Authement v. Weill

2 So. 2d 31, 197 La. 585, 1941 La. LEXIS 1064
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 31, 1941
DocketNo. 36077.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 So. 2d 31 (Authement v. Weill) 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
Authement v. Weill, 2 So. 2d 31, 197 La. 585, 1941 La. LEXIS 1064 (La. 1941).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This suit involves the title to a strip of land situated in Section 12, Township 19 South, Range 22 East, in Lafourche Parish. The land lies directly in the rear of the Town of Golden Meadow. The Golden Meadow oil field is situated in this section.

Plaintiff alleged that he acquired the property from his father and mother, Oscar .Authement and Emelisa Breaux Authement, by act of sale executed in notarial form on January 26, 1918, and recorded in the conveyance office on March 6, 1918; •that Mrs. Barbara J. Weill, under date of September 16, 1938, executed a notarial instrument in favor of Fred Shields, which instrument was recorded in the conveyance records of the Parish of Lafourche; that in this instrument Mrs. Weill agreed to transfer to Fred Shields a proportion of the undivided interest (20/48ths) which she claimed to own in the property; that the existence of the instrument on the public records constituted a cloud upon plaintiff’s title which prevented plaintiff from enjoying, as owner, the benefit of the mineral development of his property, and that plaintiff was entitled to have the instrument *587 cancelled from the public records so far as it affects the property. The petition contains other allegations which it is not necessary to recite.

Mrs. Weill, in her answer, denied the allegations of the petition, and, in the alternative, alleged that she is the owner of an undivided interest in the property, which interest she acquired as the instituted heir of Dr. James B. Guthrie. The defendant then set forth the marital status of Dr. Guthrie, the manner in which she was instituted as his heir, and the chain of title on which she based her claim of ownership. She prayed that plaintiff’s suit be dismissed, and, in the alternative, that she be decreed to be an owner of an undivided 20/48ths interest in the property.

Fred Shields, the other defendant, who was a resident of Texas, appeared personally and answered plaintiff’s petition. He denied that the instrument referred to in the petition constituted a cloud on any property owned by plaintiff. He alleged that both Mrs. Weill and himself were owners of undivided interests in the property claimed by plaintiff. He set forth the same chain of title in support of his allegation of ownership as was set forth in the answer of Mrs. Weill. He also prayed that plaintiff’s suit be dismissed, and that judgment be rendered recognizing his ownership and that of Mrs. Weill in the property, in the proportions as alleged in his answer.

The court below rendered judgment against the defendants, recognizing plaintiff to be the owner of the tract of land in dispute and decreeing the instrument executed by Mrs. Weill in favor of Shields to be void and that its inscription on the conveyance records be cancelled so far as it affects the property of plaintiff. Mrs. Weill has appealed from the judgment, but her co-defendant, Fred Shields, has not appealed.

In this court, the appellee has pleaded the acquisitive prescription of ten years, and the appellant has answered the appeal and prayed that the case be remanded for a trial on the issue of prescription as provided by the second paragraph of Article 902 of the Code of Practice.

Since we have reached the conclusion that plaintiff possesses the record title to the property in dispute, it is not necessary that we pass on appellee’s prescriptive title and the appellant’s demand to remand the case for trial on that issue.

The record shows the following facts: By deed executed on June 2, 1873, James B. Guthrie acquired from Stephen L. Griffin and William V. Griffin a tract of land described as follows:

“A certain tract of land situated in this Parish, on the right bank of Bayou Lafourche, at about 60 miles below the Town of Thibodaux, being in the upper part of Lot 12 of Township 19 South, Range 22 East, Southeastern Land District of Louisiana, west of the Mississippi River, said land to be measured as follows:
“Beginning at the corner of Lots (9 and 12) Nine and Twelve of said T. 19 along Bayou Lafourche S. 440 degrees E. 14 chains, thence S. 33 degrees E.‘ 14 chains, to Drauzin Gaspard’s upper line, *589 thence along said line S. 76 degrees 10 minutes west to the section line, thence N. 46 degrees E. back to the beginning & containing seventy-two acres and 38/100 of an acre.”

By deed executed on February 18, 1874, James B. Guthrie acquired from Drauzin Gaspard a tract of land described as follows:

“A certain tract of land, situated in the Parish of Lafourche in this state, at about 60 miles below the Town of Thibodaux, and having a front of 4% acres, on the Bayou Lafourche, by the whole depth between converging lines, and being bounded on the north by lands heretofore belonging to Stephen Griffin and now the property of said James B. Guthrie, and on the south by lands of said James B. Guthrie and containing about 40 acres all in T. No. 19 S. of R. No. 22 E. in the S.E. Land Dist. of La. in the said Parish of Lafourche * * *.”

It is admitted by the parties litigant that the tract of land involved in this suit is included in the tract of land which was acquired by James B. Guthrie under the two above-mentioned deeds.

By deed executed on December 23, 1897, James B. Guthrie sold to Sheldon Guthrie property which was described in the deed as follows:

“1st. One certain tract of land situated in the Parish of Lafourche, on the right bank of Bayou Lafourche, about sixty miles below the Town of Thibodaux, comprising (a) certain land purchased by vendor from Stephen H. Griffin and William V. Griffin as per act of sale passed before Emile E. Le Blanc, Recorder of the Parish of Lafourche, on the Second (2nd) day of June, A. D. Eighteen Hundred and Seventy Three (1873) and (b) certain land purchased by vendor from Drauzin Gaspard as per Act of sale passed before Jas. Fahey, Notary Public, New Orleans, La., on the Eighteenth (18th) day of February, A. D. Eighteen Hundred and Seventy Four.
“The said tract of land composed of the two tracts of land ‘a’ and ‘b’ hereinbefore described is bounded on the upper side by land belonging to Messrs. Dillingham & Hunt, and on the lower side by land belonging to B. J. Morey and the estate of the late Frank Morey, and measures Fourteen (14) acres more or less front on Bayou Lafourche by Seven (7) acres in depth.”

Tracts “a” and “b” form, together, an irregular-shaped tract of land, the lower portion of which has a depth greater than seven acres. The property involved in this lawsuit is a portion of tracts “a” and “b” situated more than seven acres from Bayou Lafourche.

Plaintiff contends that James B. Guthrie sold to Sheldon Guthrie all of lands “a” and “b”. On the other hand, defendant contends that James B. Guthrie sold to Sheldon Guthrie only that portion of tracts “a” and “b” which is situated between Bayou Lafourche and a line parallel to the bayou and seven acres distant therefrom.

The record shows the following transfers of property: July 1, 1903, Sheldon Guthrie to Louis Bouvier; July 22, 1905, Louis Bouvier to Joseph Bruce; August 26, 1908, Joseph Bruce to Emile Bruce; No

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Bluebook (online)
2 So. 2d 31, 197 La. 585, 1941 La. LEXIS 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/authement-v-weill-la-1941.