Thibaut v. Thibaut
This text of 346 So. 2d 809 (Thibaut v. Thibaut) 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.
Opinion
John E. THIBAUT et al.,
v.
David D. THIBAUT et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Triche & Sternfels, Dan J. Nail, Napoleonville, James D. Rives, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Felix H. Savoie, Jr., Napoleonville, Monroe & Lemann, Benjamin R. Slater, Jr., Michael R. O'Keefe, III, Henican, James & Cleveland, Carl W. Cleveland & Joseph P. Hensigan, New Orleans, Stanwood R. Duval, Jr., Houma, Crawford, Lambert & Goldsmith, Gordon R. Crawford, Gonzales, for defendant-appellee.
Before SARTAIN, COVINGTON and LOTTINGER, JJ.
*810 COVINGTON, Judge.
This is an appeal from a judgment maintaining an exception of improper venue insofar as the plaintiffs' suit seeks to partition separate non-contiguous tracts of immovable property located in parishes other than the Parish of Assumption; as to immovable property located in other parishes and not contiguous to any property located within the Parish of Assumption, the suit was dismissed. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
RIGHT TO APPEAL
In considering the appellant's right to appeal the judgment sustaining the exception of venue, we find that this judgment is an interlocutory judgment under LSA-C.C.P. art. 1841, since it does not determine the merits but determines only a preliminary matter, venue, in the course of the action.
It is only an interlocutory judgment causing "irreparable injury" which is appealable. See LSA-C.C.P. art. 2083, and Comments thereunder. The effect of the judgment in this partition action is to require the plaintiffs to assert their rights in three separate parishes, require three separate trials of materially similar facts, and require three separate judicial sales without a right to sell the properties in globo.
It is clear that, in the present action, if a final judgment rendered by the trial court were to come before an appellate court for review, the appellate court in its decree could not restore the parties, without loss of rights under the pleadings, to the identical position which they respectively occupied before the interlocutory judgment complained of was rendered.
We find, consequently, that this is an interlocutory judgment causing irreparable injury to the plaintiffs herein. Therefore, we hold that the instant judgment, partially dismissing the plaintiffs' partition action, is an appealable judgment. This holding is consistent with the underlying policy of limiting appeals to final judgments and interlocutory judgments causing irreparable injury, a policy based on (1) preventing dilatory misuse of the appeal process, and (2) preventing fragmentary adjudication by sporadic review.
This appeal can in no way be considered a dilatory misuse of the appellate process since it actually moves the entire proceedings toward an earlier adjudication by allowing one trial on the merits rather than three separate trials in three separate parishes. Instead of permitting a fragmentary adjudication by sporadic review, this appeal tends to place the action in a posture where one appeal from a final judgment can adjudicate all of the partition rights of the parties.
VENUE
This suit involves the question of the proper venue for a partition proceeding involving non-contiguous tracts of immovable property located in the Parishes of Assumption, Ascension and St. James. The contest is between co-owners of undivided interests in the several tracts of land. The property consists of Woodlawn Plantation, Glenwood Plantation and B & D Plantation, situated in Assumption Parish; Minnie Plantation situated in St. James Parish; and Mon Desire Plantation, Peytavin Plantation and Chatam Plantations, situated in Ascension Parish, or portions of said plantations. The co-owners acquired the property from Thibaut Farms, a partnership, on January 1, 1967, and from Kate Rice Thibaut by acts of donation on December 19, 1971. The property is owned by the following co-owners in the proportions listed by their names:
James Henry Thibaut 135/900 Thomas A. Thibaut 135/900 Dr. David D. Thibaut 135/900 Mercedes Thibaut Smith 135/900 Kate Rice Thibaut 80/900 Jane Thibaut Boyce 70/900 Margaret Thibaut Owens Watson 70/900 Mary Thibaut Rives 70/900 John E. Thibaut 70/900
The plaintiffs are: John E. Thibaut, individually and as administrator of the estates of his minor children, Pierre Lastrapes Thibaut and Steven Thomas Thibaut; Joseph Wilbert Thibaut; John Bronier Thibaut;
*811 Kate Rice Thibaut; James Louis Owens, Jr.; Katherine Louise Owens; Jane Thibaut Boyce; John Clark Boyce and Jerry Thibaut Boyce; James Harvey Boyce, Jr., as administrator of the estates of his minor children, Jane Paige Boyce, James Harvey Boyce, III, and Jennifer Linton Boyce; Mary Thibaut Rives; Frank Williams Rives; James D. Rives, Jr., as administrator of the estate of minor child, Bronier Thibaut Rives; Katherine Jane Rives; and James Davidson Rives, III. They brought suit in Assumption Parish against: Dr. David D. Thibaut; James Henry Thibaut; Margaret Thibaut Owens Watson, individually and as natural tutrix of her minor children, Michael Thibaut Owens and Sarah Helena Owens. Thomas A. Thibaut; and Mercedes Thibaut Smith, to partition by licitation the seven plantations in the three different parishes. These seven plantations are non-contiguous and are not located on a common boundary of any of the parishes mentioned.
The defendants-appellees filed an exception to the venue, asserting that the suit to partition lands located in Ascension, St. James and Assumption Parishes must be brought in each parish in order to affect the particular property located in that parish. Their position is that Article 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure applies only to the situation covered in Article 1291 of the Civil Code, and that a single action for partition can not be filed in one parish, in this case Assumption Parish, to affect immovable property located in the other parishes.
The plaintiffs-appellants urge that the trial court erred in dismissing their action as to lands not located in Assumption Parish because some of the immovable property is in fact located in Assumption Parish, which is all that is required by LSA-C.C.P. art. 80.
LSA-C.C.P. art. 80 states:
"The following actions shall be brought in the parish where the immovable property is situated:
(1) An action to assert an interest in immovable property, or a right in, to, or against immovable property, except as otherwise provided in Articles 72 and 2633; and
(2) An action to partition immovable property, except as otherwise provided in Articles 81, 82, and 83.
"If the immovable property, consisting of one or more tracts, is situated in more than one parish, the action may be brought in any of these parishes."
In commenting on Article 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure, Moss, Venue (Comment), 21 La.L.Rev. 182, 190 (1960), remarks:
"However, a simplification is made in that if the property consists of one or more tracts, situated in more than one parish, the action may be brought in any of these parishes, the intention being to simplify the procedure and permit one suit rather than several to be brought."
The Comments under Article 80 read in part:
"(a) The last paragraph of this article changes the law by broadening the rule of Art.
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