Bayard v. Baldwin Lumber Co.

103 So. 290, 157 La. 994, 1925 La. LEXIS 2002
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 2, 1925
DocketNo. 24898.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 103 So. 290 (Bayard v. Baldwin Lumber Co.) 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
Bayard v. Baldwin Lumber Co., 103 So. 290, 157 La. 994, 1925 La. LEXIS 2002 (La. 1925).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

Plaintiff claims to be the owner of a strip of land, containing about 22 arpents, lying in the parish of St. Mary along the west boundary of section 10, township 14 south, range 7 east, running from the southern to the northern boundary of said section. On January 10, 1917, he entered into a contract with the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, to sell it the timber on said land at the price of $8 per thousand feet, on an estimate to he made by Walter X. Kemper, the payment to he made in cash, on the execution of the deed. The contract contains the following stipulations, to wit:

“This agreement is accepted by the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, provided that the said land shall be found to belong to the said Bayard, and that he shall establish his title thereto to its satisfaction, or, if not, that he may cause same to be established by suit *997 against the said company to compel same to purchase said timber, and, in so doing, shall establish his right to sell same; it being agreed that, upon the establishing of said right and the showing of the said estimate of the said Kemper, decree in favor of said Bayard shall be rendered accordingly.
“It is distinctly understood that both parties hereto claim the said land, and that nothing herein shall be considered as a recognition of the title of either party by the other signing hereto, nor shall anything herein estop either party from asserting any title, right, or_ claim which he may otherwise have to the said land, or the timber thereon. And the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, with the above proviso, agrees to this contract.”

J. Allen Barnett, Robert S. Barnett, and C. F. Borah made themselves parties to the act, binding themselves, in solido, to guarantee the performance on the part of the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, of its part of the contract, and to pay for the timber, as stipulated in the contract, should it be found that Bayard has title to said property. The contract provides that the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, may proceed to cut said timber, with the understanding that it will pay for it should it be determined to belong to Bayard.

After the execution of the contract, the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, availed itself of the right granted it by that instrument to proceed at once with the cutting of the timber, and cut it and hauled it away.

Something over a year after this contract had been entered into, plaintiff, through his counsel, addressed a letter to one of the attorneys for the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, mailing a copy of it to that company, in which he set out his chain of title to said strip of land, upon which the timber he had agreed to sell was growing, and in which he asserted that the chain vested title in him, and, therefore, that the obligation rested with the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, to pay him for the timber. The Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, was not satisfied with the chain of title presented by plaintiff, and therefore refused to pay unless plaintiff established title.

When the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, refused to accept the title tendered, plaintiff instituted the present suit. The purpose of the suit is to recover judgment against the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, and its sureties for $5,840, the value of said timber. Plaintiff sets out the chain of title under which he claims the land, and attaches to and makes part of his petition the foregoing contract. He also pleads, as muniments of title, the prescriptions acquirendi causa of 10 and 30 years.

Defendants, for answer to this suit, deny that the chain of title set out by plaintiff shows that the ownership of the land, from which the timber was cut, is vested in plaintiff, or was vested in him when the timber was cut, and also puts the title, so set out, at issue. They also aver that one of them, the Baldwin Lumber Company, Limited, was the owner of said timber at the time it was cut, having acquired it, along with other timber, from M. A. Patout & Son, Limited, which corporation, they aver, was the bona fide owner of the land upon which the timber grew.

The evidence discloses that the land claimed by plaintiff, from which the timber was cut, formed part of a tract selected by the state of Louisiana, by warrant 154, under the act of Congress of date September 4th, 1841 (5 Stat. U. S. 453), and was approved to the state by the Secretary of the Interior on April 13, 1858, and that the state sold the land to Simeon Patout on May 7, 1847. Whether Simeon Patout or his heirs sold or disposed of the land does not appear from the record.

The evidence also shows that in 188S a tract of land, which contains the same superficial area. as the land claimed by plaintiff, and which .plaintiff contends is the same land, was seized by Mrs. Blanche Bayard as *999 belonging to H. B. Bayard, to satisfy a judgment of the former against the latter, and was sold at sheriff’s sale to O. P. Romero, Charles T. Kratzer, Alfred Duboin, Joseph Bonin, Gervais Kleinpeter, and E. B. Bayard, the plaintiff herein.

It also appears that on January 10, 1888, Mrs. Irma Bayard, wife of Gervais Klein-peter, Mrs. Blanche Bayard, wife of Charles T. Kratzer, Mrs. Aminthe Bayard, wife of Alfred Duboin, and Mrs. Zulmee Bayard, wife of Joseph Bonin, each, with the authorization of her husband, sold, with full warranty of title, to O. P. Romero and to plaintiff, what they termed their whole undivided interest in the same land as that described in the deed of the sheriff.

As the foregoing deed of Mrs. Irma Bayard, wife of Gervais Kleinpeter, and others to Romero and to plaintiff recites that the land conveyed by it is the same land as that acquired by the vendors and purchasers named in it, at the sheriff’s sale, above mentioned, and as it was signed by the husbands of the vendors, although only for the purpose of authorizing their wives, still, in view of the recital mentioned the deed may be treated as conveying, to all intents and purposes, such interest as the husbands had in the land, described in it, as well as such as their wives had.

It also appears that some time after the execution of the foregoing deed, O. P. Romero, another of the vendees named in the sheriff’s deed, and his wife, Mrs. Cec'ile Bayard, sold their undivided interest in the same land, as that described in the sheriff’s deed, to plaintiff.

As Romero had acquired with plaintiff all of the interest that the remaining vendees, named in the sheriff’s sale, had acquired in the land conveyed by that sale, therefore, by the deed from Romero and his wife to plaintiff, plaintiff became the owner of all the right, title, and interest .that H. B. Bayard possessed in the tract sold at sheriff’s sale.

The foregoing constitutes the title, by deed, produced by plaintiff. Defendants contend that the title produced fails to show that plaintiff was the owner of the timber for two reasons.

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 290, 157 La. 994, 1925 La. LEXIS 2002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayard-v-baldwin-lumber-co-la-1925.