject property was allegedly acquired in 1913, by Charles E. Barrett (plaintiff's ancestor in title), Charles W. Harrell and Thomas A. Shaffer (defendants' ancestor in title), in the proportions of an undivided one-third each. In effect, this action is between the heirs of Charles E. Barrett and the heirs of Thomas A. Shaffer. Plaintiff, Ree Corporation, acquired its half interest from E. E. Rogers, who in turn acquired from his mother, Lena Barrett Rogers by inheritance pursuant to judgment dated July 9, 1962. The transfer from E. E. Rogers to plaintiff was in consideration of the exchange of substantially all of plaintiff's capital stock to Rogers.

It is conceded that in 1959, Lena Barrett Rogers executed an oil, gas and mineral lease in favor of Placid affecting an undivided half interest in subject tracts. On November 25, 1959, Richard Conway Shaffer, Elise Shaffer Niemeyer and Edith Shaffer Burrows, recorded a similar lease granted to Placid under date of November 3, 1959. On November 25, 1959, Lorraine K. Shaffer, as tutrix of the above named minors, recorded a mineral lease of the property to Placid. On December 4, 1959 Placid recorded a lease dated December 1, 1959 from Ora Nelms Shaffer. On October 25, 1963, Placid recorded a release or surrender of a portion of the lease granted by Lorraine K. Shaffer, Tutrix, as well as a portion of the acreage leased by Richard Conway Shaffer and his co-lessors. Subsequently, on November 6, 1963, Placid released a portion of the acreage covered in the lease granted by Ora Nelms Shaffer.

Pursuant to the leases from Mrs. Rogers and defendants, Placid, in 1960, successfully completed a well on the property which well produced for a short time until its abandonment in 1961. In essence, plaintiff alleges the leases granted by defendants on November 25, and December 4, 1959, respectively, are still in force and of record as to approximately 84 of the 384 acres contained in subject tracts and, as such, constitute a disturbance in law of plaintiff's possession.

*316 The evidence discloses that subject tracts are 20% to 50% water, 10% high land and the remainder in salt water marsh. As proof of its possession, plaintiff offered testimony to show that it exercised possession through possessive acts of an alleged co-owner, Herbert C. Wurzlow, who claims an undivided one-half interest in subject property and who, though not a party to these proceedings, has granted trapping leases and numerous tenancy agreements permitting various parties to construct piers, camps and other structures fronting upon or along waterways and roadways running through the lands. Plaintiff maintains that Wurzlow's possession, exercised for himself and as plaintiff's agent, entitles plaintiff to base this possessory action thereon.

Defendants filed exceptions of vagueness, lack of possession on plaintiff's part sufficient to sustain a possessory action, and no right and no cause of action. The exceptions were consolidated for trial. Defendants' exception of no right of action was sustained and plaintiff's suit dismissed on the ground that since plaintiff claimed only a half interest in the property and defendants were asserting only a one-third interest, plaintiff had no right to bring a possessory action. On rehearing, the lower court set aside its judgment and permitted plaintiff to amend its petition to allege that defendants were claiming ownership of the entire property. Defendants reurged their exceptions and answered plaintiff's amended petition. At the commencement of trial, defendants requested leave to amend their answers, judicially admitting their claim to ownership is limited to a one-third interest in the property, and tendered a written document to that effect, coupled with the offer to record same in the conveyance records of Terrebonne Parish to remove the alleged slander. On objection by plaintiff, the trial court declined to permit the amendment on the ground the offer was tardy.

Appellants maintain the trial court erred in (1) holding that in order to maintain a possessory action, plaintiff need only show possession at the time of institution of suit and for one year prior thereto; (2) holding that one co-owner, claiming an undivided half interest in lands is disturbed in his possession by another co-owner claiming only an undivided one-third interest in the commonly owned property; (3) admitting in evidence, in a possessory action, documents purporting to show ownership of an undivided half interest of a person not a party to the suit, and also admission of evidence of possession by the alleged non-party owner; (4) ruling that possession by an alleged non-party co-owner in a possessory action possessed as agent of plaintiff and entitled plaintiff to base a possessory action on such possession; (5) finding that the evidence showed sufficient possession, in any event, to sustain a possessory action by plaintiff; (6) refusing to hold that introduction of proof of Wurzlow's alleged one-half ownership in the property converted plaintiff's possessory action into a petitory action, and (7) declining to rule that defendants' proffered disclaimer of all but a one-third interest in the lands rendered plaintiff's action moot.

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Bluebook (online)
246 So. 2d 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ree-corporation-v-shaffer-lactapp-1971.