Ashley Co. v. Bradford

33 So. 634, 109 La. 641, 1902 La. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 1, 1902
DocketNo. 14,231
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 33 So. 634 (Ashley Co. v. Bradford) 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
Ashley Co. v. Bradford, 33 So. 634, 109 La. 641, 1902 La. LEXIS 162 (La. 1902).

Opinion

BLANCHARD, J.

Article 101 of the Constitution prescribes that when the Judges of the Courts of Appeals certify to this court a question or proposition of law arising in a cause pending before them, concerning which they desire instruction for its proper decision, this court may either give the instruction applied for, or may cause the record of the case to be sent up for its consideration, to the end of determining the whole matter in controversy the same as though the case was on appeal directly here.

In certifying the propositions of law arising in the instant case, the Judges of the Court of Appeals have, ex proprio motu, transmitted thither the whole record, so that the case is here for such action as the court may see proper to take — whether to give, merely, the instructions applied for, or decide the case outright.

We will do the latter, though our doing so in this instance is not to be deemed and taken as a precedent.

The case calls for the construction of the second clause of article 233 of the Constitution. The question at issue is considered of vast importance, affecting, even, public policy, and involving large interests throughout the state.

That great interest is taken in the case by the profession is attested by the fact that prominent lawyers, having no direct connection with it, have, as amici curiae, filed briefs, some on one side, some on the other. There are no less than four of these, besides the briefs of regular counsel and those of special counsel employed on each side. The importance of the case results from the question at issue — the precedent to be set — not from the amount or value at stake.

In 1856 Dr. C. J. Mitchell entered at the State Land Office a tract of land of some hundreds of acres. It was wild land covered with forests, in the swamps of the Mississippi river, subject to overflow. Its location was the parish of Madison.

A portion of the land so entered was the N. % of N. W. % of section 30, T. 15 N., R. 11 E., containing- 80 and a fraction acres, and over this 80 acres the present legal warfare is waged.

, The land so entered by Mitchell became known on the land maps and plats of the parish as the “Mitchell Tract.”

At the time of this entry Mitchell resided in Madison parish. He continued to reside there until 1862. After the Civil War he re-mo'ved to and settled in the city of Vicksburg. He died in 1886.

It is doubtful if Dr. Mitchell ever paid any taxes on the land after he acquired it. Certain it is he paid no taxes after his removal from the state in 1867 to the time of his death in 1886 — a period of nearly 20 years.

The tract of land does not appear to have been assessed to him at all up to the date of his death.

After his death it went on the assessment rolls for the year 1887 under an assessment to the succession of C. J. Mitchell. This was its first appearance ■ on the assessment rolls — certainly since the close of the Civil War.

Since 1887 to the present time it has been regularly assessed to the Mitchells (the dead man’s widow and heirs) or their transferee, Bradford (defendant herein), and they have paid the taxes under these assessments, which included the 80 acres involved herein.

Adjoining the Mitchell tract is another and larger tract of land known on the maps as “Ararat.” One Milford Hunter was the owner of “Ararat.” He acquired it partly by entry at the State Land Office prior to the Civil War, and partly by purchase from others who had entered portions of the tract.

The 80 acres of the Mitchell tract which figure in this controversy are immediately adjacent to — touch, connect, join — the western portion of the “Ararat” tract.

While no return of the Mitchell tract was made for taxation and the same was omitted from the rolls, the “Ararat” tract was, in 1870, assessed to M. A. Hunter, and continued to be assessed each year thereafter, until and inclusive of 1877, in his name.

Whether “M. A. Hunter” was the Milford Hunter who became the owner of the tract as above stated, or was another and different man, is not made clear.

In assessing the “Ararat” tract to M. A. Hunter, the assessor included in the description the N. y2 of N. W. Yi of S. 30, T. 15, N., R. 11 E. This was 80 acres appertaining to the Mitchell tract adjoining — no portion of which tract, as heretofore explained, appearing at any time on the rolls as assessed to Mitchell. This inclusion of the 80 acres of the Mitchell tract in the assessment of the [645]*645“Ararat” tract, made to Hunter, continued to and inclusive of the year 1877.

Hunter failed to pay the taxes under the assessment thus made to him, and on the 1st of August, 1874, the tax collector exposed the property for sale by a description (the same as on the assessment rolls) which included specifically the N. % of the N. W. % of See. 30, T. 15, R. 11. In default of bidders the property was adjudicated to the state and title to the state therefor, dated March 15, 1875, was recorded in the conveyance records on April 5, 1S75.

The sheriff’s title to the state shows the property was sold for the payment of taxes assessed against Hunter for the years 1869, 1870, 1871 and 1872.

In 1881 the sheriff and tax collector prepared and advertised a descriptive list, giving names of parties to whom assessed and description of each piece separately and amount of taxes due thereon, of all property situated in the parish forfeited or sold to the state for delinquent taxes and not redeemed as provided by law, and announced the sale of the same for the taxes due thereon pursuant to Act No. 107 of 1880. This offering took place first in March, 1881, and there being no bid, again in May, 1881, and at the last offering all the property assessed in the name of Hunter, including the SO acres in question, was adjudicated to John B. Stone.

The sheriff’s deed recites that the property was sold for delinquent taxes due for the years from 1870 to 1877, both inclusive, and that each piece of property sold was offered separately by description and name of party to whom assessed.

Stone paid the amount of his bid and also the taxes on the property for 1880 (then due) and recorded his title in the conveyance records on August 27, 1881.

Thereafter the property, including the 80 acres, was assessed to him and he paid the taxes thereon for the years 1881 and 1882. He failed to pay the taxes for 1883, 1884 and 1885 and the property was offered for sale by the tax collector for those taxes, and in default of any bid therefor was adjudicated to the state.

This was 'in May, 1886. The state’s title was recorded in the conveyance records July 15, 1886.

In November of the following year the State Auditor, acting under Act No. 44 of the Acts of 1886, certified the lands to the board of commissioners of the Fifth levee district, and the levee board’s title was recorded in the conveyance records on December 28, 1887.

The description in all these transfers included, specifically, by legal subdivision, the 80 acres involved in this suit.

The levee board sold to James A. Stone in March, 1889; Stone sold to William Ger-ton in April, 1889; Gerton, later in the same month, sold to Silas F. Catchings; and Oatchings in May, 1889, sold to the plaintiff company.

All these acts of sale were seasonably recorded in the conveyance records.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 So. 634, 109 La. 641, 1902 La. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-co-v-bradford-la-1902.