Uthoff v. Thompson

146 So. 161, 176 La. 599, 1933 La. LEXIS 1576
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 31403.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 146 So. 161 (Uthoff v. Thompson) 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
Uthoff v. Thompson, 146 So. 161, 176 La. 599, 1933 La. LEXIS 1576 (La. 1933).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is a petitory action to recover lot 8, in square 153, in the city of New Orleans, laid out according to a sketch, dated March 12, 1912, made by Walter J. Seghers, deputy city surveyor-, the square in which the lot is situated being bounded by Breedlove, Panama, and De Armas streets and the Bloomingdale line. The width of the lot is 25 feet, 4 .inches, and 6 lines on Breedlove street, and 30 feet, 5 inches, and 3 lines in the rear, by a depth of 117 feet, 5 inches, and 2 lines on the Bloomingdale line, with an increased depth of 3 lines on the dividing line between it and the adjoining lot, namely, lot 7. By an amendment to the petition, plaintiff also sues for rent for the property, in the sum of $15 a month, from March 17, 1927.

The defense to the suit is a denial of plaintiff’s claims. Following this denial there is a reconventional demand for recognition of defendant’s title, in which defendant deraigns its title, setting forth two tax sales to John C. Smith, made by the city of New Orleans, in October, 1921, for the taxes due it for the year 1920, assessed in the name of the Widow Jos. A. Quantin. The tax sales cover the property, claimed by plaintiff, to a depth of 57 feet, 2 inches, and 4 lines. In an amended answer, defendant reconvened, in the event of eviction, for $2,790, the cost of a one-story double residence; for $80, the cost of a shed and a fence; for $124, the cost of paving sheds and alleyways, and for 16 loads of filling; and for $61, the amount paid for curbing, drainage, and filling for a sidewalk ; the sum total of these demands being $3,055.

There was judgment below in favor of plaintiff for the property and dismissing defendant’s reconventional demand, but reserving to defendant the right to remove the buildings and improvements, placed thereon by him, within sixty days from the date of the finality of the judgment.

The right of plaintiff to recover so much of the property, claimed by him, as is included in defendant’s deeds, depends upon the validity of the two tax sales, made by the city of New Orleans to Smith for the taxes of 1920, under an assessment made in the name of the Widow Jos. A. Quantin for the taxes of 1920, and upon the binding effect on pláintiff, which should be considered first, of a judgment confirming these .tax sales, rendered on March 24,1925.

At one time Dr. Rivers Frederick was the owner of square 153, in which the lot, claimed by plaintiff, is situated. At that time *603 the square was subdivided into 10 lots, running from Panama street to the Bloomingdale line, according to a survey made by D. E. Seghers & Sons, in July, 1910. Dr. Frederick had Seghers make, in 1912, a new sketch of lots 7, 8, 9, and 10 of the survey made in 1910. This sketch subdivided these four lots into two, and made these two face on Breedlove street, instead of, as formerly, on Panama street; the former total width of the four lots becoming the depth of the two newly created lots. The two newly created lots were designated in the sketch as lots 7 and 8. Lot 8, according to the new sketch, was sold to plaintiff by Dr. Frederick on March 5, 1913.

Dr. Frederick, apparently forgetting about his new sketch, under which he sold to plaintiff, sold, in 1914, certain lots in square 153, according to the survey of 1910, to E. A. Pargons, except lots 7 and 8. Parsons sold, in 1919, the property acquired by him, according to the plan of 1910, to Widow Jos. A. Quantin. It was in Mrs. Quantin’s name that the property, here involved, was sold at tax sale.

The judgment, mentioned above, confirming the- two tax sales, is pleaded by defendant as res judicata against any attempt to annul these sales.

Smith, the purchaser at those sales, sold the property there acquired by him to the Commercial Security Company, Limited. The suit to quiet the tax sales, in which several other tax sales were involved, was instituted by Smith’s vendee, under the title of “Commercial Security Co., Ltd., v. Estate of B. G. Loos, William Landry, et ah” A curator ad hoc was appointed, quoting from the order, “to represent and stand in judgment herein [that is, in the suit to quiet title] for the unknown owner or owners of the property described in the foregoing petition, preceding said tax sales set forth in the said petition, and the Succession and Ileir^ of B. G. Loos, Wilmot Halsall and William Landry I preceding owners of property, not involved here, whose addresses were alleged to be unknown].”

It is alleged in the petition to quiet title that Mrs. Quantin, in whose name, as tax debtor, the property was sold at tax sale, was a resident of the city of New Orleans, and service of citation was made upon her in person. Service of citation was also made upon such preceding owners, who were absentees, or whose addresses were unknown, or who themselves wore unknown, by delivery of citation to the curator ad hoc appointed.

Plaintiff’s name is not mentioned in the petition to quiet title, nor in the order appointing the curator ad hoc. Plaintiff, therefore, was a stranger to the suit, unless it may be said that the general language of the order, appointing a curator ad hoc to represent unknown owners, included him, notwithstanding the petition to quiet title did not mention plaintiff’s name, or refer to the preceding owner as one unknown or absent, but named such owner as the Widow Quantin, a resident of the city of New Orleans.

The suit to quiet title was instituted under Act No. 101 of 1898, p. 127, relative to the manner of notice and the form of the proceeding to quiet tax titles. In section 1 of the act it is provided that:

*605 “The petition and citation shall be served as in ordinary suits; provided that if the former proprietor be a non-resident of the State, or unknown, or his residence be unknown, the Court shall appoint a curator ad hoc to represent him and receive service. * Jjs

In our view, plaintiff, whose right of ownership in the' property, claimed by him, does not appear from the proceeding to have been even suspected, was not a party to the suit, but an utter stranger to it. The order, appointing a curator ad hoe for unknown owners, did not relate to him, but only to those who were so styled in the petition, or whose residences were alleged to be unknown. The act o.f 1898 does not contemplate the appointment of a curator ad hoc to represent one who is not referred to in the petition as a former owner, known or unknown, but who is omitted therefrom altogether, nor, as said, does the order appointing the curator contemplate that he should represent such a person.

Defendant cites the case of Hamburger et al. v. Purcell, 139 La. 456, 71 So. 765, as supporting his position that, notwithstanding that idaintiff’s name is not mentioned in the proceeding to quiet title, or that it is not mentioned there that the former owner of the property is unknown, or that his residence is unknown, the appointment of the curator to represent unknown owners made the judgment valid. In our opinion, the case does not support defendant’s position. There, two children of Mrs. Catherine Schmidt, then deceased, who was the mother, by her first marriage, of one of the children, and, by her second marriage with W. A.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 161, 176 La. 599, 1933 La. LEXIS 1576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uthoff-v-thompson-la-1933.