Barnett v. State Mineral Board

192 So. 701, 193 La. 1055, 1939 La. LEXIS 1246
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 27, 1939
DocketNo. 35391.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 192 So. 701 (Barnett v. State Mineral Board) 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
Barnett v. State Mineral Board, 192 So. 701, 193 La. 1055, 1939 La. LEXIS 1246 (La. 1939).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

J. P. Barnett and J. Cleveland Fruge seek an injunction against the State Mineral Board to prevent the Board from granting a mineral lease on a tract of land containing about 690 acres in the Parish of St. Landry. Plaintiffs claim to be the owners of the land by virtue of grants from the State of Louisiana to the Red. River, Atchafalaya and Bayou Boeuf Levee District under Act No. 79 of 1890, as amended by Act No. 46 of 1892, ratified and approved by Act No. 316 of 1926. Plaintiffs set forth their complete' chain of title, beginning with the transfers from the State to the Levee District and from the Levee District, by mesne conveyances, to them. Plaintiffs allege that the State Mineral Board is advertising for bids for a mineral lease on their land, and, unless enjoined, will grant such a lease, to their irreparable injury, loss and damage.

The State Mineral Board excepted to plaintiffs’ petition, on the ground that it *1159 failed to disclose a cause or right of action. The exception was referred to the merits and defendant answered, denying plaintiffs’ ownership of the land and alleging that title to the land was still vested in the State. Defendant showed that the instruments evidencing the grant by the State to the Levee District were not signed by both the State Auditor and the Register of the Land Office, as provided by Act No. 79 of 1890, as amended by Act No. 46 of. 1892, and defendant averred that Act No. 316 of 1926, purporting to ratify and confirm the instruments evidencing the grants, is unconstitutional because it violates sections 2, 4, and 12 of Article 4 of the Constitution of 1921.

The facts are not disputed. The evidence offered on the trial of -the case is wholly documentary. This evidence consists of plaintiffs’ chain of title, beginning with the instruments of conveyance by the State, signed by the State Auditor, to the Levee District, which instruments were executed in the month of February, 1897, and were recorded in the parish records in the same month and year; certified copies of the deeds in the chain of title running from the Levee District to and including the title acquired by plaintiffs; and a certified copy of the advertisement of the State Mineral Board asking for bids for the lease of the mineral rights in and to the land claimed by plaintiffs.

The trial judge rendered judgment, recognizing plaintiffs as the owners of the land in dispute, but not of the mineral rights thereunder, and denying plaintiffs injunctive relief. Plaintiffs appealed, and, after lodging the transcript, filed in this Court a plea of peremption and prescription and a plea of estoppel, contending that if the State had any right to dispute the validity of the grants to the Levee District, this right was lost by the lapse of six years under Act No. 62 of 1912; and that the State is estopped from attacking the constitutionality of Act No. 316 of 1926 because it maintained that the act was constitutional in the case of State ex rel. Woods v. Register of the State Land Office, 189 La. 69, 179 So. 38.

The case, as presented in the district court, involved the following question: (1) Does Act No. 79 of 1890, as amended by Act No. 46 of 1892, require that both the State Auditor and the Register of the State Land Office should have signed the instruments evidencing the transfer to the Levee District? (2) Is Act bfo. 316 of 1926 unconstitutional as being violative of sections 2, 4, and 12 of Article 4 of the Constitution of 1921?

The case, as presented in this Court, involves those questions and the additional questions: (a) Has the State lost its rights, if any, by the lapse of six years, as provided by Act No. 62 of 1912? (b) Is the State estopped from asserting the unconstitutionality of Act No. 316 of 1926 by having asserted its constitutionality in the case of State ex rel. Woods v. Register of the State Land Office?

The trial judge, in rendering judgment on the questions submitted to him as shown by his written reasons on file in the record, held that Act No. 79 of 1890, as amended by Act No. 46 of 1892, required the sig *1161 natures of both the State Auditor and the Register of the State Land Office to the instruments evidencing the grants to the Levee District, and that, therefore, until the passage of Act No. 316 of 1926, the Levee District did not acquire any title to the land in dispute; that upon the adoption of Act No. 316 of 1926, the title to the land passed to the Levee District and inured to its vendee and through him to the plaintiffs; that as plaintiffs did not acquire any title whatever until Act No. 316 of 1926 became effective, the title so acquired was only to the land itself and not to the minerals under the land, which the State was prevented from conveying by section 2 of Article 4 of the Constitution of 1921.

Linked with this question, however, is the second question submitted for our consideration, which is whether the instruments of transfer from the State to the Levee District, if informally executed, were constitutionally validated by the provisions of Act No. 316 of 1926. That statute declares, in plain and unmistakable language, that such instruments were merely “informally executed transfers,” which the Legislature, in enacting the statute, expressly “ratified, quieted and confirmed, the same as if all such deeds had been signed by both the Auditor and Register of the State Land Office * * *.”

In this case, the lands composing the tract in dispute were applied for by the Levee District, identified by instruments of conveyance signed by the State Auditor, and placed of record in the parish wherein the lands are situated. Subsequently, the lands were sold by the Levee District and are now held by the plaintiffs as successors in title of the Levee District by duly recorded mesne conveyances.

Conceding that under the provisions of Act No. 79 of 1890, as amended by Act No. 46 of 1892, it was the duty of the Register of the State Land Office, as well as of the State Auditor to sign the instruments of conveyance to the Levee District, the question arises as to whether the failure of the Register of the State Land Office to sign those instruments was cured by the adoption of Act No. 316 of 1926, in view of the provisions of section 2 of Article 4 of the Constitution of 1921.

The trial judge, in rendering his judgment, gave effect to Act No. 316 of 1926 as conveying the land, but he refused to give it effect as conveying the mineral rights under the land, because of the intervening constitutional provision — section 2 of Article 4 of the Constitution of 1921. [

The pertinent provision of the article of the Constitution reads as follows: “In all cases the mineral rights on any and all property sold by the State shall be reserved, except where the owner or other person having the right to redeem may buy or redeem property sold or adjudicated to the State for taxes.”

Counsel for the plaintiffs and the amici curiae contend that Act No. 316 of 1926 is not violative of the constitutional prohibition which we have quoted, for the reason that the transfer by the State to the Levee District was a grant and not a sale, and for the further reason that the legislative act is simply a remedial or curative statute or a statute of repose.

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Bluebook (online)
192 So. 701, 193 La. 1055, 1939 La. LEXIS 1246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-state-mineral-board-la-1939.