AM Edwards Co. v. Dunnington

58 So. 2d 225, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 539
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1952
Docket3522
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 58 So. 2d 225 (AM Edwards Co. v. Dunnington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AM Edwards Co. v. Dunnington, 58 So. 2d 225, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 539 (La. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

58 So.2d 225 (1952)

A. M. EDWARDS CO., Inc. et al.
v.
DUNNINGTON.

No. 3522.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 24, 1952.
Rehearing Denied April 28, 1952.

*226 Benj. W. Miller, Bogalusa, Mary Purser, Amite, for appellants.

Reid & Reid, Hammond, for appellee.

DORÉ, Judge.

This suit was originally instituted by A. M. Edwards Co., Inc., and subsequently Bayard Edwards was substituted as plaintiff. In its petition, the original plaintiff alleged that it was the owner and possessor of a certain tract of land, together with all the timber located, standing or being thereon, being situated in Tangipahoa Parish, and described as being, "Twenty (20) acres of land located in the Northeast Quarter of the Northwest quarter of said Section 13, more fully described as commencing at the Northwest corner of said Northeast quarter of the Northwest quarter, running thence South along the quarter section line 700 feet, more or less, to a fence; thence East 250 feet, more or less, along said fence to a corner; thence in a Northeasterly direction to the Northeast corner of the Northeast quarter of Northwest quarter to point of beginning, being in Section 13, T-6-S, R-9-E"; it alleged that it acquired the said land and timber thereon from the sole heirs of the late Seymore O. Hoover and his wife, Lucy Hano Hoover and their *227 daughter, Miss Adeline Hoover, by deed dated December 31, 1948, and recorded on February 19, 1949, in the conveyance records of Tangipahoa Parish. It further alleged that notwithstanding its ownership of the said land and timber situated thereon, Breed Dunnington, made defendant herein, has entered thereon, has cut and is continuing to cut piling and other timber therefrom in violation of its rights in the premises.

It prays for judgment recognizing it as the owner of the timber and for an injunction restraining the defendant from cutting and removing any of the timber, with reservation of its right to claim damages for the value of the timber already cut and removed. A restraining order and rule to show cause was obtained and served upon the defendant.

The defendant, in his answer, categorically denies each and every allegation of plaintiff's petition; in further answer, defendant avers that the property and standing timber thereon described in plaintiff's petition, belong to the Lake Superior Piling Company, it having acquired the same by deed, duly recorded in the Conveyance Records of Tangipahoa Parish, from Houlton Brothers and they from W. T. Jay, as per deed duly recorded in the Conveyance Records for Tangipahoa Parish. He further avers that under an agreement between the said Superior Piling Company and himself, he purchased certain poles and piling from the said property, to be paid for when cut and in the amounts cut. He reserves his right to proceed against plaintiff, in a separate action for any damages he may have sustained by virtue of the issuance of the restraining order. His prayer is for dismissal of plaintiff's demand.

The case was tried and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against defendant, recognizing plaintiff, Bayard Edwards, to be the owner of the land previously described and the timber thereon, and permanently enjoining and restraining the said defendant from cutting and removing any of the timber on the above described property. There was further judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for the full sum of $236.50. The defendant has appealed.

We find it hard to classify this action in that it partakes of both the petitory and possessory action. However, from the record, it appears that the litigants treated the action as a petitory action, and the trial judge in his written reasons, likewise treated it as such, since he passed on the title to the property, and adjudged the ownership of the land in the plaintiff. We will so treat it.

It is now elementary that in a petitory action the plaintiff must recover on the strength of his title, and not on the weakness of his opponent. The burden of proof lies throughout the case upon the plaintiff to prove a superior title in himself, and to merely make it probable is not enough.

It appears from the record that the plaintiff, on the trial of the case, attempted to prove title by the prescription of thirty years. To the offering of proof thereof, and before evidence was adduced, defendant offered a "blanket", general objection to such evidence on the ground, "that he cannot tack on to his own possession that of his authors in title in order to eke out the prescription of thirty years, and that the parties who are supposed to have the purported thirty year possession are not parties to the suit and that, in the Succession of Seymore O. Hoover, the property herein forming the subject of this suit, is not claimed by the heirs, not inventoried and not in the judgment." Testimony was admitted subject to the objection and the objection was made general by the court.

In this court, the defendant does not seem to press his objection to the testimony. His objection seems to be abandoned. We, however, find no merit in his objection for at least one reason, to wit: An owner of land can tack on to his possession the possession of prior owners whenever there is a privity of contract. In the case at bar, in the deeds of acquisitions, the land in dispute is included therein, and the heirs, plaintiff's vendor, inherited, by operation of law, all of the rights of action which their father and mother had in the said property which necessarily included their previous possession of the said tract *228 in dispute. See Crichton v. Krouse, La. App., 142 So. 635.

In this court, it is admitted that the recorded title to the property in dispute, prior to plaintiff's acquisition from the Hoover heirs, was in the Lake Superior Piling Company, the vendor of the timber on the property to defendant, and that the Lake Superior Piling Company's title is paramount to that of plaintiff unless it be shown, by a preponderance of the evidence, that plaintiff, with the Hoovers, have had the continuous, uninterrupted, public and unequivocal possession as owner for more than thirty years. This is admittedly the only question before this court, and which is a question of fact.

The record discloses that Seymore Hoover owned the S½ of SW¼ of Section 12, upon which he had his residence in the southwest corner; Section 12 is above Section 13; and W½ of NW¼ of Section 13, all in T-6-S, R-9-E. The Lake Superior Piling owns the E½ of NW¼ of Section 13. The property in dispute is in the shape of a triangle, having as the north leg, the line dividing the two sections, the west leg, the dividing line between the E½ and W½ of NW¼ of Section 13, and the east leg, a line running from a point on the dividing line between the said E½ and W½ to the NE corner of said NW¼ of Section 13.

As to the actual and physical possession, as owner, of Seymore Hoover, of the property, we have the testimony of Clinton Hoover, who was born in 1898, and was 51 years of age at the time of trial, who testified, that in accordance with his memory, his father had the disputed property under fence for more than forty years; that at first the fence was a rail or stake and rider fence; that in 1909 the fence was blown down by a storm and was rebuilt and in 1915, it was again blown down and again rebuilt, and in 1922 or 1923, it was rebuilt of wire, the remnants of which are still standing; that his father used the disputed property as a pasture.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 So. 2d 225, 1952 La. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/am-edwards-co-v-dunnington-lactapp-1952.