Resweber v. Jacob

125 So. 2d 241
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 1960
Docket4
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 125 So. 2d 241 (Resweber v. Jacob) 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
Resweber v. Jacob, 125 So. 2d 241 (La. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

125 So.2d 241 (1960)

E. L. RESWEBER
v.
Robert A. JACOB et al.

No. 4.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

December 19, 1960.

*242 Mestayer & Mestayer, by Ray F. Mestayer, New Iberia, for defendants-appellants.

Helm, Simon, Caffery & Duke, by Lawrence Simon, New Iberia, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before FRUGE, SAVOY and HOOD, JJ.

SAVOY, Judge.

This matter is before this court on appeal by the appellants herein from a judgment of the district court decreeing the appellee to be the owner of the property described in appellee's original petition.

The facts of this case are as follows:

E. L. Resweber filed a suit in the district court to reform and correct a tax deed executed by Wade O. Martin, Sr., Sheriff and Ex-Officio Tax Collector for the Parish of St. Martin, Louisiana, in favor of Lou Resweber, dated June 13, 1925, and recorded on July 21, 1925, in the Conveyance Records of St. Martin Parish, to show that said property involved in this suit was sold for the unpaid taxes of 1924, assessed in the name of Charles Dugas and Robert A. Jacob, and prayed that he be decreed to be the true owner of said land entitled to full and undisturbed possession thereof.

Resweber alleged further that the tax deed was prepared on a printed form of deed used for tax sales for the year 1923, that through error and inadvertence the sheriff failed to correct said printed form to show that said sale was made for the 1924 unpaid taxes, and therefore the said tax deed erroneously reflected that there was an adjudication of the land for the 1923 unpaid taxes; that said error was not discovered by Resweber until said land was recently abstracted.

Resweber filed a supplemental and amended petition alleging that he and his author in title, Lou Resweber, had been in open, notorious and peaceful possession as owners of said property since 1925, and alleged specifically the acquisitive prescription of ten years in bar to any claims of defendants to said property.

The defendants answered the suit denying generally the pertinent allegations of plaintiff's petition, and then assuming the position of plaintiffs-in-reconvention stated that plaintiff, defendant-in-reconvention, E. L. Resweber, was in illegal possession, in bad faith, and that his title to the disputed property was null and void for the following reasons:

*243 1. That the purported tax sale was made for the year 1923, whereas, the taxes for the year 1923 had been paid; and

2. That E. L. Resweber was a deputy sheriff for St. Martin Parish in 1925, that the property purchased in the name of Lou Resweber was purchased as an interposed party, said Lou Resweber being a sister of E. L. Resweber, and that the attempted sale to Resweber as a deputy sheriff was an absolute nullity. Plaintiffs-in-reconvention stated further that if the sale should be corrected by the court that they have an opportunity to redeem said property and that a tender of all taxes, interest and costs to date had been made to E. L. Resweber without avail.

Plaintiffs-in-reconvention also prayed for a judgment in excess of $10,000, being the amount defendant-in-reconvention received from the illegal use of said property.

The case was continued from time to time at the request of counsel for both sides. On the date that the case was to be tried, plaintiff, E. L. Resweber, defendant-in-reconvention, through counsel, made a motion to dismiss his suit as of non-suit. This the trial court allowed over strenuous objections made by counsel for defendants, plaintiffs-in-reconvention.

Plaintiffs-in-reconvention attempted to file a supplemental and amended petition alleging the following:

"Defendants, as plaintiffs in reconvention further show, in the alternative, that should the Court find that the said tax sale was actually made for due and unpaid taxes for a year other than the year 1923, and, for that reason, render judgment sustaining said sale, then, and in that event, the conveyance records of St. Martin Parish, and particularly the deed in question, must be ordered amended and reformed to reflect the correct information concerning the due and unpaid taxes for which the said property was actually sold, in which event, plaintiffs in reconvention urge the right and that right is hereby asserted to redeem said property within the time, and the manner prescribed by law."

The judge would not sign the order allowing the supplemental petition to be filed by plaintiffs-in-reconvention. Defendant-in-reconvention then filed numerous exceptions and pleas, including that of no cause or right of action, plea of three years prescription, peremption of five years, plea of laches and estoppel, and plea to the unconstitutionality of Act 94 of 1902.

Defendant-in-reconvention then filed an answer denying all of the allegations contained in the petition filed by plaintiffs-in-reconvention, and further answered the petition alleging that he was the owner of the property in dispute by virtue of the tax sale mentioned herein, and asked that the demands of the plaintiffs-in-reconvention be dismissed.

On these issues the case was tried.

This Court will first discuss the procedural questions arising because of plaintiff's dismissal of his original petition and the refusal by the trial judge to allow plaintiffs-in-reconvention to file a supplemental and amended petition. Under the provisions of Article 491 of the Code of Practice of Louisiana, plaintiff may in every stage of the suit previous to judgment being rendered discontinue the suit on paying the costs.

In the case of Rives et al. v. Starcke et al., 195 La. 378, 196 So. 657, 658, the Supreme Court said:

"It is well settled that, although the filing of a demand in reconvention by the defendant in a suit cannot prevent the plaintiff's discontinuing his suit at any time before a judgment is rendered, the discontinuance after the demand in reconvention has been filed does not prevent the defendant from proceeding with the prosecution of his *244 demand in reconvention to a final judgment. * * *"

This Court concludes that the order of the trial judge allowing plaintiff, E. L. Resweber, to dismiss his original suit was proper and correct.

The demand of plaintiffs-in-reconvention was not disturbed by the dismissal of the original suit. The supplemental and amended petition attempted to be filed by defendants, plaintiffs-in-reconvention, stated in substance that if the district court found that the tax sale was actually made for unpaid taxes for a year other than 1923 that they be permitted to redeem said property.

It was within the discretion of the trial judge to refuse to allow plaintiffs-in-reconvention to file their supplemental and amended petition.

Appellants have assigned this Court four errors wherein the trial judge was in error in deciding the case as he did in the lower court, to wit:

1. In allowing the introduction of parol evidence to vary the unambiguous statements of the tax deed in the absence of any allegation of fraud or mistake;

2. In decreeing that the property in this suit was sold for the 1924 unpaid taxes and not the 1923 unpaid taxes without correcting and reforming the tax deed;

3. In refusing to allow appellants to redeem the property; and

4. In refusing to allow evidence to prove that the original plaintiff as deputy sheriff purchased the property through his sister, an interposed party, in violation of a state law.

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 2d 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/resweber-v-jacob-lactapp-1960.