NOTE: Part VI Heading, Subpart A, and §2266 eff. until Jan. 1, 2026, upon
ratification of the const. amend. proposed by Acts 2024, No. 409.
PART VI. PROCEDURES TO QUIET TAX TITLE
SUBPART A. PROCEEDING TO QUIET TITLE
§2266. Procedure to quiet tax titles
A.(1) After expiration of the redemptive period, an acquiring person may institute
an ordinary proceeding against the tax sale parties whose interests the petitioner seeks to be
terminated. The petition shall contain a description of the property, the time and place of the
sale, and the name of the officer who made the sale, the page and record book and date of
filing of the tax sale certificate, and for adjudicated properties sold or donated by a political
subdivision, reference to the page of record book and date of filing of the sale or donation,
notice that the petitioner is the holder of tax sale title to the property by virtue of tax sale or
is the owner of the property by virtue of a sale or donation of adjudicated property, and notice
that the title and full ownership in the property will be confirmed unless a proceeding to
annul is instituted within six months after the date of service of the petition and citation.
This suit shall be brought in the parish in which the property is located unless it lies in two
or more parishes, in which case this suit may be instituted in either of the parishes.
(2) The petition and citation shall be served as in ordinary suits; however, if a tax
sale party is a nonresident of the state, is unknown, or his residence is unknown, the court
shall appoint a curator ad hoc to represent him and receive service. The curator shall receive
a reasonable fee for his services to be fixed by the court in each suit, which shall be taxed as
costs of suit. If no proceeding to annul the sale has been instituted after the lapse of six
months after the date of service of petition and citation, judgment shall be rendered quieting
and confirming the title and the full ownership interest therein.
B. In all cases when tax titles have been quieted by prescription of five years under
the provisions of Article VII, Section 25 of the Louisiana Constitution, the purchaser, donee,
or his heirs or assigns may, either obtain a judgment of the court confirming the title by suit
in the manner and form in Subsection A of this Section, except that the delay for answer shall
be ten days instead of six months, provided that the failure to bring suit shall in no manner
affect such prescriptive titles.
C. The petitioner may file a notice of lis pendens with the recorder of mortgages of
the parish in which the property is located. A transfer, mortgage, lien, privilege, or other
encumbrance filed after the filing of the notice of lis pendens shall not affect the property.
The recorder of mortgages or the recorder of conveyances shall cancel, erase, terminate, or
release the acts upon request of the petitioner.
NOTE: Part VI Heading, Subpart A, and §2266 eff. Jan. 1, 2026, upon ratification
of the const. amend. proposed by Acts 2024, No. 409.
PART VI. PROCEDURES TO ENFORCE TAX LIEN
CERTIFICATE
§2266. Repealed by Acts 2024, No. 774, §2, see Act.
Acts 2008, No. 819, §1, eff. Jan. 1, 2009; Acts 2024, No. 774, §§1, 2, see Act.