4 La. Ann. 248 | La. | 1849
The judgment of the court (King, J. absent,) was pronounced
by
This is a petitory action. The plaintiffs, as legitimase decendants and forced heirs of Andrew and Mary Hughey, deceased, «jlái-m six hundred and forly acres of land in possession of the defendant, and allegedito have formed part of the community which existed between the said Andrewmná Mary. The defendant, and tire warrantors made parties to the suit, do not-seriously contest the heirship of the plaintiffs, but they deny the title alleged, and. aver that, if it ever existed, it was not in the community, but in Andrew Hughey-alone, who has since been legally divested of it in the following manner: 1st. By;a judgment in favor of John W. Hall against him, for two hundred and forty arpents thereof. 2d. By a sheriff’s sale, of three hundred and sixty acres of the land, made on the 2d day of June, 1824, under a twelve months’ bond, given by him in satisfaction of a judgment obtained against him by W. Wood, on the 9th of October, 1821. 3d. Bya.tax-snle made onthc 3d June, 1824, by the tax-collector,■■df live hundred
I. The first question which we will consider is, whether the plaintiffs have made out a title in the community or in Andrew Hughey. They have shown a probate sale of the succession of Joshua Barker, dated the 9th of March, 1816, and pending the marriage, showing the adjudication to Hughey of three hundred acres of the land in controversy, more or less, this being at the time a mere settlement right., The defendant objected to the introduction of this evidence on various grounds, which were overruled by the court, and we think properly overruled. The defendant, claiming under Hughey, cannot controvert his title. Crane et al. v Marshall, 1 Mart. N. S. 578. Verret’s Heirs v. Candolle, 4 Mart. N. S. 402. Bedford v. Urquhart et al. 8 La. 237.
This purchase was made during the existence of the marriage, and, after its dissolution, to wit, on the 8th May, 1822, the United States made to Hughey individually a donation of six hundred and forty acres of land, upon the original settlement of Joshua Barker. The plaintiffs contend that, the rights of Barker having been acquired by the community, the subsequent donation to Hughey must enure to its benefit. The donation was made at a time when the laws of Spain were still in force in Louisiana. Those laws provide that: Toda cosa que el marido y muger ganaren 6 compraren, estando de consuno, háyanlo ambos por medio; y si fuere donadío de Rey 6 de otri, y lo diese á ambos, háyanlo marido y muger; y si lo diere al uno, hádalo solo aquel á quien lo diere.” Nov. Recop. lib. 10, tit. 4, law 1. This law expressly ordains that things given by the sovereign shall not be common to the luisband and wife, but shall belong exclusively to the individual to whom the king gives them.
This question first came before the Supreme Court in the case of Gayoso v. Garcia, 1 Mart. N. S. 334, and was decided against the community. This deci. sion was maintained in the cases of Rouquier v. Rouquier, 5 Martin N. S. 98, and Frique v. Hopkins et al. 4 Ib. N. S. 212. In the last case, the court went into an elaborate examination of the laws of Spain on this subject, and we have no doubt of the correctness of the opinion to which they came; and the rule applies to all cases coming within its letter, except those where the king gave in remuneration of military services rendered to him by the husband, when he served without pay and was supported at the expense oí the community. Fuero Real b. 3, tit. 3, law 3. Febrero, p. 1, c. 1, par. 22, no 239. In the same case the court held, on the authority of Febrero, that the right of the wife in ameliorations made on the property, is quite distinct from her right to the property, and that the augmentation of value, given by the common labor, alone made a part of the acquests and gains. The distinction attempted to be drawn, that the improvements in this case were not made by the husband and wife but were purchased by them, does not appear to us to affect the principle. The land was given without any price paid for it, and not in renumeration of any services rendered, and-the consideration which may have induced the donation, or the fact that the
II. The plaintiffs contend that-the judgment in favor of Hall cannot prejudice them : 1st. Because the indentity of the land is not shown. 2d. Because the title of Hall is alleged to be derived from Larclois and Andrew Robertson, and, as no title or confirmation is shown in these parties, the confession of Hughey that they had a title is not binding upon them. The land claimed by Hall is described in the petition as having six arpents front on the Mississippi river opposite the mouth of Red river, and then in possession of the defendant, by his tenant. The defendant compromised this suit, and, in execution of the compromise, made the judicial admission of the existence of the plaintiff’s title upon which the judgment is based. We are of opinion that the evidence of the identity of the land is, prima facie, sufficient, and that the plaintiffs are estopped by the judicial admission of Hughey that the title was in John W. Hall. Purchasers under Hall were not bound to enquire into the truth of that admission. It was enough for them that it stood on the records of the court, and that a judgment had been rendered upon it. 1 Greenleaf, Evid. no. 27. 2 Annual, 446. 8 La. 422.
III. It is next urged that the sheriff’s sale in the suit of Wood v. Hughey conveys none of the land in controversy, and that there is no legal evidence in the record establishing the boundaries, or the-identify, of the land conveyed; that the judgment upon its face is unconstitutional, and can have no binding effect upon any one; and that the forms of law were not complied with, in the execution of said judgment. The land in the sheriff’s deed' is described as fronting on the Mississippi river, bounded east by lands of MeMasters and west by lands of Andrew Hughey, and containing three hundred and sixty acres. The testimony of Purvis shows that MeMasters lived half, or three-quarters, of a mile above the ferry-house opposite the mouth of Red river. This testimony, it is true, does not fix with precision the line of MeMasters, but it shows that the land sold was the eastern portion of the tract, and the line may easily be ascertained by reference to the survey and.location made by the United States.
The judgment in that case is in these words: “ A judgment by default having been rendered in this case, it is, therefore, ordered that judgment be rendered for the plaintiff for $596 40^, with eight per cent interest from 31st January, 1821, till paid, and costs of suit.” It is urged that the plaintiff did not prove his demand; that the judgment does not show that three judicial days elapsed after the default, and does not contain the reasons upon which it is founded, as required by the constitution of 1812.
Under the act of the Legislative Council passed, in 1805, regulating the practice of the late Superior Court, and still- in force when Wood instituted'his suit, in all cases of liquidated accounts or demands, when -no answer was filed, the allegations in the petition were to be taken pro confessis, and the judgment, rendered in consequence of the default of the defendant, became final after three days, in consequence of his negligence and sufferance, without any agency of the court. It has been repeatedly held that reasons need not be assigned in a judgment, which becomes final by lapse of time and operation of law on a judgment by default. Allard v. Ganucheau, 4 Mart. 662. Babin et al. v. Winchester, 7 La. 460. The informalities alleged after the judgment need not be noticed in detail, as it is evident that they are all covered by the prescription of ve years, under the act of. 1834.
We are of opinion that this exception should have been sustained. It is ti-ue the defendant proved that the original tax-roll, which the law requires to be de-, posited in the office of the parish judge, is not found there; but the certificate adduced disclbses the existence of a copy of it in the possession of the auditor, and an extr&cfifrom this copy properly certified, was the only admissible evidence. The law never allows the certificate of a mere matter of fact, given by a public Officer, to be admitted as evidence. If he was bound to record the fact, the proper evidence is a copy of the record duly authenticated; and as to matters which he was not bound to record, his certificate is merely the Statement of a private •persoii,-and, .therefore, inadmissible. 1 Greenleaf, Evid. nos. 498, 509.
If this’certificate had been properly in evidence, the description of five hundred fields of land on the Mississippi river, unsupported as it is by proof of possession,under thé sheriff’s Sale, or by any other evidence going to show its identity With the- land claimed, is too indefinite to pass the title. The want of proof of & proper assessment' and of á sufficient description of the land, where no actual possession hás followed, are not defects that can be cured by the prescription óf'fiye.years-, tinder the act Of 1834. In sales for taxes the assessment stands in lieu of the judgment in ordinary judicial sales, and the party relying upon a sale of that description is bound to show its existence and legality. Nancarrouw v. Weathersby, 6 Mart. N. S. 348. 7 La. 50. 10 La. 283.
It is unnecessary to determine whether this sale would be sufficient to support thé plé'a of prescription, as no possession has been shown under it.
On the 16th June, 1824', seven days after the' date of this sale, Bouis, the-purchaser, sold to Sterling, without warranty, Ms right, title and interest in and- to a certain tract of land exposed to public sale for taxes, and purchased by him. It does not appear that Sterling ever took actual possession, and, in 1834, he sold, also Without warranty, to Hartnanson, making an express reference to the act of sale from Bouis to him. This last sale, which embraces several titles, does not, ótt the face of it, purport to be a sale of land; but merely of claims to land, and the purchaser binds himself to incur all the- expenses attending the prosecution of those claims-. Under the deeds from? Bouis to Sterling, and from Starling to Hatfmahson, the purchaser was apprized of' the nature of his title and that it' Was defective. Titles of this kind cannot form the basis of prescription. 4 MaK. N. S. 213, 222. 5 La. 240, 247. 3 "Rob. 220. 4 Martin, 436. 10 Rob-. 80.
This action Whs Cbmmenced in 1842', and the defendant cannot have prescribed wnder Conveyances subsequent in date? to those already noticed.
It is, therefore, ordered that, the judgment in this case be reversed. It is further ordered that, the defendant be forever quieted in his possession and title, against all claims and pretensions of the plaintiffs, to the two hundred and forty arpents of land recovered by John W. Hall from Andrew Hughey, being six arpents front by forty deep, opposite the mouth of Red river, and including the house built by Joshua Barker; and also to the three hundred and sixty acres of land sold at the suit of William Wood v. Andrew Hughey, to be taken adjoining to the eastern line of the tract of six hundred and forty arpents confirmed by the United States to Andrew Hughey, under certificate no. 252, in pursuance of the act of Congress passed on the 8th May, 1822, entitled, an act supplementary to the several acts for adjusting claims to land and establishing land offices in the districts east of the island of New Orleans. It is further ordered that, the plaintiffs recover from the defendant the remainder of the aforesaid six hundred and forty acres, and that the case be remanded for the purpose of ascertaining the boundaries between them and the defendant, and all matters relating to rents and improvements, and to the liability of the warrantors. It is i that the costs in both courts thus far incurred be paid by the dg