Standard Oil Co. of Louisiana v. Allison

200 So. 273, 196 La. 838, 1941 La. LEXIS 988
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
DocketNo. 35971.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 200 So. 273 (Standard Oil Co. of Louisiana v. Allison) 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
Standard Oil Co. of Louisiana v. Allison, 200 So. 273, 196 La. 838, 1941 La. LEXIS 988 (La. 1941).

Opinion

*843 HIGGINS, Justice.

The Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District appealed from the judgment of the trial court holding that by warranty title the transferees of the District and their successors and assigns were owners of the mineral rights of the lands known as the “R. E. Allison-Ellerbe Farm,” and therefore, entitled to share according to their proportionate interests, in the approximate sum of $220,000, representing the purchase price of the oil obtained therefrom and sold to the Standard Oil Company, which corporation deposited the funds in the registry of the court in a coiicursus proceeding under Act 123 of 1922, and cited all claimants to assert their rights thereto.

The State of Louisiana was cited, through the Register of State Lands, and it excepted to the jurisdiction of the court. This exception was sustained with the consent of all parties, after the Attorney General entered into a stipulation to the effect that the State was not claiming any title and if it had answered the petition, its answer would have been identical with that filed by the State Mineral Board. This board, in its answer, disclaimed any right to the proceeds deposited in the court and averred that the Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District had title to all of the mineral rights in the lands and, therefore, it was entitled to the funds on deposit in the registry of the court.

The Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District, in its answer, averred that it was a public corporation of this State created by Act 74 of 1892, as amended by Act 160 of 1900; that the lands in controversy were subject to the terms of those acts and were thereby granted to the District; that on September 19, 1895, by an authentic deed with warranty of the fee-simple title, the District sold the property involved in this suit, together with other lands, to Levi Cooper and Albert H. Leonard; that the act was properly registered in the Conveyance Office of Caddo Parish; that on October 31, 1919, and October 8, 1923, formal certificates of conveyance were issued by the Register of State Lands and the State Auditor, covering only a part of the lands included in the sale, and these certificates were properly registered in Caddo Parish; that instruments of conveyance were not issued on the lands in controversy until 1924, 1926 and 1927; that these lands became the subject of two suits which were brought by Mrs. Cecilia Ellerbe (sole heir of Albert H. Leonard), Mrs. Tljeo Cooper Greil (sole heir of Mrs. Levi Cooper) and Levi Cooper, against the Auditor and the Register of State, in which they claimed the ownership of the lands bought from the Caddo Levee District, and prayed for an injunction against the state officials, “prohibiting them from executing mineral leases affecting said lands or from receiving applications for the sale or lease thereof, and requiring them to recognize, respect, and give full effect to the ownership of said plaintiffs;” that while these two suits were pending, the Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District, “after careful and prolonged discussions,” by resolutions dated March *845 26, 1926, instructed the Board’s attorney to file a petition of intervention in the suits, and to join the plaintiffs in asking that relief he accorded to them as prayed for; that on June 2, 1926, another resolution was passed by the Board, instructing its attorney to intervene in the suits in its behalf'in order to make unquestioned the complete ownership of Ellerbe and Cooper to the lands involved and to have these lands certified to them; that on November 27, 1926, the attorney was authorized to appear in these suits “for the purpose of protecting titles made by the former Board to the plaintiffs in this suit,” or any other litigation where the validity of titles warranted by the Board was in contest; that from an adverse judgment of the district court, the Attorney General perfected an appeal to the Supreme Court (where counsel for the Caddo Levee District filed a brief), and the judgment of the lower court was affirmed, restraining the state officials from leasing or selling the lands claimed to be owned by the plaintiffs, Ellerbe et al. v. Grace et al., 162 La. 846, 111 So. 185; that thereafter, formal certificates were issued on the property to the Caddo Levee District by the State Register and the State Auditor; that “Since the sale of the lands in question by the defendant Board of Commissioners to Cooper and Levi on September 19, 1895, as set forth in paragraph 9 hereof, the said Board has never taken a position or made any claims respecting said land inconsistent with its position as vendor thereof by the deed referred to in paragraph 9 and attached hereto;” and that the Board prayed “for such judgment as may, in the opinion of the court, be justified by the law and the facts herein set forth.”

The successors in title of the transferees and their assigns, in addition to the facts stated in the District’s answer, averred that they were the owners of a perfect fee-simple title to the property by virtue of the authentic act of sale, with warranty, by the Board to their ancestors in title in September, 1895; that after the sale, the transferees, their successors, and assigns had taken actual possession of the lands and had cultivated them for agricultural purposes, the assessment of the property being in their names on the tax rolls of Caddo Parish and all taxes due to the State and its subdivisions had been paid by them; that they had title to the property prior to 1921; that by virtue of the warranty of the Levee District any subsequently-acquired title to the lands enured to the benefit of its purchasers or transferees under the act of sale of 1895; that their title was perfected by Act 62 of 1912 prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1921; that the question of ownership of or title to the lands between the State and the transferees, their successors and assigns, was res ad judicata, the matter having been finally determined in their favor/ and against the State in the case of Ellerbe et al. v. Grace et al., 162 La. 846, 111 So. 185; that the State and the Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District were barred by estoppel both judicial and en pais from asserting claim of title to the lands or the minerals, or any part thereof, against them; and that on May 23, 1938, these respondents executed an oil, gas and mineral lease on *847 the aforesaid property to R. E. Allison, a co-defendant herein, who has gone on the property and through great expense drilled a number of wells and produced a large quantity of oil, which has been sold to the Standard Oil Company, and that the purchase price thereof has been placed in the registry of the court. The respondents prayed to be recognized as the owners of the mineral rights in the lands, in their respective proportions, and, as such, entitled to all of the proceeds realized from the sale of the oil.

On the trial of the case on its merits, the facts set forth in the pleadings were substantially proved and, in addition thereto, it was shown that the Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District, by resolution, and the transferees, through their attorney, in writing, made demands in 1919 and 1920 upon the Register of State Lands and the State Auditor to issue proper certificates of conveyance to them covering the lands in question, but they were refused on the ground that the lands were not subject to the grant and that the United States Government was claiming them.

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Bluebook (online)
200 So. 273, 196 La. 838, 1941 La. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-of-louisiana-v-allison-la-1941.