Case Title: Louisiana State Mineral Board v. Albarado

Citation: 180 So. 2d 700, 248 La. 551

Docket Number: 

State: louisiana

Court: Louisiana Supreme Court

Date: 1965-12-13T00:00:00Z

Document:
180 So. 2d 700 (1965) 248 La. 551 LOUISIANA STATE MINERAL BOARD v. Shirley E. ALBARADO et al. No. 47757. Supreme Court of Louisiana. December 13, 1965. *701 Paul C. Tate, Tate & Tate, Mamou, John E. Jackson, Baldwin J. Allen and John E. Jackson, Jr., New Orleans, for intervenors-appellants. Charles C. Jaubert, Lake Charles, Plough, Jumonville & Mulla, Moreau J. Jumonville, New Orleans, Clarence E. Strauch, Metairie, James A. Bowes, Harvey, for respondents. HAMLIN, Justice: In the exercise of our supervisory jurisdiction (Art. VII, Sec. 11, La.Const. of 1921), we directed Certiorari to the Court of Appeal, Fourth Circuit, in order that we might review its judgment insofar as it applies to the demands of Ulysses Pierrottie.[1] 173 So. 2d 5. This suit is one of many in protracted litigation, which has been previously reported; therefore, only those facts necessary for a determination of the present proceeding will be stated. On November 7, 1955, in the case of Dugas v. Powell, 228 La. 748, 84 So. 2d 177 (rehearing denied December 12, 1955), this Court recognized the heirs (collateral heirs) of Francois Zenon Boutte to be the owners of a certain tract of land, comprising approximately 400 acres on Barataria Island in Jefferson Parish. The Louisiana State Mineral Board, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 30:181, now repealed by Act 358 of 1960, then granted an oil, gas and mineral lease to The California Company on February 24, 1960. The lease allegedly covered some 253 acres of the Boutte Tract. Thereafter, on June 26, 1962, the Louisiana State Mineral Board instituted the present concursus proceeding. It alleged that it had received $103,753.67 as a bonus for the lease, had accumulated interest in the amount of $2,997.11, and believed that it would continue to receive royalties from the lease. It prayed that $106,150.57 be accepted and ordered placed in the Registry of the Court; that it be relieved of all liability, present and future, to defendants and all other persons; that attorneys be appointed to represent non-residents and absentees; and, that certain enumerated persons be cited. Approximately ten persons, including Relator, Ulysses Pierrottie, intervened in this concursus proceeding. They asserted money demands for services performed and monies advanced in the litigation as well as the securing of the instant lease with The California Company *702 The trial court recognized approximately 1,830 persons as heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte and fixed the proportionate interest of each in the Estate[2] (Ulysses Pierrottie was recognized as an heir of an infinitesimal proportion). No appeal was taken from that part of the judgment. The trial court rejected the interventions, holding that its judgment should in no wise or manner affect or impair the rights of the parties thereto under any existing assignment of interest, power of attorney, or attorney-client contract. It further held that the rights and obligations resulting from private instruments were reserved to the contracting parties in whose favor they enured. On appeal by Intervenors, the Court of Appeal reversed the judgment of the trial court with regard to the intervention of Alvin A. Cobb. It affirmed the judgment in all other respects. Herein, Relator contends that the Court of Appeal erred as follows: In his petition of intervention, Ulysses Pierrottie alleged in part the following: In rejecting the above intervention, the trial court stated in its reasons for judgment the following: The Court of Appeal held that none of the Intervenors could qualify under the so-called "fund" doctrine, In re Interstate Trust & Banking Co., 235 La. 825, 106 So. 2d 276. In speaking of Ulysses Pierrottie's demand to recover in contract or quasi contract on quantum meruit, it stated: "Obviously Mr. Pierrottie has not alleged nor does he claim to hold an assignment of interest in the land or the fund and has not shown a right to participate as an intervenor in the concursus proceeding. The judgment rejecting his intervention but reserving his rights under private contract or power of attorney is correct and must be affirmed." Counsel for Ulysses Pierrottie, in brief and in oral argument, submit that a token allowance of expenses would be acceptable. This accession is made because of the difficulty of proof of their claim.[3] *704 The evidence of record reflects that at the time of trial, Ulysses Pierrottie was seventy-nine years of age. He stated that he began the performance of his services for the Boutte Heirs in 1930; we gather that the services consisted in substantial part of making up a family tree of the Boutte Heirs and renewing it from year to year. Testimony to this effect is corroborated by some of the Boutte Heirs witnesses of record. Relator testified that he traveled through seven states in which he checked marriage certificates and birth records. Pierrottie's services were initially provoked by the desire of an oil company to develop an oil field on the Boutte acreage. Included in the evidence of record are two Powers of Attorney given to Ulysses Pierrottie by several hundred Boutte Heirs; the original, dated November 10, 1938, is supplemented by the second which gives Pierrottie the right to grant oil, gas and mineral leases.[4] *705 A $9,000.00 trapping lease was executed, and The California Company advanced a $10,000.00 bonus for the potential securing of an oil, gas and mineral lease. Of the amounts received, Herman Guillory, attorney for Pierrottie, was paid $6,000.00 for his expenses; the remainder was distributed among a number of the Boutte Heirs. Pierrottie traveled extensively to make the distribution. He stated that except for $300.00 advanced to him by Mr. Guillory's daughter, he never received any expense money; he did not keep accurate records and stated that some of his receipts were stolen. All in all, Pierrottie calculated that he actually spent $47,178.64. He testified: The record contains an account by Ulysses Pierrottie, which sets forth the time traveled by him, the amounts advanced for expenses, the miles traveled, the persons seen, and the purposes for which the many trips were taken. It is not in chronological order, nor is it summarized, but it reflects his activities, services and efforts for more than thirty yearsall done for the Boutte Heirs. The substance of Pierrottie's testimony with respect to what he expected to receive is that he hoped to someday receive royalties. Pierrottie testified that he, instead of the heirs, filed an application with the Mineral Board to advertise and lease the land and requested that the land be leased for no less than $100,000.00.[5] Ulysses Pierrottie's present counsel sent a mimeographed inquiry to persons purporting to have signed the Powers of Attorney, supra; this inquiry states in part: A number of replies denied any obligation to Ulysses Pierrottie. Some replies stated that the signature on the Powers of Attorney were those of their ancestors; others stated that Pierrottie's work was voluntary, without authority or consent; others stated that the writers had employed their own representatives to handle their claims. We conclude from the evidence of record that Ulysses Pierrottie acted for the benefit of all of the heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte. Insofar as the record reflects, there was no expression of prohibition to his work by any heir when he commenced his undertaking in the early 1930's. The evidence clearly discloses that although Pierrottie was an heir to a minute degree, he did not act purely for his own interest. As stated supra, he only had hopes or expectations of eventually receiving some royalty interests. Without contradiction, the record discloses that Ulysses Pierrottie was instrumental in bringing about the recognition of the heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte as such; he was also substantially responsible for the heirs' success in the case of Dugas v. Powell, 228 La. 748, 84 So. 2d 177; and, he assisted in part in bringing about the present lease of the land to The California Company. The Powers of Attorney granted to Ulysses Pierrottie by a large number of the heirs were not exclusive contracts. He did not work exclusively for the signers, nor did he agree to work exclusively for them. Cf. Succession of Kernan, 105 La. 592, 30 So. 239. It is certainly reasonable to assume that those who signed the Powers of Attorney contemplated that Ulysses Pierrottie would be remunerated in some form. "When one renders services beneficial to another, at his request, an implied contract is raised for remuneration. * *" Beall v. Van Bibber, 19 La.Ann. 434. Cf. David v. Southern Import Wine, La.App., 171 So. 180.[6] Those who did not sign the Powers of Attorney were enriched by Pierrottie's work; as owners, they reaped advantages from Pierrottie's services as a whole. Unless they prohibited the work, which they did not, supra, these heirs cannot be enriched without paying some form of remuneration. The law does not allow one to enrich himself at another's expense. Beall v. Van Bibber, supra; Bauman, Inc. v. Tilly, La.App., 185 So. 504. See, 37 TLR 59. It is true that a number of the heirs engaged their own representatives and attorneys, but we find that the services of these *707 parties were, in the beginning, supplementary and auxiliary to those of Ulysses Pierrottie. We do not find that the trial court and the Court of Appeal were correct in rejecting Pierrottie's claim in its entirety and holding that he had not borne the burden of proving unjust enrichment. We agree that he cannot recover under the "fund" doctrine[7] (In re Interstate Trust & Banking Company, 235 La. 825, 106 So. 2d 276; Louisiana State Mineral Board v. Abadie, La.App., 164 So.2d 159), but we find that he is entitled to some remuneration on the basis of quantum meruit. Because of the large number of heirs involved and the length of time this litigation has been pending, it is not feasible to remand this case for the fixing of the separate amounts due by each heir to Ulysses Pierrottie. "In the absence of a contract the compensation due Plaintiff for services rendered to Defendant must be fixed by resorting to equity." Haase v. Brumfield, La.App., 137 So. 2d 680. See, Gilmore v. Gasquet, 178 La. 437, 151 So. 763. Ulysses Pierrottie is asking that his fee be fixed at $10,000.00. Under the facts and circumstances of this case, we find that this amount is neither excessive nor unreasonable. In the exercise of our discretion and in the interest of justice, we will fix the amount due him at that sum. For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Fourth Circuit, rejecting the intervention of Ulysses Pierrottie, is reversed and set aside. It is now ordered that Ulysses Pierrottie be paid $10,000.00 out of the sum to be distributed to the Heirs of Francois Zenon Boutte from the amount on deposit in the Registry of the Court. Relator's proportionate costs of these proceedings to be paid from the *708 amount on deposit in the Registry of the Court. HAMITER, J., dissents, being of the opinion that the judgment of the Court of Appeal is correct. HAWTHORNE, J., dissents. HAWTHORNE, Justice (dissenting). In my view the judgment of the Court of Appeal affirming a judgment of the district court which rejected the intervention of Ulysses Pierrottie, expressly reserving to him all rights under contracts of employment or powers of attorney, should be affirmed. [1] A number of other parties were similarly affected by the judgment of the Court of Appeal. They did not apply for Certiorari; hence, we shall only consider the application of Relator, Ulysses Pierrottie. [2] The Court of Appeal, 173 So. 2d 5, 8, states, "Some of these interests, computed on the basis of $100,000.00, are as little as 11 cents and relatively few exceed $100.00. * * *" [3] In brief, counsel states:"Counsel readily admits that the valuation of the services rendered by Mr. Pierrottieor more properly speaking the valuation of the benefit derived by the heirs therefrom is difficult. The difficulty is increased by the fact that, theoretically at any rate, the Court does not have before it the question of determining the interest of the various claimants like Mr. Pierrottie in the lands from which the fund on deposit was derived. On this point, Mr. Pierrottie can do little but throw himself upon the mercy of the Court and abide by any reasonable determination made. We do, however, respectfully suggest that the Court give consideration to the possibility of assigning a fixed percentage to all claimants, including Mr. Pierrottie (assuming they are entitled to any) of the property and therefore of the fund, once and for all, andin addition theretothat the Court reimburse Mr. Pierrottie the expense incurred by him on behalf of all the heirs. Considering Mr. Pierrottie's contract at page 537 of the record, apparently contemplating a payment by him to attorneys on behalf of the heirs not in excess of 10%, we respectfully submit that a determination that Mr. Pierrottie is entitled to 10% of the present fund and of all funds subsequently realized would be just and equitable and within the intendment of the parties. If the matter were placed on this basis, we submit that a token allowance of expenses to Mr. Pierrottie in the amount of approximately TEN THOUSAND AND NO/100 ($10,000.00) DOLLARS would be justified by the evidence in the record. Thus Mr. Pierrottie would realize from the present proceedings approximately TWENTY THOUSAND AND NO/100 ($20,000.00) DOLLARS, less than half of his own valuation of his interest and expenses. Since the fund on deposit represents only the bonus under a mineral lease on a substantial parcel of land, Mr. Pierrottie would have to look to further revenues from the property for the recovery of the balance of his demand." [4] "* * * we the undersigned heirs of Antoine Boutte, Sr. and or Louise Hyacinthe Boutte, Antoine Hilaire Boutte, Modeste Boutte, Louis Hilaire Boutte, Francois Zenon Boutte, Juan Leon Boutte, Celestina Boutte, have made, constituted and appointed, and by these presents do make constitute and appoint (Ulysses Pierrotti and Felix Pierrotti), the true and lawful attorneys for us, and in our names, place and stead, to conduct an investigation of the title of land emanating from whatever sources to, Antoine Boutte and or Francois Zenon Boutte, and particularly the title of land emanating from the Spanish Government, confirmed by an act of congress to Francois Zenon Boutte, from whom Louise Hyacinthe Boutte, Antoine Hilaire Boutte, Modeste Boutte, Louis Hilaire Boutte, Juan Leon Boutte and Celestina Boutte, inherited as brothers and sisters; and to recover whatever property may have been left by the said Antoine Boutte, Sr., and or Francois Zenon Boutte at their death, and especially to recover the property left by the said Francois Zenon Boutte, emanating from the patents issued by the Federal Government, which patents is of record, and to institute and prosecute suits to obtain said property and to institute and prosecute suits for the partition of said property and to proceed to the sale and disposition of the property forming the succession, or any single piece, part or portion of the said property, either at private or public sale, at auction or otherwise, and to fix the terms and conditions of such a sale, and to receive the price and to pay the debts charges and expenses of said succession; to employ counsel, if necessary and to appear in court to prosecute or defend as occasion may require; to take all steps or requisite for the partition or division of the property, real, personal or mixed, and effects of the succession of said deceased; to employ counsel if necessary, and to pay counsel not to exceed 10% of the amount each of us recovers from the said succession. "IT IS UNDERSTOOD, that a contract already exists employing attorneys for the prosecution of this estate; that said attorneys, already holds a contract of 331/3% of whatsoever amount they recover; that there exists another contract of 62/3% for the real estate firm who gathered up the family tree; and that, therefore, the authorization given by this document to our attorneys Ulysses Pierrotti and Felix Pierrotti, to hire counsel and to pay 10% on a contingent base of the amount of the property recovered, means 10% of the whole, before the 40% already contracted, before the existence of this document, is removed from the whole amount recovered in said succession. "We the undersigned heirs of the said Antoine Boutte and or Francois Zenon Boutte, further give and grant unto the said attorneys, Ulysses Pierrotti and Felix Pierrotti, full power and authorization, to do and perform all and every act and thing whatsoever requisite and necessary to be done in and about the premises, as fully to all intents and purposes as we might or could do if personally present, with full power of substitution and revocation, hereby ratifying and confirming all that the said attorneys or their substitute shall lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof." First Power of Attorney, dated November 10, 1938. "We the undersigned heirs of Francois Zennon Boutte declare that on November 10, 1938, we granted a Power of Attorney to Ulysse Pierrottie and Felix Pierrottie; * * * "That suit has been instituted and judgment has been obtained, placing the heirs of Francois Zennon Boutte into possession of the following described property, two-wit: "* * * * * "That we, the undersigned, desire to amend the Power of Attorney granted to the said Ulysse Pierrottie and Felix Pierrottie on November 10, 1938, by giving to said parties the additional power and right to grant oil, gas, and mineral leases, covering and affecting the above-described property on terms and conditions and for considerations to be decided by them and to do any and all acts necessary in the premises. There is also given to the said Ulysse Pierrottie and Felix Pierrottie the additional right to execute any lease of any nature whatsoever, including trapping leases for the terms and conditions and for the considerations to be decided by them." The record does not reflect the exact date of this second Power of Attorney. [5] "Q. Now, before this, Mr. Pierrottie, do you know that that lease was granted under the provisions of Act 531 of 1952, under which it is provided where more than five hundred people own a tract of land, any fifty of them can make application for the lease. Do you know that that's the way the lease was advertised? "A. I don't know; I am not acquainted with that. I made personal agreement with Bonnecarrere." [6] "Our conclusion is that, where an attorney is employed to prepare articles of incorporation and the corporation comes into existence as a result of those services, the corporation is bound, as by a quasi contract, for the payment of those services on a fair basis." [7] This is conceded by his counsel.