Brown v. Wood

451 So. 2d 569
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1984
Docket15886-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 451 So. 2d 569 (Brown v. Wood) 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
Brown v. Wood, 451 So. 2d 569 (La. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

451 So.2d 569 (1984)

Beulah Howell BROWN, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Vera McClanahan WOOD, et vir., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 15886-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

April 30, 1984.
Writ Denied June 15, 1984.

*571 Cameron C. Minard, Columbia, for defendants-appellants.

Dimos, Brown, Erskine & Burkett by David G. Erskine and Donald R. Brown, Monroe, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Before PRICE, HALL, MARVIN, JASPER E. JONES and SEXTON, JJ.

HALL, Judge.

Plaintiffs filed a petitory action against defendants to establish their ownership of a tract of land in Caldwell Parish. The trial court awarded judgment in plaintiff's favor and defendants have appealed. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

Plaintiffs in this cause are Donald R. Brown, Charlotte Brown Hislop, Beulah Howell Brown, and Henry Brown. Defendants are husband and wife, Charles and Vera Wood. In this petitory action filed June 3, 1982, the plaintiffs, Browns, sought legal recognition of their ownership of the Bouef River river front tract to which they held the record title. In a decision rendered June 15, 1983, the trial court awarded judgment in plaintiff's favor, recognizing the Browns as owners of the tract in question and ordering defendants, the Woods, to surrender possession of that property.

The tract at issue, approximately 5 acres in Section 18, Township 14 North, Range 5 East, is located between the southern bank of the Bouef River and other property held by the Woods under record title, and is traversed by Louisiana Highway 133. The following diagram illustrates the situation:

*572

The tract in question is part of a larger tract which was deeded to Dr. S.H. Brown, plaintiffs' ancestor in title, in 1904. The same tract was sold by Dr. Brown to Ernest "Buddy" Oliveaux and Tray Ritchie in 1936. In 1944, the tract was purchased at a sheriff's sale by Erwin and Cecil Brown, the sons of the then deceased Dr. S.H. Brown. Cecil and Erwin Brown have both since died intestate, and the four instant plaintiffs are their heirs. Plaintiffs Donald Brown and Charlotte Brown Hislop are the children and sole heirs of Cecil Brown. Plaintiffs Beulah Howell Brown and Henry Brown are the widow and son, respectively, of Erwin Brown, and his sole surviving heirs. Upon the deaths of Cecil and Erwin, the four instant plaintiffs acquired record title to the tract in question via intestate succession. Thus, plaintiffs are the record owners of the contested property.

In 1956, defendants Charles and Vera Wood purchased from Ernest "Buddy" Oliveaux a plot of land in Section 19 immediately to the south of the disputed tract. The deed from Buddy Oliveaux to the Woods did not include or encompass the contested tract. However, subsequent to the 1956 conveyance to the Woods of the property abutting the south end of the contested river front acreage, the Woods performed various acts of corporeal possession on the disputed tract. In 1981, the Woods acquired a quit claim deed to that part of the Brown tract lying north of the highway from the Oliveauxs.

Ownership of immovable property under record title may be eclipsed and superseded by ownership acquired under prescriptive title. Under the general codal provisions on acquisitive prescription, a possessor lacking good faith and/or just title may acquire prescriptive title to land by corporeally possessing a tract for 30 years with the intent to possess as owner. Such possession confers prescriptive title upon the possessor only when it is continuous, uninterrupted, peaceable, public and unequivocal, and confers title only to such immovable property as is actually possessed. LSA-C.C. Arts. 3424, 3476, 3486, 3487, 3488. Alternatively, under Civil Code Art. 794, a title holder may acquire more land than his title calls for by possessing property beyond his title for 30 years without interruption and within visible bounds. Such a title holder may attain the thirty *573 year possessory period—which is necessary to perfect prescriptive title in the absence of good faith and just title—by "tacking" on the possession of his ancestor in title. LSA-C.C. Arts. 794, 3442. Possession is only transferable by universal title or particular title, and thus privity of contract or estate is an essential prerequisite to tacking. LSA-C.C. Art. 3441.

The legal principles which govern tacking under Civil Code Article 794[1] are in some respects different and distinct from the principles which govern tacking under Civil Code Articles 3441 and 3442 (formerly embodied in Articles 3493-3496).[2] Article 794 deals with boundary prescription, strictly speaking, while Articles 3441 and 3442 provide general rules which refer in broader terms to acquisitive prescription of property, generally.

Article 794 states that:

"When a party proves acquisitive prescription, the boundary shall be fixed according to limits established by prescription rather than titles. If a party and his ancestors in title possessed for thirty years without interruption, within visible bounds, more land than their title called for, the boundary shall be fixed along these bounds."

Article 3441 provides that:

"Possession is transferable by universal title or by particular title."[3]

Tacking under Article 794 is different from tacking under the general tacking provisions of Articles 3441 and 3442 in the following respect:

Under Article 794, the privity of title between the possessor and his ancestor in title need not extend to the property to which the possessor asserts prescriptive title; under Article 794, the juridical link, or written instrument which passes to the possessor from his ancestor in title need not encompass or include the particular property to which the possessor claims prescriptive title. On the other hand, it is generally conceded under the general tacking provisions of Articles 3441 and 3442 and their statutory pre-cursors, that tacking is only *574 allowed with respect to property that is included and described in the juridical link between the possessor's ancestor in title and the possessor himself.

Simply stated, under Art. 794 (old Art. 852), one may utilize tacking to prescribe beyond title on adjacent property to the extent of visible boundaries, but under the general prescriptive articles, Arts. 3441 and 3442, tacking may be utilized to prescribe only to the extent of title. As was succinctly stated by former Justice, then Judge Tate, in Stanford v. Robertson, 144 So.2d 747, 750 (La.App. 3d Cir.1962),

"Under LSA-C.C. art. 3499, the possession of the predecessors in title cannot be added to that of the present possessor, unless the title of the present possessor includes the property in dispute, else there is no privity of estate such as is necessary to make up the thirty years adverse possession "as owner ". On the other hand, under LSA-C.C. Art. 852, the tacking of successive possessions up to the established visible bound between two estates is permitted, whether or not the land in dispute is included within the title description of the party pleading prescriptive title under this article." (Citations omitted).

However, when correctly viewed, there still must be some juridical link to effectuate tacking under either species of tacking, whether it is Article 794 or Articles 3441 and 3442.

The fact that Article 794 envisions that tacking requires some

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451 So. 2d 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-wood-lactapp-1984.