48 So. 126 | La. | 1908
Statement of the Case.
Relator prays for a writ of mandamus directing the defendants to execute a deed to certain lands which it alleges were conveyed to it by the state by Act No. 80, p. 125, of 1906. Defendants answer that the lands in question did not belong to the state at the date of the passage of Act No. 80 of 1906, having been previously conveyed by the state to the Red River, Atchafalaya and Bayou Boeuf Levee District, and by the Board of Commissioners of that district sold to John V. Moffet and Allen R. Dillon by acts of sale, duly recorded, and that they have no duty to perform in regard to them. The Board of Commissioners of the Red River, Atchafalaya and Bayou Boeuf Levee District intervene, and allege that the lands claimed were conveyed to it on January 27, 1900, under the authority of Acts No. 79. p. 63, of 1890. and No. 46, p. 50, of 1892, and were sold by it before the creation of the relator board, and that the act of 1906, upon which relator relies, purports to convey to it only the lands within the limits of the district, "now belonging, or that may hereafter belong, to the state of Louisiana,” which grant does not include the lands in question, the state’s, and intervener’s, title to which had previously been devested. A motion was filed to strike out this intervention, on the grounds that intervener is without interest, that the intervention came too late, and that an intervention is not permissible in a proceeding of this character.
The case, then, proceeded to trial, and the following facts were admitted or proved, to wit:
Admitted that the lands claimed were acquired by the state from the United States, under the swamp land acts, that they are located within the limits of the Saline Levee and Drainage District, as created by Act No. 80, p. 125, of 1906, and, also within the limits of the Red River, Atchafalaya and Bayou Boeuf Levee District, as fixed and described in section 1 of Act No. 79, p. 63, of 1890, and section 1 of Act No. 46, p. 50, of 1892; and that relator has made a legal demand on the Auditor and Register for a deed to said land, as required by Act No. 80 of 1906.
Act No. 79, p. 63, of 1890, establishes and defines the limits of the Red River Atchafa-laya, and Bayou Bceuf Levee District (hereinafter called the “Red River District”), in the parishes of St. Landry, Rapides, and Avoyel-les, creates a board of commissioners for the administration of its affairs, and vests the board so created with certain powers and imposes on it certain obligations. Section 6 of the act authorizes the board to levy such taxes on all property subject to taxation for levee and drainage purposes as may be authorized by article 214 of the Constitution (of 1879). Section 10 provides that, for the purpose of raising additional funds for the district, the board—
“shall have power to levy an annual * * * assessment, upon all lands in said district, subject to taxation for levee and drainage purposes, not to exceed 5 cents per acre * * *. That, in order to provide additional means * * *, all lands, now belonging, or that may hereafter belong to the state of Louisiana, and embraced within the limits of the * * * district, as herein constituted, shall be, and the same are, hereby, given, granted, bargained, donated, conveyed and delivered to said board * * », whether said lands are parts of the lands originally granted by Congress * *, or whether said lands have been, or may hereafter be, forfeited to, or bought in by, or for, or sold to, the state, at tax sale, for nonpayment of taxes. Where the state has, or may hereafter, become the owner of lands, by, or through, tax sales, conveyance thereof shall only be made to said board * * * after the period of redemption shall have expired, provided, however, that any and all former owners of lands which have been forfeited to purchasers, by, or sold to, the state, for nonpayment of taxes, may, at any*619 time within six months ensuing after date of the passage of this act, redeem said lands or any part of them upon paying all taxes * * * due thereon down to the date of such redemption, but such redemptions shall be deemed and taken to be sales of land by the state, and all and every sum or sums of money so received shall be place to the credit of the Red River * * • District. After the expiration of said six months, it shall be the duty of the Auditor and the Register * * *, on behalf of, and in the name of, the state, to convey to the said board * * *, by proper instruments of conveyance, the land hereby granted, or intended to be granted and conveyed, to said board, whenever, from time to time, said Auditor and Register * * *, or either of them, shall be required to do so by the said board * * *, or by the president thereof, and, thereafter, said president and board shall cause said conveyance to be properly recorded in the recorder’s office * * *, and, when said conveyances are so recorded, the title to said lands, with the possession thereof, shall, from thenceforth, rest, absolutely, in the said board * * * its successors or grantees; said lands shall be exempted from taxation, after being conveyed to, and while they remain in possession of, or under the control of, said board. Said board shall have the power * * * to sell * * *, or otherwise dispose of, said lands, in such manner, and at such time and for such prices, as said board shall deem-proper, but all proceeds derived therefrom shall be deposited in the state treasury, to the credit of the Red River * * * District, and shall be drawn out only upon the warrant of the president of said board. * * *
“Sec. 11. * * * That all money arising from, or that shall accrue from, said district, by taxation or otherwise, shall be placed to the credit of the Red River * * * District, and shall be held and used, exclusively, for the necessary drainage, construction, repair and maintenance of any and all public levees in said district, which, in the opinion of the Board of State Engineers, will protect said levee district from overflow and for the payment of the members of said board and their secretary and the actual and necessary cost of organizing said board and putting this act into effect.”
Section 13 provides that all moneys in the state treasury to the credit of the several parishes in which the Red River District is established shall be transferred to the district. *
Section 15 reads:
“That, upon the application of the president of the police jury of any parish situated within this levee district, it shall be the duty of the levee board to have the Board of State Engineers examine any section of any parish, designated, to ascertain whether, on account of natural difficulties, it would be impolitic to attempt to protect the portion of said parish so examined, and, in case the report of said engineers should be adverse to the building of levees, then, such lands, unprotected by levees, shall be exempted from the provisions of this act.”
The Board of Commissioners having been organized under the statute thus referred to, there was presented to it, on November 18, 1890, a petition signed by the president of the police jury of the parish of Avoyelles requesting it to have certain lands in the-district, and in that parish, examined “with a view of having it pronounced impolitic to1 protect them by levees.”
The board, accordingly, requested the engineers to make the desired examination, and, the engineers having reported “that it is impolitic, at this time, to attempt to protect” the lands in question, the board adopted a resolution (January 28, 1891) to the effect that said lands “be exempted from the operation of Act No. 79, p. 63, of 1890.”
On September 14, 1891, a petition was presented, numerously signed by property holders (owning lands, also, lying in the parish of Avoyelles and within said district), and indorsed by the president of the police jury, alleging and praying that certain (other) lands—
“are unprotected by levees and are subject to overflow * * *, no likelihood of being protected, for some years, for which reason your petitioners respectfully ask that the lands comprised within the specified limits be exempted from the levee tax as fixed by the act creating your board.”
This petition was also referred to the engineers, who reported, as before, that:
“On account of natural difficulties, it would be impolitic, at this time, for your board to attempt the building of levees in the said section of the parish of Avoyelles”
—to which they added:
“The Board of State Engineers would, furthermore, at this time, take occasion to express the opinion that the full intent of this exemption, when made, coupled with those already passed upon, is to relieve from the operation of Act No. 79, p. 63, of 1890, as far'as the levying of taxes for levy purposes is concerned, all that part of the parish of Avoyelles, subject to overflow, north of Red river, and all that part, south*621 of the same, bounded by Bayou des Glaizes, the Atchafalaya and Bed rivers, and the public road running from David’s Perry, on Bed river, to the Bayou des Glaizes, by way of Marksville, Mansura, and the long bridge at Bout du Bayou.”
In 1892, the General Assembly passed the Act No. 46 of that year, entitled “An act to amend and re-enact Act No. 79, of 1890, creating the Bed Biver, Atchafalaya and Bayou Boeuf Levee District,” sections 1 and 10 of which (without going further) are identical with the sections bearing those numbers in the act of 1890. In other words, the delimitation of the district and the grant to it of all the state land therein contained, or thereafter to be acquired, are reiterated totidem verbis. No further action bearing upon the questions here at issue appears to have been taken until January 27, 1900, when, upon the application of the Board of Commissioners of the Bed Biver District, the Auditor and Begister, acting, as the deed recites, under the authority of Acts No. 79, p. 63, of 1890, and No. 46, p. 50, of 1892, executed a formal instrument, conveying to the board all the state lands, described in the instrument, situated in the parish of Avoyelles and embraced within the limits of that district, the lands described including those which had been the subject of the petitions and action in 1890 and 1891, heretofore referred to, and the instrument »o executed being duly recorded, in the parish of Avoyelles, on January 30th following. The lands so conveyed were then sold by the board to John V. Moffet and Allen B. Dillon by act recorded March' 17, 1900. Moffet and Dillon sold them to James B. Staley by act recorded June 17, 1901. And thereafter, by acts duly recorded, down to March 12, 1904, they were sold by Staley to McCormick, by McCormick to the Avoyelles Company, and by the Avoy-elles Company to the Louisiana Construction Company, which last-mentioned company appears to be the present holder of the title. In 1906 the General Assembly passed Act No. 80 of that year, converting, intp, the Saline Levee and Drainage .District .that portion of the Bed Biver District in ,\vhic^ the lands heretofore referred .to aye, situated, and granting to the. new district “'all lands, now belonging, or that may hereafter,.belong, to the state * * * and embraced within the limits of said district,” whether said lands have been or, hereafter be forfeited or ■bought in, etc. (the language of . the grant being the same as in Acts No. 79, p. 63, of 1890, and No. 46, p. 50, of 1892).
Opinion..
The motion to strike out the intervention does not appear to have been finally acted on by the judge a qiio, and is rather insisted on in this court. But, as the intervener asked for no delay, the intervention was not too late; as the title which emanated from the intervener is indirectly the object of attack, we think it has sufficient interest to authorize it to appear; and, as we have heretofore held that “the form of action cannot control the right to intervene” (State ex rel. Southern Bank v. Pillsbury, Mayor, 31 La. Ann. 1), we conclude that the grounds of the motion are not well taken.
On the merits of the case, or, rather, upon the question of relator’s right to proceed by mandamus, it is evident, from the language of the second of the two petitions addressed to the Board of Commissioners of the Bed Biver District, from, the report of the Board of Engineers in response thereto, from the action of the commissioners in applying for the conveyance of the land here in question, of the Auditor and Begister in making such conveyance, and of the commissioners in selling the land, six years before the Saline district was created, that, among the officials and others who were interested in the matter, and who have been called on to construe the provisions of Acts No. 79, p. 63, of 1890, and No. 46, p. 50, of 1892, the opinion has
The record does not show that such was the case, but it may be that these several agents were advised by the law officers of the state. At all events, there is not the faintest suggestion that they did not, in
Matters having reached the condition thus stated, relator appears and shows that, nearly six years after the Auditor and Register had executed the instrument conveying the lands to the Red River Commissioners, and after the lands had been sold by the latter and resold by its vendees, it (the Board of Commissioners of the Saline Levee and Drainage District) had also been created an agent of the state, and that, in creating it, the state had granted to it, not the lands in question, but (speaking as of date July 5, 1906) “all lands, now belonging, or that may hereafter belong, to the state * * * and embraced within the limits of the Saline Levee and Drainage District”; and, upon the basis of the grant so worded, relator .asks that the Auditor and Register be order■ed, by mandamus, -to execute deeds conveying to it the same lands that these officers, some seven years ago, conveyed to the Board of Commissioners of the Red River District. We can hardly assume, however, that, in creating the Saline Levee and Drainage District, the General Assembly acted in ignorance of the fact that the Auditor and Register, interpreting the grant contained in the acts of 1890, and 1892, had conveyed the lands to the Red River District, and we do not find that the -act of 1906, or - any other legislation enacted since the year 1900, repudiates or questions that conveyance. We can therefore discover no basis upon which to predicate the order prayed for. Relator’s idea of what the Auditor and Register and the Commissioners of the Red River District should have done in the matter is, to say the least, no more authoritative than are the ideas upon which those other representatives of the executive department have acted, and the state itself, through the lawmaking power, appears to have acquiesced in the view adopted by the latter.
In view of the situation as thus presented, and of the fact that title to the lands here claimed, made by the respondents, acting as state agents, within the limits of their apparent power, and valid upon its face, is outstanding in third persons, we are of opinion that relator, exhibiting no special authority in the premises, has no standing to discredit such title, and hence has no standing to prosecute this suit.
The judgment appealed from is, therefore, affirmed.