Bostwick v. New Hope Baptist Church

111 So. 2d 201, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 898
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 3, 1959
DocketNo. 8988
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 So. 2d 201 (Bostwick v. New Hope Baptist Church) 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.

Bluebook
Bostwick v. New Hope Baptist Church, 111 So. 2d 201, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 898 (La. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

BOLIN, Judge ad hoc.

Sam Bostwick brings this suit, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 13:5062, against the New Hope Baptist Church in order to try title to a certain plot of ground which was reserved in a deed made to the church some sixty years ago. The plaintiff alleges that the defendant is “a colored congregation, unincorporated, domiciled and doing business in Vivian, Caddo Parish, Louisiana.” In connection with the suit in the lower court, service was made on a Negro by the name of Friday Davis, who is alleged to be a deacon and a member of the said church. The defendant first filed an exception to the citation in that the defendant was cited through the said Friday Davis, an individual who had not been appointed for such purposes. This exception to the citation was overruled by the trial judge. Without any reservation as to its rights under the exception, the defendant filed an answer in the form of a general denial, coupled with a plea of prescription of ten and thirty years acquirenda causa. On these issues the case was tried, resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff recognizing him to be the owner of the 40 acres in question, less a square acre in the northwest corner thereof. It is from this judgment that the plaintiff has perfected the appeal now before the court.

As stated hereinabove, this is what is generally referred to as an action to try title wherein neither of the litigants are alleged to be in possession of the property. In order to better understand the background of this case, and particularly as it relates to the ownership, description and possession of the property, it would perhaps be better to briefly outline the basis •of such title. On September 22, 1893, the New Hope Baptist Church originally acquired from John W. Stallcup:

“Northwest Quarter of Northwest Quarter of Section 35, Township 22 North, Range 16 West, Caddo Parish, Louisiana.”

On June 19, 1894, the said church sold to Allen Thompson:

“The Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section Thirty-five (35), Township Twenty-two (22) North, of Range Sixteen (16) West, less two acres reserved for Church purposes, on the North line of sedd quarter of quarter section upon which the church now stands, situated in Cad-do Parish, La.” (Emphasis ours.)

The Estate of Allen Thompson permitted this property to be sold for taxes on June 25, 1941, and on the said date Sam Bost-wick purchased same at a tax sale, but, for the first time, the property was described as follows:

“39.00 acres, NW of NW y4 of Sec. 35 (22-16), less 1 acre in NW corner.” (Emphasis ours.)

In 1944 the property was redeemed by the Allen Thompson Estate but it was again sold in June, 1945, to the same purchaser and under the same description as previously bought by him in June, 1941.

Mr. Bostwick brought a suit to quiet his title to the 39 acres above described and such a judgment was signed by the District Court of Caddo Parish, Louisiana, on March 12, 1954 and a corrected judgment affecting the same property was signed by the said court on September 28, 1956.

In appealing its case before this court the defendants below now contend that the judgment of the district court is in error and should be reversed principally because of the following reasons:

(1). The trial judge was in error in overruling the exception to the citation which was filed in the lower court.
(2). The judgment of the lower court was in error in recognizing the [203]*203plaintiff as the owner of that portion of property which was being used as a colored cemetery.

In brief and in oral argument before this court, counsel for defendants strenuously urge that the original exception to the citation was good and should have been sustained. In this connection we have been cited to many cases under our jurisprudence to the general effect that a service of citation on a member, who is not authorized, is defective as to an unincorporated association such as the New Hope Baptist Church, and, particularly when the defendant is involved in a suit to try title to a tract of land. Such may he the law but, unfortunately for the defendant, we feel that this court cannot pass on this exception in the manner in which it has been presented to us. As previously stated herein, the defendant made a voluntary appearance in the lower court by filing an answer and a plea of prescription without reserving any of its rights under the previous exception as to the citation. A defendant may, without subjecting himself to the jurisdiction of the court, come in and ask to be dispensed from answering a suit, or, in other words, decline to answer, either because the court has no jurisdiction or because the process for bringing him into court has been faulty. But he cannot, without subjecting himself to the jurisdiction of the court, apply for any other relief. Florida Molasses Co. v. Berger, 1951, 220 La. 31, 55 So.2d 771; Rathbone v. The London, 6 La.Ann. 439; Succession of Baumgarden, 35 La.Ann. 127; Williams v. Gilkeson-Sloss Commission Co., 45 La.Ann. 1013, 13 So. 394; First Nat. Bank of Arcadia v. Johnson, 130 La. 288, 57 So. 930, 931; Vititoe v. Shea, 161 La. 984, 109 So. 785.

As to the merits, we are of the opinion that the trial judge was in error in decreeing the plaintiff to be the owner of any property that was'being used as a cemetery. There was no dispute in the evidence that a certain portion of the property was being used as a burial ground for the colored people of that community. Mr. Ben E. Ramsey, a Civil Engineer who testified for the defendant, estimated that approximately 1.25 acres were thus being used as a cemetery. In this connection, a great deal of the trial below was consumed by the introduction of testimony as to how long the property had been used for such a cemetery and as to whether or not same had been under fence for a period of thirty years or more. All of this evidence was apparently introduced for the purpose of sustaining the pleas of ten and thirty years prescription relied upon by defendant. In connection with this contention by the defendant, the plaintiff likewise diligently sought to show in the lower court that any such use of a cemetery as a burial ground was done indiscriminately by the public and as such could not be classified as any possession by or on behalf of the New Hope Baptist Church.

As previously stated herein, any title which the plaintiff has must rest on his tax deed which he acquired in 1945. It is our opinion that the plaintiff, under no circumstances, could have acquired a valid title to the cemetery by means of the tax deed. Louisiana Constitution Article 10, Section 4, LSA, provides as follows:

“Section 4. The following property, . and no other, shall be exempt from taxation:
# * * * # *
“2. Religious, charitable and educa-, tional property. * * *; places of burial.” (Emphasis ours.)

While we have not been furnished with any cases wherein property exempt from taxation has been sold at a tax sale, we feel certain that such a sale is null and void and has no effect. As an analogy of the situation, it is settled jurisprudence that a tax sale of property upon which the taxes have previously been paid is an absolute nullity, not curable by the prescriptive periods provided in the Constitution. Lacaze v.

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 2d 201, 1959 La. App. LEXIS 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostwick-v-new-hope-baptist-church-lactapp-1959.