18 La. 102 | La. | 1841
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Plaintiffs allege that they with Henry T. Williams and Charles F. Zimpel, purchased a large tract of land of A. F. Rightor, being a portion of a claim or grant generally known as the Houmas, in the parish of Ascension. They took possession, with the intention of dividing it into smaller tracts and selling them at auction, to affect a partition; but were prevented from doingso, by the acts and conduct of the defendant, who publicly declared that he was the owner of a large portion of the land, and slandered their title. They say they have requested him to desist his slanders or to bring suit to assert his
The defendant pleads a general denial, then specially that the plaintiffs have no title; he further avers that he is the true and lawful owner of the land hy good and sufficient titles, and concludes hy a demand in reconvention, in which he prays the plaintiffs may he cited to answer; that they he compelled to produce and exhibit their titles ; and that he he quieted and maintained in his possession of the land.
The plaintiffs, for answer to this reconventional demand, plead the general issue, and called on A. F. Rightor, as their warrantor, to maintain and defend their title against that of M‘Donough. Rightor answers the call in warranty, hy a plea of the general issue; secondly, that the plaintiffs are not en. titled to the remedies against him, which thay claim ; thirdly, that they had a perfect knowledge of the character and extent of the defendant’s claim when they purchased, and therefore have no right to call on him as warrantor. He further says the plaintiffs have a good and sufficient title; that M‘Do-nough has none at all; and if he has, he is hound to sue the plaintiffs to establish it or abandon his claim. He prays that M'Donough he compelled to exhibit his title, that it he rejected, and he concurs in the prayers of the plaintiffs against him, (M'Donough).
It is further prajrnd that the cause he tried hy a jury ; hut subsequently the parties agreed to submit the question of titles to the court, reserving the damages to a trial before the jury.
The issues in this case are somewhat complicated, it has been argued at great length and with eminent ability. A variety of questions have been raised by bills of exceptions, which with the evidence, have swelled the record to a great size, and both plaintiffs and defendant evidently desire the court
The first question is upon which party lies the burden of proof, as to the title of the land. The defendant says it rests upon his adversaries and their warrantor. We think differently ; the reasons given by the District Judge in his judgment have not been refuted, and are, in our opinion unanswerable. He says the demand of the plaintiffs in their original petition does not constitute a petitory action. It is destitute of the first requisite of- that action ; not being brought against a party alleged to be in possession; C, P., art. 43. On the contrary the plaintiffs allege they are in possession and are disquieted and prevented from making a legitimate use and profit out of their possession and title by the words and acts of the defendant, for which cause they ask for damages; and that he be enjoined from setting up any claim for the future, unless he do it at once, either in the present action or by another suit. It is true, the defendant says he is in possession also, and had he rested his case upon that allegation, it is possible the question would have been limited to that inquiry; according to article 49 o'f the Code of Practice. But the defendant has gone further, without excepting to the form of the action; he comes up to the mark, sets up title in himself and institutes^areconventional demand, asking that the property be adjudged to him. This . , reconventional or cross action, which is by the Code of Practice consolidated with the principal or original suit, is clearly petitory; and imposes on M‘Donough the obligation of making the proof requisite to sustain his demand. So fully does this seem to have been understood by the parties originally that all the subsequent proceedings are in accordance with the idea
M‘Donough, holding the affirmative of the issue, offered in evidence a certified copy, from the register or record of complete grants in the Land Office in New Orleans, by which it appeared that on the 3d of April, 1769, the French Governor of Louisiana granted to Pierre Joseph Delille Duparc, pére, a tract of land having thirty arpents front on the Mississippi river, with all the depth which might be found to Lake Mau-repas, of the land where formerly stood two villages of the Collapissa Indians, situated about sixteen leagues above the city on the same side, to take from the plantation of a person named ....... Allemand, and join that of a free mulatto man named Joseph Lacomb. The usual stipulations and reservations are made in this grant. To its reception in evidence various objections were made, which were overruled and bills of exception taken by Rightor, and the grant attacked after it was received, as being a nullity on various grounds. It is not necessary in the present case to decide any of these questions.
The counsel for Rightor on whom devolved the whole de-fence of this case (the plaintiffs not appearing at all, further than to join issue with M‘Donough) insists that supposing the grant to Delille Duparc to be genuine, given by competent authority, and all the rights of the grantee vested in his oppo
To sustain their position, the counsel for M'Donough insist strenuously on what they call a plat made by Don Carlos Trudeau, in 1790, which they say indicates the partition of the tract among the heirs and legal representatives of Delille Du-parc, as on it, it is said, the lines open in the rear as claimed. This document was objected to as evidence by the counsel of Rightor, hut received by the court with the exception of a written memorandum on it, and a hill of exception taken, which we consider it unnecessary to decide on, as we think the paper does not prove what is alleged, nor is it entitled to any weight as evidence. It is neither a survey or plat, or a copy properly authenticated, showing^how the partition was made. On the face it is apparent a partition had been made previously and there is evidence in the record showing it must have been made several years previous, as one of the heirs sold her portion to Fonteneau in 1784. This plan is evidently nothing more than a sketch made by Trudeau to represent the front of the tract, which it seems
When the inventory of Delille Duparc’s estate was made in 1776, the land is represented as extending to Lake Maurepas, but not a word said of there being an opening towards the rear. Sometime after M‘Donough and Brown purchased of Le Bourgeois, they presented the claim for.confirmation to the Commissioners of the United States in the eastern district of Louisiana, and represent it as having a front of eighteen ar-pents, three toises and three feet, by eighty feet deep, and having'an opening of twenty degrees and seventy-one minutes towards the rear, and with the exception of a small portion it was confirmed to that extent; American State Papers, vol. 2, Public Lands, 332. This claim was based upon a grant of the Spanish Government to Le Bourgeois, nothing being said about a grant to Duparc.
Another portion of this claim was derived from Duparc, through L. H. Guerlain, agent of the Eastern. Shore of Mary
We have been thus particular in the examination of all these circumstances to show that the effects of the subsequent action on the claim are not such as contended for by the defendant.
In the American State Papers, vol. 3, relating to the Public Lands, p. 254, and from the record, we ascertain that McDo-nough & Co. again applied to the Register of the Land Office and Receiver of public monies in New-Orleans to report on this claim, under the provisions of the act of Congress passed the 27th January, 1813, entitled “An Act giving further time for registering' claims to land in the Eastern and Western Districts of the Territory of Orleans, now State of Louisiana.” It is described as “a tract of land situated in the county of Acadia on the East shore of the Mississippi, sixteen leagues above New-Orleans, containing thirty-two arpents front, with a depth extending as far as Lake Maurepas. This tract has
The omission to mention any thing about the plat, goes to show it was not regarded or had but little weight, and we can scarcely suppose that so important an opening as is claimed, would have been passed over in silence if it had been seriously pressed.
We are of opinion, that the plat even if admissible as evidence, is not entitled to any weight as establishing the. extent the claim. Although Potier says he is a sworn Surveyor, commissioned by the Surveyor General of the United j j j States, we know of no right that gives him to run out claims under the direction of individuals merely, and fix the boundaries of those not recognized by the government. It is not pretended he acted under any authority from his superior in making what is called a survey; it never was presented to the Surveyor General for his approval, nor does it seem to have had the legal sanction of any one authorized to act in the premises. Potier does not pretend it is a regular survey, he calls it “Plan extrait des minutes de nos opérations d’arpen-tageffaites dans les années 1806,1808 et 1812, lesquelles lignes en divers temps out été parcourues jusqu’h la riviere Amite et demarquées conformément aux lignes du plan.” He then goes on to say Delille Duparc had derived his title from the Colla-pissa Indians and sold it to various persons. He does not seem even to have heard of a grant from the French government in 1769, or attempted a location in conformity to it.
The defendant further states, that his claim has been located b.y the United States since its confirmation, and surveyed in the manner claimed by him. To establish this, he offered in evidence copies of three township plats, to wit: Township No. 10, South; ranges five and six East, and township No. 11 South; range five East. To the introduction of these plats as evidence, Rightor objected; because the papers are not nor do they purport to be copies of the original plats of those townships, and for other causes mentioned in his bill of exceptions. The District Judge admitted them in evidence, in which we think he erred. The papers are copies of copies, and it is a well settled rule of evidence that they are not admissible as testimony when better evidence can be procured. It is fur-from the certificate of the Register of the Land Office, that they are not correct copies. The claim of McDo-J r nough is represented on these copies in a manner differing
Although we are of opinion these plats were improperly received in evidence, we have examined them with a view to see if the pretended survey would justify the claim of the defendant. We do not find in the record the slightest evidence of authority from any officer of the United States to locate this claim in any manner. The acts of Congress of the 12th of April, 1814, and the 3d March, 1831, direct the mode of locating private claims. Land Laws, vol. 1, 652 — sec. 3 — 4. Idem, vol. 2, 294 — sec. 6.
There are also other acts of Congress in relation to the location of particular classes of claims, but the defendant does not come within the provisions of any of them.
It has been decided that the court and jury will look beyond the confirmation of a claim by the land commissioners or Congress emanating from the former governments of Louisiana in
we repeat, that it is not our purpose to decide in any 1 manner upon the validity of the Houmas grant under which the plaintiffs .claim, nor do we decide any thing more in relation to that alleged to be in favor of Delille Duparc, under which the defendant claims, than to say, whether it is for thirty or forty arpents front, and is eighty arpents or more in depth, it must be located by parallel lines, unless the confirmation to McDonough and Brown for eighteen arpents three toises and three feet front by eighty in depth, should for that quantity authorize the opening mentioned in the report on the claim, but it cannot extend beyond it.
It is clear from the evidence before us, that the claim of the defendant if located in the manner specified, cannot in any way interfere with the land claimed by the plaintiffs as shown by the plats laid before us.
The judgment of the District Court is therefore affirmed with costs..