Bruce v. Holstein

151 So. 810
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 3, 1934
DocketNo. 4620.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 So. 810 (Bruce v. Holstein) 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
Bruce v. Holstein, 151 So. 810 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Otis Bruce and LeRoy Bruce, the sole heirs of their mother, Viola Street Bruce, instituted this suit, a petitory action, against W. C. Holstein, Trudia Jones, and John H. Strickland, to recover an undivided one-half interest in and to lot 3, being the N. W. ⅛ of N. E. ¾ of Sec. 5, Tp. 9 N., R. 1 E., in the parish of Grant, .La.; and to recover rent for *811 tlie use and occupancy thereof for several years.

The petition declares that the land was patented to Patrick C. Street as a homestead in 1906, and that the heirs of Street sold and conveyed it to George W. Bruce, petitioners’ father, during the lifetime of their said mother, and was owned by him when she died; that, as her sole heirs, they inherited their mother’s community half of said land at her death. Possession of the land by defendants since December 19, 1924, is alleged.

Defendants assert ownership of said land, admit actual possession thereof, and deny that plaintiffs have any right or interest thereto or therein. They called H. W. Kendrick in warranty. He was personally served, but did not answer, so far as we are informed by the record; no default was entered against him.

Defendants filed a plea of prescription of ten years, acquirendi causa, wherein they allege that they and their authors in title have had the public and peaceable possession of the land in controversy, under just title, translative of property, for more than 20 years; and that both plaintiffs were over the age of 22 years when this suit was filed.

The trial judge found that LeRoy Bruce was over 22 years old when the suit was filed, sustained the plea of prescription as to him, and rejected his demand; and also found that Otis Bruce had not reached the age of 22 years when suit was filed and recognized him to be the owner of án undivided one-fourth interest in the land. Plaintiffs’ demand for rent was rejected. On the call in warranty, the judgment contains- the following reference: “That the same judgment herein rendered against the defendants, be rendered in favor of defendants against their warrantors in title.”

LeRoy Bruce has appealed. Defendants have not answered the appeal, made no appearance in this court, nor filed brief.

The land in dispute was patented to Patrick 0. Street by the United States in 1903. A large number of grantors, presumably the heirs of the patentee, on June 19, 1910, sold and conveyed the land to George W. Bruce, but the description in the deed reads lot 2 instead of lot 3, and, on April 22, 1911, Bruce attempted to sell the land to Alexander W. Mobley, and the same error occurred. The record contains no other conveyances of the land, but it is evident that it passed by mesne conveyances through several owners before defendants acquired deed to it. There is in the record a copy of a judgment rendered by the ninth district court, Grant parish, on June 26, 1926, which specifically decrees that the descriptions in the following deeds: F. R. Street et als. to George R. Bruce, recorded in Conveyance Book “P,” page 639; George W. Broce to Alexander W. Mobley, recorded in Book “R,” page 620; Alexander W. Mobley to Lemuel B. Scott, recorded in Book “T,” page 101; Lemuel B. Scott to John W. Scott, recorded in Book “T,” page 366; L. B. Scott to Walter Slay, recorded in Book “T,” page 384; J. W. Scott to Walter Slay, recorded in Book “T,” page 385; Walter Slay to Mrs. R. Kendrick, recorded in Book “X,” page 170; be corrected to read “Lot 3 of Section 5, Township 9 North, Range 1 East,” whereas said description read “Lot 2” of that section, township, and range.

The record in that suit is not in the transcript before us. Henry W. Kendrick was plaintiff. Apparently it was brought against every one who owned an interest in the land back to the Street heirs. There is no deed in the present record running to Henry W. Kendrick, nor to the defendants herein. No note of evidence was taken when the case was tried. At the request of attorneys for both sides, the trial judge wrote and signed a statement of the facts, found by him in the case, which is in the record. He states that the deeds, the descriptions of which were corrected in the Kendrick suit, were introduced in evidence. He found that Mrs. Bruce, mother of plaintiffs, died January 4, 1910; that Otis Bruce was 22 years old on November 21, 1931; and that LeRoy Bruce was 24 years of age when this suit was filed on September 30, 1931. He also says that Holstein and. Kendrick, defendants, had improved the property since they went into possession of it.

The record is not in satisfactory condition, many documents offered in evidence being omitted therefrom, but with the statement of facts of the lower court and admissions in the pleadings, it is possibly near enough complete to justify us in undertaking to pass upon the one question involved, and that is: Could the deeds of this property, containing erroneous descriptions of the land sought to be conveyed, form the basis for the beginning of the current of prescription acquirendi causa, or did such prescription only have its inception with the j-udgment of the court in 1926, which corrected the errors of description in the various deeds, back to the entry-man? If prescription began with the deeds, especially that of plaintiffs’ father to Mobley in 1911, LeRoy- Bruce is barred thereby. If it only began when the errors were corrected by the court’s decree in 1926, it is clear the period had not entirely run when this suit was filed.

Article 3478 of the Civil Code, as amended by Act No. 64 of 1924, is as follows: “He who acquires an immovable in good faith and by just title prescribes for it in ten years. This prescription shall run against interdicts, married women, absentees and all others now excepted by law; and as to minors this prescription shall accrue and apply in twenty-two years from the date of the birth of said minor; provided that this prescription once it has begun to run against a party *812 shall not be interrupted in favor of any minor heirs of said party.”

Article 3179 of the Code, inter alia, requires that the title referred to in article 3478, supra, shall be legal “and sufficient to transfer the property”; and article 34S3 reads: “To be able to acquire by the species of prescription mentioned in this paragraph, a legal and transferable title of ownership in the possessor is necessary; this is what is called in law a just title.”

Therefore, to serve as the basis of the prescription of 10 years, in addition to good faith, which is always presumed, and actual possession, neither of which is controverted in the present case, the title relied upon must, in itself, be sufficient to transfer the ownership of the property sought to be conveyed, if executed by the true owner; “a legal and transferable title of ownership in the possessor is necessary.” If the title is not “just” and sufficient of itself to translate ownership of the land intended to be transferred, it cannot form the basis of the prescription of 10 years aequirendi causa. Material error of description, or a description not sufficient to identify the land, is sufficient to affect the conveyance as being not just and not sufficient to transfer title of ownership within the meaning of the Code. This principle has been upheld in many recent cases in the Supreme Court. It has also been held that, until correction of erroneous description of land is made, prescription does not begin to run.

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151 So. 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-v-holstein-lactapp-1934.