Williams' Heirs v. Zengel

42 So. 153, 117 La. 599, 1906 La. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 18, 1906
DocketNo. 15,893
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 42 So. 153 (Williams' Heirs v. Zengel) 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
Williams' Heirs v. Zengel, 42 So. 153, 117 La. 599, 1906 La. LEXIS 738 (La. 1906).

Opinion

PROVO STY. J.

There are two petitions, an original and a supplemental. In the original petition the plaintiffs alleged that they were “the holders, owners, and possessors” of certain real estate which they described, and that the defendants had slandered, and were continuing to slander, their title. They did not set forth their title, and did not say how • long their possession had lasted. The slander was alleged to consist in that the property had been inventoried as belonging to the defendant succession. Damages were prayed against the succession and against Frank Zengel, its administrator, individually. The individual responsibility of the administrator was alleged to have resulted from the fact that it was he who had caused the property to be inventoried, and that he had done so maliciously, well knowing that plaintiffs were the owners of it. The prayer of the petition was that the defendants “be ordered to establish their said pretensions of ownership, and that, in default thereof, petitioners have judgment perpetually enjoining said defendants from disturbing them in their said possession of said property, and for $2,100 damages.”

Defendants excepted on the grounds:

(1) No cause of action.
(2) “Plaintiffs are not in possession of the property described in their petition, nor have they been in such possession for the twelve months next preceding the institution of their suit, and therefore they have no right to resort to an action in slander of title.”

It is observed that this exception does not address itself to the want of allegation of possession, but to the want of possession in fact, by plaintiffs, so that it would seem to have been, not an exception, but an answer to the merits. It was, however, dealt with as an exception to the sufficiency of the allegations. The court ruled on it as follows:

“It is ordered that the exception of no cause of action be maintained to the extent only of ordering plaintiffs to amend their petition by setting forth the nature of their possession as well as their title to the property in controversy and that the other exception of defendant be overruled without prejudice to urge same hereafter.”

Thereupon the plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition. They set forth their title, and alleged that their possession ■ had been by virtue of same, and had lasted for more than one year. They repeated, in the same words, the prayer of their original petition.

In this supplemental petition they included property not embraced in the original petition; and this additional property was alleged to be held by one of the plaintiffs in severalty, in which respect it differed from [603]*603that included in the original petition, which was alleged to be held by the plaintiffs jointly.

Defendants prayed oyer of the titles thus alleged, and also that the plaintiffs be required to file a plat showing that the property claimed by them, which they described as land subdivided into streets and squares, was the same property as that inventoried in the succession of Naylor, which was described merely by boundaries, as an ordinary tract of land.

The court made an order granting the prayer for oyer, but subsequently revoked this order, for the reason that, the suit being in slander of title, and as such founded, not on title, but on mere possession, the defendants had no right to demand the oyer of plaintiffs’ titles.

The defendants then pleaded to the jurisdiction of the court ratione materiae et personae, and also filed the following exceptions:

First. That the petition fails to state the nature of plaintiffs’ possession; fails to give the date of its commencement; fails to state any actual possession, or the date thereof; fails to set out the date of any registry of title in the conveyance office as a basis of ■civil possession.

. Second. That the amended petition includes property not included in the original petition; and same should be stricken out.

Third. The two petitions together fail to ■show a cause of action.

Fourth. Misjoinder of parties plaintiff; the plaintiffs having no common interest, especially as to the additional property claimed by Watts alone.

Fifth. Misjoinder of parties defendant, Frank Zengel, individually, having no common interest with Frank Zengel, curator; the only party in interest being the succession of Naylor, whereof, moreover, Frank Zengel is not the curator, but the administrator. •

Sixth. No cause of action, for the reason that the property, claimed by plaintiffs is not identified by description as being the same as that claimed by defendants; the plaintiffs’ property being described as subdivided into squares and streets, and that of defendants as an ordinary tract of land.

Later defendants filed the following exception:

“Now come defendants and except to plaintiffs’ petition on the ground that plaintiffs are estopped from bringing this suit by reason of their having instituted two petitory actions against defendants for the same property, first, in the estate of John C. Naylor, No. 74,400, in this court, and, second, by their opposition to defendants’ appointment as curator or administrator in the succession of John C. Naylor, No. 483, district court, parish of Ascension, all afterwards dismissed.”

All the exceptions were tried together. On the trial the defendants offered in evidence the records of the two proceedings referred to in the last above-mentioned exception.

The learned judge a quo overruled the plea to the jurisdiction and the plea of estoppel, and, as to the succession of Naylor, the plea of no cause of action, and sustained the plea of misjoinder of plaintiffs, and also that of no cause of action as to Zengel individually. He rendered judgment of nonsuit as to the estate of Naylor, and of - dismissal as against Zengel individually.

The appeal has been taken by plaintiffs.

In this court defendants filed an answer to the appeal, asking that those of the exceptions which the lower court overruled be sustained, and that, instead of a nonsuit as to the estate of Naylor, there be a final dismissal.

This motion to strike out is the first matter calling for our attention. We find that the case was fixed for argument for the 30th of January, 3906; that six days before that date, namely, on the 24th day of January, the counsel for plaintiffs and appellants wrote to the counsel for defendants and ap[605]*605pellees, proposing a reassignment, and that the counsel for defendants and appellees con-sented, and that on the 30th of January a written memorandum to that effect was executed; that the case was thereupon reassigned for May, 1906; and that the appellees filed the answer in question on March 12, 1906.

The ground of the motion to strike out is that the answer was filed too late; the Code Prac. art. 890, requiring that the answer to ■an appeal should he filed at least three days before the day fixed for argument.

In the case of Des Allemands Lumber -Company v. Morgan City Timber Company ante, p. 1, 41 South. 332, it was held that, where before the expiration of the day for answering the assignment is agreed to be •set aside, the time for answering will be computed with reference to the subsequent assignment. The answer was therefore in time, and the motion to strike out miust be denied.

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Bluebook (online)
42 So. 153, 117 La. 599, 1906 La. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-heirs-v-zengel-la-1906.