Walmsley v. Pan American Petroleum Corporation

153 So. 2d 375, 244 La. 513, 1963 La. LEXIS 2403
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1963
Docket46393
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 153 So. 2d 375 (Walmsley v. Pan American Petroleum Corporation) 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
Walmsley v. Pan American Petroleum Corporation, 153 So. 2d 375, 244 La. 513, 1963 La. LEXIS 2403 (La. 1963).

Opinions

SUMMERS, Justice.

Plaintiffs, Hughes P. Walmsley, the duly appointed, qualified and acting Receiver of Gulf & Bayou Cook Oyster Company, Ltd., a Louisiana corporation, in Receivership; Rudolph J. Schultz, Jr., Clyde W. Thurmon, James M. Barnett and Horace Gary Small, residents of Louisiana, instituted this suit, which they characterize as one to remove a cloud from title or an action to quiet title. They seek to have an oil, gas and mineral lease, executed by the State Mineral Board of the State of Louisiana, decreed null, void and cancelled insofar as it affects certain properties in Plaquemines Parish.

The defendants are the State Mineral Board, as lessor, and the present lessees under the questioned lease, the Tidewater Oil Company, Gulf Oil Corporation and Pan American Petroleum Corporation. The State Mineral Board, Tidewater Oil Company and Gulf Oil Corporation filed an exception of non-joinder of an indispensable party and an exception of no cause or right of action. In particularizing their exceptions they set forth that the State of Louisiana, and not the State Mineral Board, has title to the lands leased; that the suit for cancellation of the lease will necessarily involve a determination of the title to the lands affected and, therefore, the State of Lousiana is an indispensable party under Article 641 of the LSA-Code of Civil Procedure.

The trial court maintained the exceptions and dismissed plaintiffs’ suit. The court of appeal annulled and set aside that judgment and remanded the case to the district court to allow either plaintiffs or defendants to make the State a party as defendant in the main demand, or as third-party defendant in a third-party action un[517]*517der LSA-Code of Civil Procedure Articles 1111 to 1116; and to permit the attorney general, if he so desires, to intervene in behalf of the State; the case thereafter to be proceeded with according to law. 144 So.2d 627 (1963). On plaintiffs’application we granted writs to review that judgment.

In their petition plaintiffs set forth that they are the owners of an undivided 2462/2770 interest of stated proportions in the following described property:

West Half (Wj4) of Section Forty (40), Township Twenty (20) South, Range Twenty-eight (28) East, situated in the Parish of Plaquemines, State of Louisiana, according to the Official Plat of Survey of said lands.

The petition sets forth in detail plaintiffs’ recorded chain of title to these lands, which is based upon a patent dated February 13, 1878, granted by the State of Louisiana to Alesandre Travirani. It is shown that the State Mineral Board purporting to act on behalf of the State of Louisiana, executed the oil, gas and mineral lease in question on July 26, 1956, and the lease is now owned by defendants, Tidewater, Gulf and Pan Am as lessees. The property affected by the lease includes the whole of the property above described, and therefore includes the interest therein which is owned by plaintiffs.

The primary term of the lease is alleged to have expired on July 26, 1959, but there is no release of record. Defendants are claiming that the lease is being maintained by production of oil, gas and other minerals and defendants refuse to cancel this recorded lease.

Plaintiffs then show that, since they are the owners of the designated undivided interest, the State Mineral Board did not have authority to execute the lease affecting their interest; and Tidewater, Gulf and Pan Am have no right to claim the lease is valid. The recorded lease, it is alleged, casts upon plaintiffs’ title a cloud which they are entitled to have removed by an order cancelling the lease from the public records insofar as it purports to affect their interest ; and to that end they are entitled to have their interests decreed valid and to be decreed owners thereof free of any claim thereto by defendants arising from the lease of July 26, 1959.

The prayer of the petition then asks for judgment decreeing the lease “to be null, void and of no effect and cancelled and annulled” and “decreeing defendants * * * have no interest in and to said properties by virtue of said lease.”

The defendants, in support of their exception of non-joinder of an indispensable party, argue that, although plaintiffs characterize their action as one to remove cloud from title, that action is not available to them. This is so, they say, because plaintiffs’ petition shows that defendants are in corporeal [519]*519possession of the property and the action to remove cloud from title is available only against a defendant who is not in possession. They also contend that plaintiffs’ petition reflects that they are claiming title. What plaintiff has in reality alleged, they contend, is a petitory action inasmuch as plaintiffs claim title against a defendant who is in possession. Therefore, because plaintiffs’ suit is a petitory action, the title to the lands in question is at issue. The State Mineral Board, being merely an agent of the State, cannot stand in judgment when the State’s title to the lands is assailed.

The issue presented is whether the State is an indispensable party. The State is an indispensable party if this is a petitory action as defendants contend. The State is not an indispensable party if this is an action to remove a, cloud from title as plaintiffs contend.

Thus it is noted that the defendants rely primarily upon two allegations in plaintiffs’ petition to bring plaintiffs’ action within the definition of a petitory action. One is plaintiffs’ allegation that they claim ownership, and the other is the allegation which defendants say is, in effect, an allegation that defendants are in possession of the property.

The LSA-Code of Civil Procedure defines the petitory action as follows:

“Art. 3651. The petitory action is one brought by a person who claims the ownership, but who is not in possession, of immovable property or of a real right, against another who is in possession or who claims the ownership thereof adversely, to obtain judgment recognizing the plaintiff’s ownership.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The defendants assert that plaintiffs here have alleged that they are persons who claim ownership and that plaintiffs have alleged that defendants are parties, who are in possession within the contemplation of Article 3651, supra, and, in so doing, plaintiffs have thereby classified their action as a petitory action.

In support of the contention that plaintiffs have alleged that this action is “brought by a person who claims ownership, but who is not in possession”, defendants refer to paragraph 15 of the petition, wherein it is alleged “That under the laws of the State of Louisiana your petitioners are entitled to have the title to their respective interest in the properties described in Article 2 recognized and decreed valid, and to be declared tire owners thereof free of any claim thereto by any and all of the defendants herein under and by virtue of the oil, gas and mineral lease * * * (which is sought to be cancelled) and the said lease should be cancelled and erased from the public records of the State of Louisiana insofar as same purports to [521]*521cover and affect the properties particularly described in Article 2 above.” (Parentheses by the court.) Article 2 sets forth “That petitioners are the owners of” the property heretofore described as the West Half of Section Forty, Township Twenty South, Range Twenty-eight East, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
153 So. 2d 375, 244 La. 513, 1963 La. LEXIS 2403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walmsley-v-pan-american-petroleum-corporation-la-1963.