Armstrong v. White

10 La. Ann. 607
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 10 La. Ann. 607 (Armstrong v. White) 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
Armstrong v. White, 10 La. Ann. 607 (La. 1855).

Opinion

Voorhies, J.

(Sfofford, J., recused himself.)

This is a petitory action for the recovery of a tract of land. The plaintiffs allege that the defendant, Reuben W kite, is a possessor in bad faith; that he has, for the last two years, cultivated a field on said land, and has also committed other trespasses, by cutting timber off of the same for his own use, whereby they have sustained damages to the amount of one thousand dollars, for which they pray judgment, and also to be declared the legal owners of said land.

[608]*608The plaintiffs also instituted suits against Scarborough, McMullen and Nesbit, for the same cause of action. Reuben White having since acquired the title or rights of the other defendants, those suits were cumulated with the present; so that only one decree becomes necessary to settle the controversy between the litigants.

Both parties claim to derive their titles from a common author, John Me* Gaughlin, whose title is evidenced by a patent from the Government of the United States.

The plaintiffs, Samuel W. Briggs and Gowen L. Briggs, both deceased, whose estates are represented by Andrew C. Armstrong, as syndic, holding by inheritance from Elias Fountain Briggs, deceased; and J. R. E. Robinson, a minor, represented by his tutor, Joseph J. Robinson, also holding by inheritance from Harriet Cable, deduce their titles as follows:

■ On the 27th of January, 1834, John McGaughlin sold to Charles Myers, by act sous seing prive, the land in controversy. Josiah Hale, one of the subscribing witnesses to the act, appeared before F. Williams, a Notary Public of the parish of Natchitoches, and proved, under oath administered to him by the notary, its execution; at the foot of which the following certificate is appended:

“ I certify that the within act of sale is duly recorded in my office, in Book A. of Notarial Acts, fol. 14. Given under my hand this, fourth day of February, 1834. F. Williams, Not. Pub.”

From the certificate of the Recorder of the parish of Caddo, it appears that there was no other conveyance of the land in controversy from McGaughlin than the conveyance from the latter to the defendant, White, executed on the 13th of September, 1848.

The statement of the Hon. J. G. Campbell shows that the defendant, While, previous to his purchase of the land in controversy, applied to him to ascertain, by examination of the records of the late parish Judge’s office, and such other records as might then be in the custody of the Recorder of the parish of Natchi-toches,in whom the McGaughlin title was; that “he made a thorough search of the office, and could find no title out of McGaughlin, and so advised White; that While afterwards visited Natchitoches in person, when a renewed search was made by the Recorder and himself, in presence of White, but with no better success; that White, upon his return, purchased from McGaughlin; that, owing to some defect in the description of the land in the first deed, another was executed by McGaughlin to While, a copy of which being forwarded to the Land Office, the patent was thereupon forwarded to White; and that it is to his knowledge, White exercised great diligence, and was at considerable trouble and costs in investigating the title before making the purchase, his chief object being to ascertain whether the title remained in McGaughlin.

The certificate of the Recorder of the parish of Natchitoches, dated 1st of September, 1848, shows that, after diligent search, he could find no sale from John McGaughlin to any person, of the land in controversy. The deposition of the Recorder is also in evidence, affirming the correctness of his certificate, and adding that he was assisted in the examination of the records of his office by Judge Campbell and one of his clerks. “ On a subsequent examination,” says he, “of the records of my office, for other purposes, I found a book marked A., and written on the back, ‘ Extracts from the Notaries in the Country, from 1827 to 1839,’ This book contains extracts, and among which I find recorded the following: ‘4th February, 1834, John McGaughlin to Charles Myers, sale of [609]*609land containing 640 acres, situated on the south-west bank of Red River, bounded north and above by Pascagoula Bayou, south and below by vacant land. The above land was sold for and in consideration of the sum of one hundred dollars cash.’ This extract is contained, with others, in No. 74, as recorded in said extract book, and at the bottom of which is written the following certificate: ‘ I, the undersigned, Notary, do hereby certify the above and foregoing to be extracts explanatory of all acts passed and acknowledged before me up to the first day of March instant. Given under my hand and private seal of office, this first day of March, 1834. Signed, F. Williams, Notary Public.’ The foregoing is all that I now recollect in relation to the matter on which I am interrogated.”

None of the purchasers from John McGaughlin, under whom the plaintiffs claim, appear to have ever been in actual possession of the land in controversy.

Under this state of facts, the question presented is, was the conveyance from John McGaughlin to Charles Myers sufficiently apparent on the public records to affect third persons ?

We think not. But it is argued by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that the recording of the abstract of the sale from McGaughlin to Myers was good against third persons, as “ the authority given to record the acts of the Notary of Cloutier-viile, by abstracts of the title and substance inscribed in the proper book, virtually made the recording of any other act by abstract of title, etc., good, because third persons would be compelled to search this book, and if they there found that A. had sold to B. a specified tract of land, they would have notice, and would, after seeing the memorandum, buy in bad faith.”

This argument finds its refutation in the fact that the Recorder, familiar as he was, we must presume, with the records of his own office, was unable himself, aided, too, by learned counsel, to discover the existence of any such transfer from McGaughlin.

Under an act approved the loth March, 1822, providing for the appointment of notaries for the parishes of St. Landry and Natchitoches, it was made the duty of the notary to be appointed for Natchitoches to keep his office at Clou-tierville, to be governed “by the same restrictions and priviliges ” as those imposed upon the notary to be appointed for Grand' Prairie. The second section of that act made it the duty of those notaries to deposit on the first Monday of every month, in the offices of the parish judges of their parishes, respectively, an extract sufficiently explanatory of the several acts passed before them, and it also made it the duty of the parish judge “ to receive and record the same.'’ Admitting that the provisions of that act could be construed to apply generally to all acts passed before notaries in the parish of Natchitoches, which, however, can hardly be conceded, we are unable to perceive in what respect it could possibly avail the plaintiffs; for it does not appear that the extract of the act from McGaughlin

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Bluebook (online)
10 La. Ann. 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-white-la-1855.