3 La. Ann. 59 | La. | 1848
The judgment of the court was pronounced'by
This action purports tobe instituted against the defendant for slandering the plaintiffs’ title to waste lands; but, as the fact of possession is left in doubt by the evidence, we will consider it as a petitory action. The plaintiffs assert title to a tract of land situated in the rear of the city of New Orleans, under a patent issued in 1825, on a location made a short time previously t in pursuance of the provisions of several acts of Congress granting lands to General Lafayette, for his services in the revolutionary war. They allege that the defendant claims title to a portion of said land; they pray that he may be ordered to produce his title, if any he have; and finally, that they may be quieted in their title against his pretended claims. The defendant alleges that he is, and has been for more than a year before the commencement of this suit, in quiet possession of a tract .of land of six arpents front on the canal Carondelet, and running back between parallel lines to the line of the late John Gravier's plantation, marked on the public surveys of that part of the city with the name of Ls. Lioteau; and he denies that the plaintiffs possess, or ever have ■possessed, any part of said land. He farther pleads the prescription of twenty and thirty years. There was judgment in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiffs appealed.
The extent of the conflict is shown by the evidence, and the only question for our consideration is, whether the land claimed by the defendant falls within the reservation of the patent, by virtue of which only such parts or parcels of the tract of land which it embraces are granted, as were not at the time it issued legally claimed by any other person or persons whatsoever.
The title on which the defendant relies may be stated as follows: In 1801, Louis Lioteau presented a petition to the intendant Morales, praying that a tract of land be granted to him, having six arpents front on the left bank of canal Carondelet, with the ordinary depth, if there should be such a depth
In the case of Hooter v. Tippet, 8 Mart. 637, in which the plaintiff set up a plairn similar t.o that of the defendant ip this .suit, the la.te Supreme Court .said: “ There is no order of survey ; no decree of any kind is given by the inten- j ,dant or his representative; .the application stands unanswered. Now, supposing the parties to be in the situation in which they were before the relinquishment of the rights of the United States, woul.d the plaintiff be able to eject the possessor of the land with such a paper — a paper which is the act of the party j .alone, and bears p,ot the slightest intimation of the grantor’s pleasure.” The j .claim was hold by the court to be destitute of merit, law, or equity. J
In a subsequent case, b.etween the same parti.es, the court went farther, and held that a permission to settle, obtained on a requete, but not followed by actual settlement, did not give a right superior to that resulting from an actual settlement without perprission, or in other words from naked possession. 5 Mart. N. S. 11.0.
These decisions are clearly correct, and under them we are bound to say that Lioteau, never having had the actual possession of the land in controversy, had no lawful or equitable claim to it, at the change of government. The defendant farther claims title under the first section of the act of Congress, of the 12th of April, 1814, by which he alleges his claim ,to have been confirmed. That section only confirmed the title to lands claimed by virtue of incomplete french or Spanish grants, concessions, warrants, or orders of survey, granted prior to the 20th of Dec. 1803, and having a special and definite location. Lio? teay IjeJd no.ne .of those inchoate titles, nor was .the location of his clainj deli*
Had the defendant obtained .a .confirmation, it is probable it would not avail him in this controversy. His requite .calls for one of the side lines of Guasdiola, but does not state which of the side lines. This location, unsupported by any survey or by actual possession before the change of government, would be too indefinite and uncertain to prejudice the plaintiffs. We take the rule to be that, in order that the confirmation may have the force and effect of a patent, the description in the inchoate title, or in the act of Congress, must be such as will identify the land. If it will fit another place better or equally well it is defective, and will not protect the holder, who can show no original possession, against a subsequent location made under the authority of Congress.
An attempt has been made to fix the location by means of a map of the city of New Orleans and of the plantations around it, purporting to have been made in 1802 by Trudeau, i.n obedience to an order of the intendant Morales, and of record in the land office. Had an order of survey been given on the requite, we might perhaps at this distance of time presume, in the absence of the plat of survey and of the return of the surveyor, that' the land was correctly represented on this map; but Lioteau, when applying for the confirmation of his claim, never pretended that an order of survey had been obtained nor a survey made, and rested his application exclusively upon his requite and the statement of Ximenes thereon. Under this state of facts the map adduced does not make proof of the location, and there is other evidence in the record which raises a strong presumption of its want of accuracy. The defendant’s claim is designated on the map as “ terreno solicitado pr. T)n. Luis Lioteau.” Adjoining it is another claim designated .as “ terreno solicitado pr. JDn. Guilberto Guilleniard,” which is also embraced within the lines of the patent of the plaintiffs and which nobody claims. The register of the land office who, in 1816, gave it as his opinion that the defendant’s claim had been confirmed by the act of 1814, had this map in his keeping, and must have been aware of the location it gave to that claim. The report of the same officer, made to the general land office in 1825, with a view jto the location of General Lafayette’s patent, that this land was at that time vacant, shows that he disregarded the map, and that he must have considered the proper location of Lioteau’s claim to be on the other side line of Guasdiola’s land, that location answering the description in the requite equally well.
Had the United States parted with their title in favor of the defendant, this case would not be easily distinguished from that of Lefebvre v. Comau et al. 11 La. 321. In that case it was not shown that the settlement made by tho defendant was upon either of the quarter sections which the plaintiff had acquired from the United States, and on that ground he was cast. In this case, no settlement whatever is shown to have been made by the defendant anterior to the date of the patent, and the calls of the requite are indefinite.
The defendant has failed to show either a title, or a possession upon which prescription can be based; and we are clearly of opinion that the land in controversy was pot lawfully claimed by him when the patent issued to General Lafayette,
Eubtis, C. J., having been of counsel, did not sit in this case.