Albritton v. Steere

96 So. 121, 153 La. 561, 1923 La. LEXIS 1803
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 2, 1923
DocketNo. 25527
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 96 So. 121 (Albritton v. Steere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albritton v. Steere, 96 So. 121, 153 La. 561, 1923 La. LEXIS 1803 (La. 1923).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

This is, in its main aspects, a repetition of the suit of Albritton v. Shaw, 148 La. 427, 87 South. 32. In that case the present plaintiff sued the warrantor dl the present defendant for the same tract of land that is claimed in this suit; that is, the N. E. % of N. E. % of Sec. 25, T. 21 N., R. 8 W., containing 40.37 acres.

In his first suit plaintiff claimed title by virtue of a state patent dated the 1st day of February, 1919, and claimed that the state had acquired title by the swamp land grant of the 2d of March, 1849. The defendant in that suit (who afterwards sold the land to the defendant in this suit) held title by mesne conveyances from Thomas J. Harvey, who had bought the land and received a final certificate of entry from the United States on the 17th of December, 1850, but had not obtained a patent for the land. Our ruling in the case was that the patent held by the plaintiff was null because it had been issued in violation of a prohibitory law. It violated the Act 21 of 1886, forbidding the “purchase or entry” of any public land that had “been possessed or improved or cultivated by any person holding or claiming adversely to the party seeking to purchase or enter the same.” Section 1. The land had been possessed and improved and cultivated by Thomas J. Harvey and in turn by those whose title came from him, continuously, nearly 70 years, when plaintiff got his patent. The prohibition in Act 21 of 1886, against any outsider’s buying or entering such lands, was not repealed by the Act 215 of 1908, requiring the public lands of the state to be sold only at public auction, after advertisement in the manner provided by the statute.

When we found that plaintiff’s patent was null, there was no occasion for deciding whether the state or Harvey had acquired the title from the United States. We did decide, however, because the issue was tendered for decision at the outset, that the purchase by Harvey from the United States, on the 17th of December, 1850, as shown by his certificate of entry, gave the defendant, holding title from Harvey, at least an inceptive, equitable title, and the right, therefore, to question the validity of the plaintiff’s patent. We said that, although the certificate of entry on which the defendant’s title was founded had not been followed by a patent in favor of Harvey or his heirs or assigns, it was evidence of an equitable title of sufficient importance to allow the defendant, in possession of the land, to insist that a suit to oust him should not be brought by one who could not be adjudged the owner of the land, if the defendant did not own it.

It is said in a brief filed for the state of Louisiana, as intervener in this case, th'at we expressed the opinion, or intimated, in Albritton v. Shaw, “that the Shaw title derived from the Harvey entry was not valid.” We did not believe, and endeavored to avoid any intimation, that the Shaw title derived from Harvey was not valid. Here is what we said, in avoidance of an expression o£ opinion on the subject, which was then a moot question, viz.:

“Some of the decisions on this subject, both by the Supreme Court of the United States and by this court, would be pertinent to the question whether the defendant in this suit should be decreed the owner of the land in con[565]*565test, even though the state patent held by the plaintiff should not be decreed null.” [Meaning, of course, was not issued in contravention of a prohibitory law.] “But we are not now concerned with the question whether the defendant might be adjudged the owner of this land, in an action brought by the state, if the officers of the land department were without authority to issue the patent to the plaintiff. * * * We will review the decisions on this subject merely to demonstrate that, in our opinion, the possession which the defendant and his authors have enjoyed for nearly seventy years is founded upon a claim of sufficient equity to demand that it shall be respected by any and every person except one who could be adjudged the owner of the land, if the defendant should not be adjudged the owner of it. * * *
“According to the decisions heretofore cited, it would be a begging of the question to decide, before passing upon the question of validity of plaintiff’s patent, whether the claim of the defendant, who holds possession under the certificate of entry that was issued to Thomas J. Harvey, should prevail over the claim of the state under the swamp land grant of 1849; for, if the state patent was issued in contravention of a prohibitory law, it is absolutely null. Rev. Oiv. Code Art. 12. * * *
“Our conclusion is that the patent held by the plaintiff in this case was issued in violation of a prohibitory law and is therefore null.”

One of the arguments urged by plaintiff in his first suit, to the defendant’s questioning the validity of his patent, was that the Commissioner of the General Land Office had, on the 9 th of May, 1899, issued an order purporting to cancel the certificate of entry that had been issued to Thomas J. Harvey on the 17th of December, 1850. We held that the order purporting to cancel the certificate of entry was without effect, for want of jurisdiction. The order had been issued without actual notice to any one claiming title or holding possession under the certificate of entry.

Immediately after — on the third day after ■ — our decision in Albritton v. Shaw became final by the refusal of an application for rehearing, Albritton applied to the register of the state land office for another patent for the same land, and the new patent, on which this suit is brought, was issued to him two months later; that'is, on the 15th of March, 1921.

In the meantime, while Albritton’s first suit was pending on appeal in this court, the defendant, Shaw, filed a petition with the Secretary of the Interior against the state of Louisiana and A. L. Albritton, praying for the exercise of the supervisory authority of the Department, to rescind and set aside the order of May 9, 1899, canceling Thomas J. Harvey’s cash entry, of date December 17, 1850, and to reinstate the entry and direct that a patent should issue. A few days later, Shaw sold the land to the defendant, Steere, who prosecuted the proceedings before the Interior Department, and finally procured the reinstatement of the Harvey entry and a patent for the land, of date the 21st of December, 1921.

Photographic copies of the proceedings had before the Secretary of the Interior, in the matter entitled “George T. Shaw v. The State of Louisiana, A. R. Albritton, Patentee,” were introduced in evidence in this suit. The district court gave judgment for the defendant, Steere, and for George T. Shaw, who was called in warranty to defend the suit, rejecting the demand of Albritton, and dismissing the petition of intervention of the state of Louisiana by a judgment of non-suit. The state and Albritton have appealed.

The only difference between plaintiff’s new patent and the one that was declared null in his first suit is that the entries were made on different hinds of scrip. The first entry was made on scrip that had been issued under the Act 104 of 1888. The second entry was made under scrip that had been issued under Act 248 of 1852. The statute of 1888 authorized the register of the state land office, whenever it appeared that two entries of the same land had been made, to cancel the invalid or erroneous entry, and issue to the entryman a warrant to ' be located, on [567]*567other state lands of the same class.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 So. 121, 153 La. 561, 1923 La. LEXIS 1803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albritton-v-steere-la-1923.