43 La. Ann. 962 | La. | 1891
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a petitory action brought by the heirs of Antoine Ynogosa to recover from the defendant a certain tract of land in possession of defendants which they aver was the property of their ancestor and has never been alienated by him.
The defendant claims as owner under a chain of titles running-back to Ynogosa, and also pleads the prescriptions of thirty and of. ten years.
Ynogosa acquired the land by purchase from th3 estate of Widow Jean Savoie in 1829 by a deed which describes the land as follows:
• “ A tract of land situated, lying and being in the afpresaid parish on the Bayou Caranero, bounded on one side by land of Augustin Guidry. and on the other side by land of John H. H. Smith, having seven arpents front by forty arpents in depth — together with the dwelling house and yard fence thereon, reserving all other improvements thereon, being'the same tract of land on which the said deceased last resided.
“ And also sixty arpents of woodland, that is to'say three arpents front by twenty in depth, bounded on one side by land of Widow David Guidry and on the other side and on one end by land of Jean Savoie.”
In 1848, Ynogosa sold to Joseph and Neville Boudreau by the following description which we translate from its original French: “ A certain tract of land established as a plantation, situated on the-Bayou Carenero, measuring four arpents front by twenty in depth,.
The price was the- gross sum of $2500. The first question that presents itself is whether this was a sale per aversionem or a sale of so many acres.
Plaintiffs claim that it simply transferred four arpents front out of the seven arpents front owned by Ynogosa, and that the remaining three arpents front by forty in depth were hot conveyed, but remained the property of their said ancestor.
The defendant claims that it was a sale per aversionem of the whole tract purchased by Ynogosa from the estate of Savoie as declared in the act, which, as a whole, was “ established as a plantation,” as also declared in the act.
The description of the thing sold is obscure and ambiguous. The Code, Article 2474, declares: “The seller is bound to explain himself clearly respecting the extent of his obligations; any obscure or ambiguous clause is construed against him.”
Upon its face the sale was intended to be per aversionem. It is made for a gross sum and is described by specific boundaries. Johnston vs. Quarles, 3 La. 91; Curator vs. Wells, 4 La. 536.
If the porthern boundary had been correctly stated as being bounded by lands of Guidry, there would have been no room for dispute. The erroneous statement of the number of arpents front could, in that case, have made no difference. The only difficulty arises from the statement of the northern boundary as being “the public domain.” But that statement is totally inconsistent with the theory of plaintiffs that the sale embraced only four arpents next to the southern line of John H. H. Smith, because, in that case, necessarily the northern boundary would have been by land of the vendor.
In truth, it is quite evident that the variances in description, both
The evidence is conclusive that the entire tract was embraced in •the plantation; that the cultivated land was included between fences on the northern and southern boundaries, and that several of the plantation buildings were located on the northern three arpents front now claimed by plaintiffs.
It is further shown that Ynogosa pointed out the boundaries to. the purchaser, Boudreau, and delivered to him the whole tract; that he asked permission to remain for a time after the sale in the house,, which, according to the preponderance of testimony, was on the land now claimed by plaintiffs; that the permission was granted, and that he was taken ill and died there. There have been numerous translations of title, and all the purchasers have possessed and, used the entire tract as one undivided plantation; have maintained • fences on the northern boundary, and have continuously cultivated-parts of the land claimed by plaintiff. A large number of witnesses from the neighborhood testify to these facts, and all agree-that the whole tract had been always regarded as one plantation and as belonging to one owner.
We are thoroughly satisfied the sale by Ynogosa was intended to. be a sale per aversionem of the entire tract, as one established plantation, for a gross price in no manner relating to the number of arpents, ahd that it operated a complete divestiture of Ynogosa’s title.
The youngest of the minor plaintiffs attained majority in 1869, and much more than ten years had elapsed before this suit was brought or any claim set up on this land.
We think the defendant and her authors possessed all the elements of possessors as owners in good faith under a just title as defined in Articles 3473, 3478, 3451 and 503 of the Oivil Oode, and her plea ofi
Equally futile is the assault upon the possession. It was complete,, continuous and uninterrupted.
The verdict and judgment appealed from were manifestly erroneous.
It is, therefore, ordered and decreed that the verdict and judg-ment appealed from be annulled and set aside, and it is now decreed that' there be judgment in favor of defendant, and rejecting the-demand of plaintiffs at their cost in both courts.