BOARD OF COM'RS OF PT. N. ORL. v. Delacroix Corp.
This text of 274 So. 2d 745 (BOARD OF COM'RS OF PT. N. ORL. v. Delacroix Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF the PORT OF NEW ORLEANS
v.
DELACROIX CORPORATION et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*746 Phelps, Dunbar, Marks, Claverie & Sims, Sumter D. Marks, Jr., Charles M. Lanier, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.
Wilkinson & Wilkinson, Hugh M. Wilkinson, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant-appellant Delacroix Corporation.
Sidney L. Shushan, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees Nylka Land Co., and others.
Perez, Fernandez & Seeman, Manual A. Fernandez, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee Percy J. McCarron.
William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., State of Louisiana, John M. Currier, Asst. Atty. Gen., for State of Louisiana as original defendant.
Before REGAN, BOUTALL, and BAILES, JJ.
BAILES, Judge.
This appeal arises from the judgment of the trial court rendered in this expropriation suit filed by the Board of Commissioners of the Port of New Orleans to acquire servitudes for the construction, maintenance and operation of the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet channel and continuing spoil disposal. The trial court rejected the claim of appellant, Delacroix Corporation, to ownership of Section 26, Township 15 South, Range 17 East, St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana. We find the judgment appealed from is correct, and we affirm.
The plaintiff, as the assuring authority for the acquisition thereof, was granted judgment awarding it the necessary servitudes upon payment of the just compensation, as determined by the trial court to the parties recognized as the owners of the affected property.
In this appeal, none of the parties contest the right of the plaintiff to expropriate the rights sought, nor do any of the parties now complain of the adequacy of the compensation awarded by the trial court.
The issue in this appeal is whether title to subject property is in the Delacroix Corporation (hereinafter referred to simply as Delacroix) or Nylka Land Company, Ltd., (Hereinafter referred to simply as Nylka), and its assigns.
Delacroix deraigns its title as follows:
United States to State of Louisiana (Swamp Land Act);
State of Louisiana to Lake Borgne Basin Levee District in 1895;
Lake Borgne Basin Levee District to George H. Randolph, May 26, 1906;
George H. Randolph to W. J. Schwab, May 26, 1906;
W. J. Schwab to Thomas P. Hanna, January 15, 1908;
Thomas P. Hanna to John W. Sherard, August 21, 1911;
John W. Sherard to Edward J. Conroy, August 24, 1912;
Edward J. Conroy to George H. Henderson, November 5, 1928;
George H. Henderson to Acme Land & Fur Co., November 24, 1928; and
Acme Land & Fur Co., to Delacroix Corporation, August 7, 1929.
*747 Delacroix alleges a supplemental chain of title consisting of the following conveyances:
William J. Schwab to John R. Perez, May 6, 1926;
John R. Perez to Acme Land & Fur Company, Inc., December 24, 1927.
Nylka's chain of title originates in a June 28, 1911 tax sale of the subject property for 1910 taxes assessed in the name of Thomas P. Hanna.
Delacroix asserts it has established a record title complete from the original transfer from the United States to the State of Louisiana to its acquisition from Acme Land and Fur Company, Inc.
Alternatively, that if the 1911 tax sale to Nylka had any adverse effect on the Delacroix title this adversity has been overcome and it has preserved its title through sole and continuous possession from 1929 (date of its acquisition to date, having possessed in excess of ten years in good faith under just title and also in excess of thirty years.
Further alternatively, that if during certain periods the subject land was in a status of adjudication for delinquent taxes to the State of Louisiana, all adjudications having now been redeemed, do not bar recognition of Delacroix's title under prescriptions of ten and thirty years.
Thus, Delacroix in its answer pleaded its record chain of title and alternatively pleaded ten and thirty years prescription.
Ten year acquisitive prescription of immovables is governed by Civil Code Articles 3478 through 3482.
Article 3451 of the Civil Code defines a good faith possessor as one "who has just reason to believe himself the master of the thing which he possesses, although he may not be in fact."
A bad faith possessor by Civil Code Article 3452 is one "who possesses as master, but who assumes this quality, when he well knows that he has no title to the thing, or that his title is vicious and defective."
Further, Article 3481 provides that "good faith is always presumed in matters of prescription; and he who alleges bad faith in the possessor, must prove it."
As was stated in Knight v. Berwick Lumber Co., 130 La. 240, 57 So. 900 (1912):
"To be in good faith, the possessor must have the positive belief that he is the true owner of the property he holds. If he doubts the validity of his title, his possession cannot be the basis of the prescription of 10 years. Gaines v. Hennen, 24 How. 553, 16 L.Ed. 770. Doubt as to ownership, or the right to alienate, is inconsistent with good faith, because doubt is the mean between good and bad faith."
It is particularly significant that Acme Land & Fur Company, Inc., in the act of conveyance by which Delacroix acquired the subject property, transferred other property under the following condition, namely:
"The above 3010 acres, more or less of the `Schwab Tract' now being sold, conveyed and delivered by vendor with full warranty as to title." (Emphasis added.)
whereas the transfer of the subject property which was accomplished by the immediately succeeding section of the description contained the following condition, to wit:
"The above 5132 acres, more or less, of the `Schwab Tract' now being sold, delivered and conveyed without any warranty whatever as to title." (Emphasis added.)
There is no testimony in this record which touches on the question of whether Delacroix examined or investigated the title to the subject property. We are persuaded that even without an examination or inquiry into the validity of the title the above quoted portion of the deed is sufficient to put Delacroix on notice that there was a deficiency in the title to subject *748 property. The fact which we allude to is that 3010 acres of land was conveyed "with full warranty as to title" and immediately following is the conveyance of 5132 acres "without any warranty whatever as to title."
We are cognizant of the principle that one is not required to examine the public records and thus ascertain and determine the validity of the title to immovable property he contemplates purchasing as a condition precedent to good faith. As was said by the court in Arnold v. Sun Oil Co., 218 La. 50, 48 So.2d 369, the purchaser may purchase without any investigation of the title, and if the four conditions of Article 3479 of the Civil Code are met, the requirement for the ten year prescription is met.
We believe, though, that herein Delacroix was put on notice that something was wrong or some element for good title was absent or some deficiency existed and that an investigation should be made to determine the quality of the title conveyed.
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