117 So. 229 | La. | 1928
This is a sequel — in fact, a repetition — of the suit of Liles et al. v. Producers' Oil Co. et al.,
In the former suits, Liles et al. v. *295
Producers' Oil Co.,
If the plaintiffs had based their cause of action upon a contract or quasi contract, by suing for the amount of money due them under the contract of lease, by virtue of which the defendant and its predecessor produced and appropriated the oil, the plaintiffs would have been compelled thereby to ratify the contract and to claim only the royalty due them under it.
Our opinion is that the plea of res judicata, filed by the defendant in the district court, should have been sustained. The defendant also pleaded that, even though the plaintiffs had the right to elect to bring the action either ex delicto or quasi ex contractu, the plaintiffs, having elected to bring the action ex delicto, and having thus recovered all that was due them except that for which the action ex delicto was barred by prescription, were thereby precluded from bringing the action also quasi ex contractu, for the amount claimed but not recovered in the action ex delicto. That proposition seems unanswerable. A person whose property has been wrongfully taken and appropriated by another, and who has the right either to sue for trespass or to sue for the property or the value of the property received, cannot maintain both actions, either at the same time or one after the other.
The judgment appealed from is annulled, and the plaintiffs' demand is rejected, and their suit dismissed, at their cost. *297