58 So. 502 | La. | 1912
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
The judgment heretofore rendered, dismissing the appeal and reserving to appellant the right to transfer the case to the Court of Appeal, is avoided, annulled, and reversed; the case is reinstated on the docket for further consideration and decision.
Plaintiff, in her petition,, charged that defendant is slandering her title by claiming that it owns her lands, described as lots 1 and 2 in section 36, township 14 S., range 10, containing 95.62 acres,, fronting on Grand Lake, St. Mary’s parish. Plaintiff acquired title from the succession of her husband, Bernard Miller. The husband, years ago, obtained a patent to the land, from the state of Louisiana.
The defendant filed an exception of want of possession in plaintiff necessary to enable-her to maintain her jactitation suit. The exception was referred to the merits by the court.
In the answer, the defendant claimed as.
The lands bought by Hickey from the federal government are described as fractional section 36 in township 14 south of range 10 east, in the district of lands subject to sale at Opelousas, La., containing 191.30 acres, according to the official plat of the survey of the land. Both plaintiff’s and defendant’s tracts are cypress and swamp lands.
The court heard evidence on the trial, but •only sustained the exception of want of possession in plaintiff to enable her to maintain her action, and in that manner did not •decide the case on the merits.
A short time after the death of plaintiff, an inventory was taken of the property, and the property was described therein as owned by the succession; plaintiff always paid taxes until 190S.
All these and other facts sustain the proposition that plaintiff had possession. As to the payment of taxes year after year, it certainly shows an intention to maintain pos.session.
Defendant virtually admitted that plaintiff had gone into possession of land in the vicinity at one time years ago. The ground of •defense is that, while plaintiff may have taken timber from one of the tracts of land fronting on Grand Lake, neither the plaintiff nor her husband before her went into possession of lots 1 and 2 of section 36 before mentioned; that they had possession of the other lands than 1 and 2, and were not aware of the fact. The defendant’s insistence is that those two lots are the N. y2 of fractional section 36, and that plaintiff did not go into possession of that portion of the section. Wherever these lots are, they are the same as described in plaintiff’s patent. Johnson, surveyor, located the land under the patent as testified to by witnesses. A surveyor, Bernhardt, also surveyed the land after Johnson, and refers in his map to certain corners in the Johnson survey.
W. E. Gardner, an employé of defendant since a number of years, attending to their swamp interests, making their estimation of timber in the swamps, swore in regard to certain lines and located these lines west of these lots; and they did not embrace the lands in dispute as the lands of defendant.
One of the witnesses, Dave Erlich, swore he contracted with plaintiff’s husband for certain cypress trees in 1905, and the plaintiff went on the land, and the owner pointed out the land near the shores of Grand Lake and Yellow bayou, called lots 1 and 2.
There is other evidence to the same effect.
“When a person has once acquired possession of a thing by corporeal detention of it, the intention he has of possessing it serves to preserve the possession in him although he may*667 have ceased to have the thing in actual custody.” Civil Code, 3442.
“The intention of retaining possession is always supposed where the contrary intention does not appear.” Civil Code, 3443.
Even the defendant admits that plaintiff went into possession; it adds, however, not of the land in controversy, but of other lands near by. Upon that error, it pins its hope of sustaining the proposition that plaintiff did not have possession of the land in controversy.
We will mention one fact sufficient to maintain the contrary. Miller’s Point is well indicated on the plat; that point is in sections 1 or 2, of which plaintiff claims ownership and avers she has possession, and that is the point at which the farm hands of her husband worked at cutting down trees and working them up.
The suit having been dismissed, as before stated, on the exception of defendant, it follows that it never was tried on the merits. It must be remanded to be tried on the merits. The alleged error in the government survey has never been examined into through the measurement of a surveyor appointed by the court contradictorily with the parties concerned.
Moreover, the decision in Atchafalaya Land Co. v. Brownell-Drews Lumber Co., 58 South. 500,
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from is avoided, annulled, and reversed, and exception is overruled. The case is' remanded, to be proceeded with according to law. Costs of appeal to be paid by appellees. Costs of district court to abide final decision in the case.
Ante, p. 657.
Lead Opinion
This is a jactitation suit. Defendant excepted on the ground of want of possession in the plaintiff; and, the exception having been referred by the court to the merits, defendant, reserving the benefit of the exception, pleaded in the alternative a legal title to the land in controversy.
Plaintiff, as surviving widow of Bernard Miller, and as natural tutrix of the minor children of the marriage, instituted the present suit, alleging' that petitioners were the true and lawful owners and in the actual, physical, open possession of a certain tract of swamp land in the parish of St. Mary, known as lots 1 and 2 of section 36, township 14 S., range 10 E., containing 95.62 acres, of the value of §1,400. Petitioners further alleged that defendant was attempting to disturb their said possession, and was slandering their title to said property, thereby causing damages and injury to the amount of $500 for attorney’s fees and loss of time and annoyance in attending court. The prayer of the petitioners was for judgment for $500 as damages, and that the defendant be perpetually enjoined from further slandering their title to said property or disturbing their possession.
It is therefore ordered that the appeal be-dismissed, reserving to appellant the right to-transfer the case to the Court of Appeal in and for the parish of St. Mary, on making affidavit according to the statute within 10 • days from the date of the finality of this decree, and that the appellant pay costs in this court.