Wall v. Leger

402 So. 2d 704
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 1981
Docket14022
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 402 So. 2d 704 (Wall v. Leger) 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
Wall v. Leger, 402 So. 2d 704 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

402 So.2d 704 (1981)

Earl E. WALL
v.
Clinton Joseph LEGER, Jr. et al.

No. 14022.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

April 13, 1981.

*705 Walter Naquin, Jr., Thibodaux, for plaintiff-appellee Earl E. Wall.

Charles J. LeBlanc, Thibodaux, for defendant-appellee Clinton Joseph Leger, Jr.

Harold B. Carter and S. Frazer Rankin, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants Jeanne Gaudet Naquin, Gabriel Gaudet, Nell Gaudet Zeringue, Ernest John Gaudet, Norbert Gaudet, Robert Gaudet, Marie Gaudet Beaulieu, Richard Gaudet, Katherine Gaudet Picou, Michael Louis Gaudet and Myron Anthony Gaudet.

Before COVINGTON, CHIASSON and LEAR, JJ.

COVINGTON, Judge.

This is a concursus proceeding involving mineral rights affecting a certain tract of land, one-half arpent by forty arpents, situated in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana, on the right descending bank of Bayou Lafourche, a few miles below the City of Thibodaux, referred to as the "Leger tract." The plaintiff, Earl E. Wall, as the assignee of the lessee of certain mineral leases, asserted that the Leger tract was partly in a voluntary unit known as "The Thibodaux No. 1" well[1]; that as a result of production, certain *706 present and future royalty payments are due or will become due to the owner of certain mineral rights, but that the plaintiff in concursus was unable to ascertain the owner thereof because of contradictory claims thereto; and that, therefore, he desired to deposit the proceeds due on production from the well, allocable to the Leger tract (which property contributed 5.5861 acres to the voluntary unit, out of a total area of 160 acres, and is allocated 3.4913% of unit production),[2] and to have all claimants thereto to make their claims. Claude Gaudet, Jeanne Gaudet Naquin, Gabriel Gaudet, Nell Gaudet Zeringue, Ernest John Gaudet, Norbert Gaudet, Robert Gaudet, Marie Gaudet Beaulieu, Richard Gaudet, Katherine Gaudet Picou, Michael Louis Gaudet and Myron Anthony Gaudet, the heirs of Leonise Thibodaux Gaudet (one of the ten children of Prosper and Mathilde Toups Thibodaux), referred to as the "Gaudet heirs," asserted a claim to the deposited money and the mineral rights involved, based on a partition agreement of June 12, 1941, in which they received the Leger tract as their portion of the parent tract (with the mineral rights reserved to all heirs of Prosper Thibodaux and his widow), and their reservation of mineral rights in their sale of the Leger tract on July 19, 1968, to Clinton J. Leger, Jr. The adverse claimant was the vendee, Leger, who based his claim on the mineral rights having reverted to him as the owner of the Leger tract in December of 1974 because there was an outstanding mineral servitude on the Leger tract when the Gaudet heirs attempted to reserve the mineral rights in their sale to Leger, and which had prescribed on December 14, 1974.

The case was tried to the judge on a Stipulation of Facts and Addendum to Stipulation of Facts (which are attached to this opinion as an Appendix, but without the Exhibits referred to therein). The trial judge found that the certain mineral leases to E.H. Stickney, dated January 31 and March 18, 1939, did not prevent the Thibodaux heirs from creating a mineral servitude, which he held that they did in their partition of June 12, 1941. The court also held that it was the intention of the parties to the partition that the land be divided into separate tracts, but that it was their intention to create a single mineral servitude on the parent tract in that "all of the heirs would participate in any of the production from any portions of this tract." The court further found that this servitude on the parent tract was maintained by production through December 14, 1964; hence, the ten-year liberative prescription extinguished the mineral servitude on the parent tract, including the Leger tract, on December 14, 1974. The trial judge concluded that the deed from the Gaudet heirs to Leger did not create a new mineral servitude in favor of the Gaudets, but was a sale subject to an existing servitude on the parent tract; that when the servitude on the parent tract was extinguished because of liberative prescription of nonuse in 1974, the mineral rights to the Leger tract reverted to Leger, the then landowner. The lower court then rendered and signed a judgment recognizing Leger as the owner of the mineral rights in the Leger tract and entitled to the money deposited and to future royalty payments. The Gaudet heirs have appealed. We affirm.

On appeal the defendants, the Gaudet heirs, specify the following errors:

1. The trial court erred in concluding that the 1939 mineral lease (Stickney), coupled with production prior to the partition, did not preclude the creating of a mineral servitude in the 1941 partition.

2. The trial court erred in concluding that the partition created a single mineral servitude rather than seven separate mineral servitudes so that *707 the Grubb & Hawkins-Thibodaux Heirs No. 1 well was an "off-premises" well.

3. The trial court erred in concluding that the Gaudet heirs did not own at least a one-eighth mineral interest.

It is the royalty payments allocated to the Leger tract and the mineral rights in said tract that are the subject of the present controversy, which came about because of the act of sale conveying the Leger tract from the Gaudet heirs to Leger, dated July 19,1968, which contained this provision following the description of the land:

"LESS AND EXCEPT:

"All of the oil, gas and minerals, in, on and/or under the above described property. It is understood, however, that the exercise of the mineral rights herein reserved shall be by directional drilling; that this mineral reservation does not include the right to use the surface of the property."

The Leger tract had been acquired by the Gaudet heirs in the partition agreement between the widow and heirs of Prosper Thibodaux, dated June 12, 1941. In the partition agreement, the surface of the parent tract was divided into seven ½ by 40 arpent tracts, the surface of six of the tracts being transferred to six of the children of Prosper Thibodaux and the surface of the seventh tract being transferred to the Gaudet heirs. The following language is contained in the partition agreement:

"It is clearly understood and agreed between the parties hereto that the ownership in the oil, gas and minerals, and oil, gas and mineral rights, are not in any way changed or effected (sic) by this partition, and the co-parceners hereto, hereby declare and acknowledge that the oil, gas and mineral and oil, gas and mineral rights in each and every tract of land hereinabove allocated to each of him, her or them, is owned by the parties hereinafter named, in the proportion set out after each name, to-wit:" (names and proportions are given in a footnote)[3]

Further language from the Partition follows:

"And whereas the parties hereto, except Mathilde Toups Thibodaux, severally declare that they each acquired their interest in said property by inheritance from the late Prosper Thibodaux, as will be seen by Judgment of Possession signed August 23, 1940 by the Honorable Robert B. Butler, Judge of the 17th Judicial District Court in and for the Parish of Lafourche, Louisiana, in the matter entitled `Succession of Prosper Thibodaux No. 3777 Probate'.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
402 So. 2d 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-leger-lactapp-1981.