Roussel v. Railways Realty Co.

115 So. 742, 165 La. 536, 1928 La. LEXIS 1745
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 18, 1928
DocketNo. 27265.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 115 So. 742 (Roussel v. Railways Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roussel v. Railways Realty Co., 115 So. 742, 165 La. 536, 1928 La. LEXIS 1745 (La. 1928).

Opinions

LAND, J.

In the case of Roussel v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co., 152 La. 517, 93 So. 758, the present plaintiffs, in a petitory action, were decreed to be the owners of lots 18, 19, 22, 23, and 24, in square No. 1605, and of a triangular piece of ground No. 14D, 300 feet front on Genois street and 52 feet on First Lake street, located in the city of New Orleans. The Railways Realty Company was one of the defendants in that suit, and unsuccessfully set up claim of title to the property in dispute, based upon a purchase of date May 24, 1909, from the receiver of the New Orleans, Spanish Fort & Lake Railroad Company, made at a receiver’s sale under an order of the civil district court for the parish of Orleans.

The petition and citation in that case were served upon the defendant, the Railways Realty Company, on June 9,1913.

Judgment was rendered in the civil district court in favor of plaintiffs, and the appeal taken by defendants to this court was decided adversely to the Railways Realty Company on July 17,1922, and rehearing was refused on October 19, 1922.

In the petitory action brought on June 9, 1913, plaintiffs reserved the right to elaim *541 rents due and to' become due. Under this reservation, plaintiffs filed the present suit February 19, 1924, and demanded an accounting by the Railways Realty Company, defendant herein, of all rent received from the property recovered under leases made by defendant to others, and of rent for that portion of the property used by defendant for its own purposes, at the rate of $10,000 per annum from June 9, 1913.

Averring that it acquired said property from the receiver of the New Orleans, Spanish Fort & Lake Railroad Company on May 24, 1909, defendant company, after denying the claims of plaintiffs, prays in its answer for judgment in reconvention for the following items:

(1) Taxes paid for the years 1909 to 1923, inclusive, aggregating the sum of $5,500.

(2) Filling in said property at a cost of $2,008.38.

(3) The sum of $756 for the cost of erection of certain buildings and booths located on the property.

The claim of defendant for sums disbursed for taxes was rejected in the lower court. The items for filling in property, $2,008.38, and for the construction of buildings and booths thereon, $756, were allowed defendant on its reconventional demand, and were deducted from the amount of rents awarded plaintiffs, $9,908.90, leaving a balance due plaintiffs of $7,144.52.

From this judgment defendant has appealed. Plaintiffs have answered the appeal, and pray that the claim for filling in the property be rejected.

1. Defendant has pleaded the judgment rendered in the civil district court of the parish of Orleans, and on appeal, in the ease of Willis J. Roussel, Administrator, et al. v. New Orleans Ry. & Light Co. et al., 152 La. 517, 93 So. 758, as res judicata as to the matters and things set forth in the petition filed herein by the plaintiffs.

In our opinion, the plea is without merit. The judgment relied upon as the basis of the plea was rendered in a petitory action, in which the question as to rents due and to become due was reserved by plaintiffs for future action and adjudication.

As no such issue was involved in the Roussel Case, the silence of our final judgment on this point cannot be properly construed as a rejection of the claim of plaintiffs for rents and revenues at the time. The demand of plaintiffs to be decreed the owners of the property in a petitory action is one thing, and their present demand made upon defendant for an accounting of the rents and revenues received from the same property is another thing.

While it is permissible, it is not mandatory that a mixed action be brought for the ownership of real property and also for the fruits it has produced, or their value. C. P. art. 7. The cumulation of separate actions is optional, except when one of them is contrary to or precludes another. C. P. arts. 148, 149.

As the thing demanded by plaintiffs is not the same, and as their present demand is not founded upon the same cause of action, the final judgment invoked by defendant has not the authority of the thing adjudged as against the present action of plaintiffs. R. C. C. art. 2286.

2. Defendant company has pleaded the prescription of one, three, and ten years as a bar to plaintiffs’ suit.

A possessor in good faith owes rents and revenues from judicial demand. Blair v. Dwyer, 110 La. 332, 338, 34 So. 464; C. Cart. 3453.

Judicial demand'was made by plaintiffs upon defendant for this property on June 9, 1913. Thereafter defendant occupied the' status of a possessor in bad faith, and became responsible for the rents and revenues.

The right of the lawful owner in a' *543 petitory action to claim and recover' the rents cannot be barred by the prescription of either ■one or three years.

The prescription of one year does not apply, as the obligation of a possessor in bad faith to restore the thing and the fruits and revenues results, not from an offense or quasi offense, but from a quasi contract. Heirs of Burney v. Ludeling, 47 La. Ann. 92, 16 So. 507; C. C. arts. 2293, 2294.

Personal actions arise from quasi contracts, and, in general, are prescribed by ten years. C. P. arts. 28, 30; C. C. art. 3544.

The prescription of three years applies to actions on contracts for rent or hire, but not to the obligation imposed by law on the possessor in bad faith to restore to the lawful owner all revenues of his property of which he has .been deprived. In such cases the prescription of ten years is applicable. Walling Heirs v. Morefield, 33 La. Ann. 1179.

Prescription was not interrupted by the bringing of the petitory action by plaintiffs in the year 1913, without a demand for rents and revenues, although the right to sue therefor was reserved at the time. Liles v. Barnhart, 152 La. 419, 93 So. 490.

Prescription commenced to run in this case on June 9, 1913, the date of the judicial demand made upon defendant by the plaintiffs for the recovery of the property in controversy.

When this suit was filed by plaintiffs on February 19, 1924, it is clear that rents in .arrears prior to February 19, 1914, had been prescribed by the lapse of ten years.

The total of the rents collected by defendant from 1913 to 1923, inclusive, amounts to $9,908.90. From this suin must be deducted rents for the year 1913, or $693.81, as .action for recovery of this item had been barred by prescription, at the date of the in.stitution of the present suit. Thus far the balance due plaintiffs for rents is reduced to $9,215.09.

We are of the opinion that the lower court erred also in rejecting the reeonventional demand of defendant company for taxes for the years 1909 to 1924.

The total acreage of the Spanish Fort Park, including plaintiffs’ lots, is 21.39 acres.

The total area of these lots is 1.43 acres, and the net area, less .16 of an acre used for railroad purposes, is 1.27 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 742, 165 La. 536, 1928 La. LEXIS 1745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roussel-v-railways-realty-co-la-1928.