14 La. Ann. 414 | La. | 1859
This suit was instituted by Joseph Moore, to recover from the defendant, A. W. Jourdan, a tract of land fronting on Bayou Lafouche, known as
This land was purchased by plaintiff by public act of sale from J. W. Mills, on the 19th of February, 185C, duly recorded on the 21st of the same month and year.
Mills acquired the land from the United States on the 1st of April, 1854.
Plaintiff also claims five dollars per acre for hire of the land since defendant has had it in his possession.
The defendant claims to be the owner of the land, from having bought it from Ira E. McGehee, of Arkansas, who purchased it from Mills, the plaintiff’s vendor, by private act, on the 2d of March, 1847, and alleges that Mills had then acquired a title to the same from the United States, and he specially denies that Mills purchased it in 1854. That if he obtained a receipt for it in 1854, the receipt was granted in error, and obtained fraudulently by Mills and plaintiff. That the second receipt was obtained for the purpose of conferring a title to the land to plaintiff. But, that should the second receipt be legal, it enures to the benefit of respondent.
Defendant also alleges that plaintiff knew of the sale of the land by Mills to defendant’s vendor, McGehee; that he assisted Mills to deceive the ^Register to obtain a receipt in order to secure the land to himself; that he acquired the land from Mills fraudulently, and with a full knowledge of the transfer of the same to McGehee, and that he paid no consideration for it. He also claims compensation for improvements in case of eviction in his amended answer, and reiterates the statement that Mills acquired no new title to the land by virtue of the receipt of 1854, but had already acquired the land from the government, on the 17th of December, 1844.
There was judgment for plaintiff, and defendant has appealed.
The sale from Mills to Moore is by authentic act, and was duly recorded on the 21st of February, 1856, two days after it was executed.
The title under which defendant claims, is a bond executed on the 2d of March, 1847, given by Mills to McGehee, for the sum of one thousand dollars, the condition of which is :
“ That whereas, the above bound James Mills has this day, by bargain and sale, relinquished all his rights and title to a certain tract of land lying on the Bayou Latanache, Slate and parish aforesaid, being the same on which the said James Mills and family now reside, and adjoining lands which the said I. E. Mc-Gehee recently purchased from Asa Brown, and for and in consideration of the said bargain and sale above named, the said I. E. McGehee has this day paid to the said James Mills, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the sum of two hundred dollars in money, and the further sum of three hundred dollars in a draft on the mercantile house of Moon, Titus & Co., of Mew Orleans, payable at sight, which said draft, the said Mills binds himself to present for payment before the expiration of twenty days from the date hereof, and if payment of the three hundred dollars be made, then the said Mills binds himself by these presents to abandon the foregoing described lands within twenty days from the date hereof, and give to the said I. E. McGehee full, quiet, and peaceable possession of the aforesaid land, together with all the buildings thereon. Mow, if the said Mills shall strictly comply with the foregoing stipulations, then this obligation to be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force, virtue and effect.”
This document is certified to be a true copy from the original on file, and of
Moore's title was recorded on the 21st of February, 1856, about five months previous.
The Act of 1855, p. 335, provides, that no notarial act concerning immovable property, shall have any effect against third persons, until the same shall have been recorded in the office of the Parish Recorder, or Register of Conveyances of the parish where such immovable property is situated.
Even if Moore, at the time of his purchase, knew that the land had been sold to McGehee, still this would not benefit the defendant.
It cannot be admitted that possession under an act of sale not recorded, is sufficient notice to creditors and subsequent purchasers to defeat the operation of the registry laws. Poydras v. Laurans, 6 An. 772 ; Tulane v. Levison, 2 An. 789.
It does not, however, appear that Moore knew, or could have known, that Mills had sold the land to McGehee, because Mills only agreed upon certain conditions to give him possession of it.
But even if the bond had been recorded anterior to the sale to Moore, it would not appear to be valid as a sale, because by its terms the obligation was to be null if Mills complied with its conditions, and it appears that he did. It might be viewed as an agreement to sell, which would have authorized an action by McGehee to compel Moore to have passed a sale of the land to him.
In the sale from McGehee to defendant, only the right, title and interest of Mc-Gehee to this land is conveyed.
Plaintiff offered to prove that this bond was obtained by McGehee from Mills, by fraud and misrepresentation, and that it was given ■ by Mills in error, which was produced by the fraudulent misrepresentations of McGehee.
This testimony was ruled out by the District Judge, for the purposes for which it was offered, but was received for the purpose only of rebutting the charge of fraud set up by defendant.
The evidence also shows that Mills had entered the first lot; but his entry had been cancelled in 1846, on the ground that the front portion could not be entered separately from the back part, and the Register was instructed to notify Mr. Mills to come forward and enter the whole tract if he chose to do so, as his proof was regarded as sufficient, and if not, to return to him the money paid for the front lot. But it was not until the first of April, 1854, that he went to the land office and paid for, and received a new certificate for the whole tract.
Mills had, in 1847, at the time of the execution of the bond, only a preemption right on the whole tract, which could not be transferred until he paid for it, and obtained a receipt from the Receiver, which he did not do till 1854. Arbour v. Nettles, 12 An. 217 ; Penn v. Ott, 12 An. 233.
Judgment affirmed with costs.
Re-hearing refused.