63 So. 253 | La. | 1913
Lead Opinion
For the purpose of draining the territory lying between the city of New Orleans and Lake Pontehartrain, which was .a swamp, the Legislature in 1858 created a board of drainage commissioners and authorized it to levy a tax upon the lands composing said territory and to cause said lands to be seized and sold to satisfy said tax in case of nonpayment. In 1863, at tax sales made under this authority, all that tier of tracts of land from the lake to the city, fronting on Bayou St. John on the east and bounded in the rear, or west, by lands belonging ■ to the state, were adjudicated to said board, with the exception of two. The lands thus adjudicated were afterwards transferred to the city of New Orleans by the Legislature and in 1893 were sold at a receiver’s sale in the matter of James W. Peake v. City of New Orleans, No. 12,008 of the docket of the Circuit Court of the United States, Eastern District of Louisiana, to C. A. Gaudet; and the latter immediately sold them at private sale to the defendant. The other two tracts of said tier of lands were sold at state tax sales in 1899 to J. B. Maylie, who in Y904 sold them to the defendant company. The state lands bounding the said lands on the west were acquired from the state in 1874 by Andrew W. Smythe, and the eastern part, now in controversy, was sold by him to the plaintiff company in 1907. All of these lands had been laid out into streets and squares. The western boundary of the state
The two tracts sold at state tax sale to Maylie are described in the deeds to him by the same description as on the assessment roll as follows:
“A certain tract of ground in the square bounded by Polk avenue, French street, and Bayou St. John, and Milne, designated as squares Ños. 1015 and als.”
“A certain tract of ground in square bounded by Twiggs, Downs, Bayou St. John, and Milne streets, designated as square No. 1219 et als.”
We have transcribed the descriptions as they appear in the deeds; that is to say, each deed gives the number of but one of the squares and leaves the others to be represented by the general words “and als.”
The present suit was filed in December, 1909. It is a petitory action for the recovery of the eastern part of the said state or Smythe lands. Defendant sets up its titles, and, in connection with that acquired from Gaudet, pleads estoppel and the prescription of ten years acquirendi causa, and in connection with that acquired from Maylie pleads the same prescription and also that of three years by which nullities in tax sales are cured.
It is not shown, or even suggested, that the state’s or Smythe’s or plaintiff’s title to the space occupied by these streets was ever divested, by dedication or otherwise. Plaintiff’s title from Smythe, and the latter’s from the state, are by lot, section, and township; or, in other words, according to the maps of the United States surveys. Plaintiff, then, is owner of the streets and defendant of the squares.
“The state of Louisiana having passed valid laws to incorporate drainage boards in the parishes of Orleans and Jefferson, and having given such boards power to levy a drainage tax to pay for the work of drainage, with the right to purchase the land, could not, after the . assessment has been made, the work done, the land bought in by the drainage board and held in trust to pay for drainage work, issue a valid patent to a stranger which would have the effect of divesting the drainage board of their title or their transferees.”
We fail to discover the slightest ground for the state’s being estopped. It is now fully settled that:
“No estoppel results against the state by reason of the fact that the tax assessor erroneously assessed the land to an individual and the tax collector sold it for nonpayment of taxes resulting from such assessment.” Slattery v. Leonard, 110 La. 86, 34 South. 139; Cordill v. Quaker Realty Co., 130 La. 933, 58 South. 819; In re Vieth, 130 La. 1108, 58 South. 899; Quaker Realty Co. v. Purcell, 131 La. 496, 59 South. 915; Quaker Realty Co. v. Labasse, 131 La. 996, 60 South. 661.
“Where one acquires, though at the same time and from- the same person, distinct and widely separate tracts of land and takes actual possession of one or more of them, the rule that possession under title of part of an estate is possession of the whole has no application to the tracts not actually taken possession of.”
The proposition is a plain one and really needs no reinforcement by authority. “That the tracts must be contiguous,” says the Supreme Court of Arkansas, in Brown v. Bosquin, 57 Ark. 97, 20 S. W. 813, “is without exception in authority.”
Moreover, this pump was operated for only two years, so that, even if its action could be deemed to have been an act of ownership over the lands, its duration would not have continued during the requisite ten years.
Plaintiff contends that the tract nearest to the lake (that is to say, that part north of Downs street and of the Milne Asylum or Maylie tract) was acquired by defendant not as a continuous tract of land but as 221 squares numbered respectively from 1,297 to 1,518; and that therefore, upon the principle that the effect of acts of possession upon one tract cannot be extended to another tract separated from it by an intervening tract, for the purposes of prescription, the acts of possession shown by defendant can support the plea of prescription only as to those particular squares upon which they were exercised.
In the first place, it is not so certain that defendant did not buy from Gaudet a continuous tract of land. True, in the sale to Gaudet by the receiver and in the sale by Gaudet to defendant, the description is by regularly numbered squares and by reference to streets; but it is also by the boundary lines of the. tract as a whole. Thus:
“(5) A tract of land beginning- at the north line corner of the Bayou'St. John of the lands belonging to the Female Orphan Society and having 12 arpents, more or less, on said Bayou St. John, thence along said May street to Milne street, measuring 45 arpents, 80 feet, more or less, thence south along Milne street, 9 arpents, 142 feet, more or less, thence on a line to the said Bayou St. John, measuring 45 arpents and 96 feet, more or less, bounded on the north by the lands of the late J. B. Genois, on the west by Milne street, on the south by lands of thé Female Society, and on the east by the St. John Bayou, as per plan of J. A. D’Hemecourt, surveyor, dated - 30, 1860, deposited in said office of said commissioner of First Drainage District.”
We deem it prudent not to undertake to frame the decree in this case but to remand the case for this work to be done by the trial court, with the assistance of the counsel in the case, in accordance with the views herein expressed.
We have said that defendant’s tract nearest the lake extends as far south as Downs street. This we did merely for convenience in statement. As a matter of fact, it stops somewhat short of doing so. The dimensions are stated with precision in the deed by Gaudet to defendant; and defendant’s title by prescription, so far as that tract is con
For convenience in restatement, the judgment appealed from is set aside.
It is therefore ordered, • adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from be set aside, and that this case be remanded to the lower court for the decree therein to be framed in accordance with the views herein expressed. All costs to be paid by defendant.
Rehearing
On Application for Rehearing.
A rehearing is granted herein but restricted to the question of title apart from and outside of the pleas of prescription discussed and disposed of in the opinion heretofore handed down, the judgment remaining undisturbed in so far as the maintaining or overruling of these pleas is concerned, but being set aside in so far as it passes finally upon the question of title; and the case is remanded for further trial.