Board of Com'rs of Fifth Louisiana Levee Dist. v. Concordia Land & Timber Co.

90 So. 402, 149 La. 1053, 1921 La. LEXIS 1536
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1921
DocketNo. 23226
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 90 So. 402 (Board of Com'rs of Fifth Louisiana Levee Dist. v. Concordia Land & Timber 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
Board of Com'rs of Fifth Louisiana Levee Dist. v. Concordia Land & Timber Co., 90 So. 402, 149 La. 1053, 1921 La. LEXIS 1536 (La. 1921).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This is an action to establish title to real estate. In the district court various tracts of land were included in the suit. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for all tracts except the W. % of the S.’W. % of Sec. 1, T. 4 N., R. 7 E., which was decreed to be the property of defendant.

Defendant has appealed from the judgment, but, having abandoned hopes of reversing it in so far as the judgment is against it, now prays that it be affirmed. The plaintiff and appellee has hied an answer in this court, praying that the judgment be amended by decreeing it to be the owner of the tract of land awarded defendant. Defendant objects to this suggested amendment on the ground that tlie answer was not filed three days before the case was fixed for argument.

[1] The case was fixed in this court for January 13, 1921, but it was not heard on that day; for, on motion of defendant, with the consent of plaintiff, it was continued, and then refixed for October 31, 1921. Plaintiff’s answer to the appeal was filed on April 16, 1921.

As that answer was filed more than three days before the day fixed for argument on the secónd fixing, and as the first fixing was set aside by consent of both parties, and especially at the instance of the appellant, the answer praying for the amendment was filed in time. Both parties having consented to. the continuance, the effects of the first fixing were destroyed;, and 'the situation became the same as if the case had not been fixed the first time, but only the second. Des Allemands Lumber Co., Ltd., v. Morgan City Timber Co., 117 La. 1, 41 South. 332.

Proceeding, therefore, to dispose of the amendment to the judgment prayed for by the appellee, by determining who is the owner of the W. % of the S. W. % of Sec. 1, T. 4, R. 7, it appears that plaintiff claims the land under a tax sale made to the state in 1894 for the taxes of 1892 and 1S93, and that defendant claims the same land under a tax sale made to Mason & Dale in 1902 for the taxes of 189S, 1899, 1900, and 1901.

Defendant avers that the land in controversy was owned by the Mississippi Delta Land Company in 1S92 and 1S93; that during those years it was assessed to that company; that for the year 1S93 the entire section was assessed to it; that both assessments were paid prior to the date of the tax sale to the state, under which plaintiff claims, and hence that plaintiff’s tax title is null and void.

Plaintiff filed a plea of estoppel, which is to the effect that defendant is estopped from urging- the defects alleged by it against plaintiff’s title, for the reason that defendant has alleged that its title is valid, whereas it contains the same alleged defects that it urges against plaintiff’s; in other words, that defendant cannot bo heard to allege defects in plaintiff’s title, when it- has judicially ad[1057]*1057mitted that the same conditions do not con-1 stitute defects when considered in relation to its own. I

[2] The plea of estoppel is not well founded. Defendant’s answer does not indicate, nor suggest, any defect in its own title, nor does the evidence adduced show that it contains the defects which defendant avers that plaintiff’s does.

The assessments for the years 1902 and 1903, constituting the basis of the tax sale to the state, under which sale plaintiff claims, reads, as appears from the agreed statement of facts in the record, as follows:

“Unknown Owner; T. 4 N., R. 7 33., 293.02 acres, all Sec. 1.”

.The tax collector, however, did not follow this description. He apparently thought that the expression, “all Sec. 1,” as it appears in the above assessment, meant all of section 1, and not all in section 1; and, evidently taking advantage of section 4 of Act 140 of 1S90, the revenue act then in force, which authorized him to give a full description of the property assessed, he made the description read, as it appears in the tax deed that he executed, as follows:

“Unknown Owner; T. 4, R. 7 E., containing 293 acres, described as follows: All section 1 in Concordia parish, La.”

Thus expressed, the description means all of section 1, in T. 4, R. 7 E., containing 293 acres, situated in Concordia parish, La., the statement of the number of acres here being mere surplusage. This is the tax sale to which defendant has reference when it avers in its answer that plaintiff’s title to the land .in controversy rests on an alleged tax sale, made under the name of unknown owners, and recorded in Book U of Conveyances of' Concordia Parish. It is against that sale that it pleads that, in the year 1S92, the W. Va of the S. W. % of Sec. 1, T. 4 N., R. 7 E. was assessed to the Mississippi Delta Land Company, and that for the year 189.3 the entire section was assessed to that company, and that for both of those years the taxes due on the assessments were paid by that company prior to the date on which the tax sale was made under which plaintiff claims.

The evidence does not show an assessment against any part of the section for the year 1892 in the name of the Mississippi Delta Land Company, but it is admitted that, for the year 1S93, the company named was assessed with land in that section, and described as “T. 4 N., R. 7 É., 293.02 acres, all Sec. 1,” and that, the taxes based on that assessment were paid prior to the tax sale above mentioned. The evidence also shows that the section contains 62S.60 acres, 293.02 of which are in the north half and 335.58 in the south half of the section. It also shows that the Mississippi Delta Land Company, as appears from an admission to that effect, never owned the S. y2 of the section but was the owner of the north half in the years 1892 and 1893.

[3] The expression “all Sec. 1” in the assessment, now under consideration does not mean all of section 1. The wording of the sentence in which the expression occurs does not so indicate: Besides, as the Mississippi Delta Land Company owned no land in the south half, of the section, but owned the north half, and as the number of acres in the half of the section owned by it correspond, even to the decimal, with the number of acres given in the assessment, the proper conclusion would seem to be that the assessment was against the north half of the section. In re Perrault’s Estate, 128 La. 453, 54 South. 939.

[4] Therefore, if we adopt the theory that the tax collector in the tax deed which he executed intended to convey, and did convey, the entire section, and that he was justified in so doing, then there is presented a case in which the taxes, on one-half of the [1059]*1059section for one of the years for which the property was sold were paid under an assessment in the name of another. Such a tax sale is null, and is not protected by the prescription of three years, which i>laintiff has pleaded, under article 233 of the Constitution of 1913. Harris v. Deblieux, 115 La. 147, 38 South. 946; Doullut v. Smith, 117 La. 506, 41 South. 913; Board of Commissioners v. Concordia Land & Timber Co., 141 La. 261, 74 South. 921.

[5] On the other hand, if the theory should be adopted that the tax collector conveyed only 293.02 acres of Sec. 1, T. 4 N., R. 7 E., belonging to Unknown Owner, thus following the description that the assessment seems to give — for such would appear to be the proper interpretation of an assessment, reading “T. 4 N., R.

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 402, 149 La. 1053, 1921 La. LEXIS 1536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-of-fifth-louisiana-levee-dist-v-concordia-land-timber-la-1921.