Vegas v. Cheramie

80 So. 2d 880, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 832
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1955
DocketNo. 4019
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 80 So. 2d 880 (Vegas v. Cheramie) 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
Vegas v. Cheramie, 80 So. 2d 880, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 832 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

The plaintiffs sold to the defendant, Daize Cheramie, a parcel of land off of the northern portion of their property and he in turn sold three portions of it to the other defendants. On the 25th day of April 1949 the present defendants filed actions in boundary against the present plaintiffs for the purpose of having judicially fixed and established their southern and the present plaintiff’s northern boundary line. These suits were 'Nos. 9410, 9411, 9412, 9413, and were consolidated for the purpose of trial.

[881]*881On November 17, 1949 Daize Cheramie also filed a boundary action against Gustave Cretini to settle his northern boundary line between the two properties.

On the date that Daize Cheramie filed suit against Cretini, although no exceptions or answer had been filed in the suit by the various defendants against the present plaintiffs, no action other than the making of the survey had been taken. In contrast, the day following the filing of the suit by Daize Cheramie against Cretini to settle the northern boundary line of Daize Cheramie’s property, answer was filed which contained a plea of ten and thirty years prescriptions and judgment was rendered on the 29th of November, 1949, sustaining both pleas of prescription and “the boundary line separating the property of the plaintiff from the property of the defendant be and the same is hereby fixed along the line of the fence now separating said properties.” There is no testimony and no minutes of the court in this suit which is No. 9558.

In the suits against the present plaintiffs (Nos. 9410, 9411, 9412 and 9413) which will hereafter be referred to as 9410, a survey was made and a procés verbal filed together with a -map on September 9, 1949; on January 9, 1950 preliminary default was entered, and on February 20, 1950, in accordance with verbal instructions of the District Judge the surveyor, C. E. Heck, made another procés verbal changing the previous boundary line, which he had established according to the titles of the parties, so as to make the southern boundary line of the present defendants’ property parallel and in conformity to the judicial line which the District Court had established as the boundary line between Daize Cheramie and Cretini. On the same day that this procés verbal was filed, judgment was confirmed and signed in accordance with the verbal instructions of the judge to the surveyor after the entry of the preliminary default.

In June 1952 the present defendants obtained an order directed to Carl E. Heck, surveyor, directing him to place visible markers or monuments on the line judicially established as a boundary between their property and the plaintiffs by judgment on February 20, 1950. There was quite a disturbance, which resulted in the jailing of some of the plaintiffs.

On November 7, 1952 the present suit was filed by Rapheal Vegas and Aimee Vegas, wife of Octave Bruce, in which they are seeking to annul the judgments rendered in suit 9410. Plaintiffs in effect have alleged the filing of the suits against them by the Cheramies to establish their common boundary which would be Cheramie’s southern and plaintiffs’ northern boundary. They also allege the subsequent filing of the suit on the date above set forth by Daize Chera-mie against Cretini to fix Cheramie’s northern boundary of the property sold to him by the plaintiffs. They allege that they were not notified nor called in any manner to-defend the title or boundary of the property which they sold and warranted to Daize Cheramie. They further allege that Chera-mie made no defense to the suit and that had. they been called or notified the prescriptive pleas of possession could have been successfully refuted, and further allege that if Cretini had acquired the property between the title boundary and the old fence which he claimed should be the boundary and which the Court established as the boundary, that such possession was acquired after they had sold the property to Daize Chera-mie. They further allege that they filed no-answer in suit No. 9410 as they were satisfied with the line as fixed in accordance with their titles by Mr. Carl E. Heck, Surveyor. Plaintiffs also allege that a preliminary default was entered and it was-then that the District Judge gave verbal orders or instructions to Carl E. Heck, the Surveyor, to go back on the property and resurvey this boundary line and establish it parallel to and in conformity with the old fence line on the north of the Cheramie property which the court had fixed as the boundary between Cheramie and Cretini, thus moving plaintiff’s boundary line as-established in accordance with the titles, some forty or fifty feet south. Plaintiffs also alleged that they received no notice of [882]*882the second survey, that all of the above constituted ill practice entitling them to a judgment decreeing the judgments rendered in Nos. 9410, 9411, 9412 and 9413 as null and void under Article 607 of the Code of Practice.

The defendants filed an exception of no right and no cause of action and the lower court sustained the exception of no right of action from which judgment a suspensive appeal was taken to this court. The judgment of the lower court was reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the judgment. See Vegas v. Cheramine, La.App., 69 So.2d 66.

The case was duly tried and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants dismissing plaintiffs’ suit at their costs, and the case is now before this court on appeal by the plaintiffs.

The law with regard to actions of nullity is well established and settled in our jurisprudence. While many cases could be cited the law has recently been reaffirmed and expressed by our Supreme Court in Alonso v. Bowers, 222 La. 1093, 64 So.2d 443, 444, in which an appeal was taken from a judgment annulling and setting aside a previous judgment. The Court in discussing the law and previous cases on the subject stated:

“According to Article 60S of the Code of Practice, the causes for which the nullity of a definitive judgment may be demanded are those that are relative to form and those that appertain to the merits of the question tried. According to Article 607, one of the cases in which such judgment -may be annulled is where it appears that it was obtained by ill practices on the part of the party in whose favor it was rendered. Under the jurisprudence any improper practice or procedure which enables a party to obtain a definitive judgment comes within the meaning of this article. The courts have looked at each case from a purely equitable viewpoint to ascertain whether allowing the judgment to stand would be inequitable or unconscionable in view of the practice or procedure which enabled the party to obtain such judgment. See Laceste v. Robert, 11 La.Ann. 33; City of New Orleans v. LeBourgeois, 50 La.Ann. 591, 23 So. 542; Tarver v. Quinn, 149 La. 368, 89 So. 216; Succession of Gilmore, 157 La. 130, 102 So. 94; Walsh v. Walsh, 215 La. 1099, 42 So.2d 860; Coltraro v. Chotin, 1 La.App. 628.
“In Succession of Gilmore, supra (157 La. 130, 102 So. [94] 95), tins court said:
“ ‘ * * * The remedy given by said article (607) * * * is not restrictive. The courts of this state will not hesitate to afford relief against judgments, irrespective of any issue of inattention or neglect, when the circumstances under which the judgment is rendered show the deprivation of legal rights of the litigant who seeks relief, and when the enforcement of the judgment would be unconscientious and inequitable.

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Related

Cheramie v. Vegas
273 So. 2d 703 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Castellon v. Nations
186 So. 2d 708 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1966)
Naquin v. Naquin
142 So. 2d 525 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
Harris v. Womack
83 So. 2d 541 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 2d 880, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vegas-v-cheramie-lactapp-1955.