Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey v. Perkins

29 So. 2d 502, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 651
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1947
DocketNo. 2873.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 So. 2d 502 (Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey v. Perkins) 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
Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey v. Perkins, 29 So. 2d 502, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 651 (La. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

This is a concursus proceeding to determine who, of the parties cited, J.E. Perkins as one claimant, and the State of Louisiana, through the Director and Board of Minerals and the Register of Land Office for said state, as the other claimant, all of the Parish of East Baton Rouge, is entitled to $225.43 deposited by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey in the Registry of the District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge. The said sum of $225.43 arises out of oil purchased by the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana and its successor, the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, between May 5, 1940, and November 30, 1945, inclusive, from a unit in the Eola Oil Field in Avoyelles Parish, wherein a lot was allocated an interest of .016129 of the said oil, or .00217 interest in the total production amounting to the sum supra.

The State of Louisiana appeared and in its answer admits that J.E. Perkins is claiming the proceeds of the said oil, but denies the validity of his pretended claim and avers that the funds belong and should be paid to it, for the reason that the said Lot D of Tract 1, to which the oil had been allocated, belonged to the State, having been escheated by the death of Ella M. Prescott, its former owner, the said Ella M. Prescott having died without any heirs with the right of inheritance.

The defendant Perkins interposed exceptions of no right and no cause of action against the plaintiff, which exceptions were referred to the merits. He then answered, admitting that he was a claimant of the money deposited. He averred that he was the owner in fee simple of the lot to which the proceeds of the oil had been allocated; that he, or his predecessors in title had leased the said property for oil development and that plaintiff stood as his lessee and therefore could not dispute his *Page 504 title. He further set out that his vendors had been recognized as the natural heirs of Ella M. Prescott, and as such, sent into possession of the said property by judgment of court for the Parish of Avoyelles, and which proceedings were a collateral attack on the said judgment. He therefore included in his answer a plea of estoppel, res adjudicata, and plea to the jurisdiction of the District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge as to the plaintiff. As to the defendant State of Louisiana, he averred that it was a mere trespasser, not having taken any proceedings to escheat the property.

On these issues, the case was tried, resulting in a judgment overruling all exceptions and recognizing J.E. Perkins as owner of the funds, less the costs of court, and discharging the plaintiff from further liability. The State of Louisiana has appealed. Defendant Perkins has answered the appeal in his brief, a novel procedure indeed.

The case was submitted on the following stipulation of facts: The Standard Oil Company of Louisiana, a Louisiana corporation, on or about May 3, 1940, started purchasing oil produced from a well located on a drilling unit of approximately 22.32 acres lying in the Eola (Freetown), Louisiana, townsite in the Parish of Avoyelles, known as Tract No. 1, in which was located Lot D, consisting of .36 acres. The said Standard Oil Company of Louisiana, and its successor, the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, the plaintiff herein, continued to purchase the said oil from the well on said unit until the filing of the suit. The part of the purchase price of the oil produced during the period from May 5, 1940, to November 30, 1945, inclusive, allocated to Lot D of the said unit or tract 1, amounted to $1,802.34 in value, 1/8 of which as royalty is the sum of $225.43, the amount deposited in court.

"That the property from which the production was realized in this case was acquired by Ella M. Prescott, she being unmarried at the time and having no legitimate relatives, that she was born out of wedlock and that her mother, then single and unmarried, was Winnie Wade; that subsequent to the birth of Ella M. Prescott, Winnie Wade married Clarfore Gremillion, and that Walter Gremillion and Chester Gremillion are the only issue of said marriage; that Ella M. Prescott was not legitimated or acknowledged, according to the provisions of Article 203 of the Revised Civil Code, but she was raised in the home of Winnie Wade and by the latter treated the same as if she had been born of a lawful marriage and that all persons adquainted with the family accepted and treated her in the same manner; that both the mother and father of Ella M. Prescott died before Ella M. Prescott, and that the said Ella M. Prescott died intestate without having married, and without leaving any ascendants, descendents, adopted children or any other legitimate relatives whatsoever.

"That, by ex parte judgment of the Honorable Twelfth Judicial District Court in and for Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana, rendered in August, 1945, in the matter of the Succession of Ella M. Prescott, deceased, bearing No. 1340 on the Probate Docket of said court, Walter Gremillion and Chester Gremillion were recognized as the natural brothers and sole heirs of the said Ella M. Prescott and sent into possession of all the property left by Ella M. Prescott at her death, which included the property described in these pleadings and from which production was realized in this case.

"That following the date of succession judgment aforesaid, Walter Gremillion and Chester Gremillion executed a deed to J.E. Perkins which conveyed to said Perkins the lands described in the succession judgment (which included the property upon which production was realized in this case) and all of the interests of Walter Gremillion and Chester Gremillion in the lease covering the said lands, and that the said deed has been placed of record and no rights acquired by J.E. Perkins therein have been sold, transferred, or assigned.

"That there are two basic issues involved, viz., (1) can the judgment in the succession proceedings of Ella M. Prescott in which Walter Gremillion and Chester Gremillion were recognized as the sole heirs. of the said Ella M. Prescott be attacked *Page 505 in this suit and (2) if the judgment can be so attacked will Walter Gremillion and Chester Gremillion under the provisions of Article 923 of the Revised Civil Code legally inherit from her to the exclusion of the State of Louisiana."

[1-3] Although defendant Perkins styles his brief as an answer to the appeal, we fail to construe it as such. It is but a brief on his exceptions and on the merits. Even admitting it to be an answer to the appeal, we do not see wherein it can serve him for any purpose in so far as plaintiff, Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, is concerned. The only appellant before us is the State of Louisiana. Perkins and the plaintiff are the appellees and it is now too well settled that a judgment cannot be amended or reversed in any manner between coappellees. All exceptions of defendant Perkins were filed against plaintiff's petition and not as against the State of Louisiana. The prayer of his answer is that the exceptions be maintained and plaintiff's suit be dismissed at his costs. The only question before us is the correctness of the judgment awarding the sum on deposit in the registry of the lower court to defendant Perkins.

[4] Civil Code Article 212 states: "Illegitimate children of every description may make proof of their material descent, provided the mother be not a married woman. But the child who will make such proof shall be bound to show that he is identically the same person as the child whom the mother brought forth." The jurisprudence under that article is now well settled that where an illegitimate child seeks to inherit from its parents, such child may prove its acknowledgment by the parent by any legal evidence. See Jobert v. Pitot, 4 La. Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
29 So. 2d 502, 1947 La. App. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-of-new-jersey-v-perkins-lactapp-1947.