Champion v. Herrick

156 So. 429, 180 La. 396, 1934 La. LEXIS 1531
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 2, 1934
DocketNo. 32436.
StatusPublished

This text of 156 So. 429 (Champion v. Herrick) 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
Champion v. Herrick, 156 So. 429, 180 La. 396, 1934 La. LEXIS 1531 (La. 1934).

Opinion

BRTJNOT, Justice.

This is a suit by Mrs. Julia H. Klein, widow of Albert C. Early, and her children and grandchildren, against Mrs. Alice Louise Pfankuchen, widow of Bert Champion, and his heirs, and the Nylka Land Company, Limited, for the annulment of a tax title confirmation judgment rendered and signed in the suit entitled Bert Champion v. Coleman Herrick et ai., No. 93031 of the docket of the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, during the month of April, 1910, in so far as it affects the property described in the plaintiffs’ petition.

The plaintiffs had a curator appointed to represent the minor, Bertha E. Champion, and all of the defendants were properly cited. The curator of the minor, for lack of sufficient information, filed a general denial to the allegations of the petition. The Nylka Land Company, Limited, filed an exception of misjoinder of parties defendant. These exceptions were heard and overruled, and the Nylka Land Company, Limited, answered the suit, denied all allegations of the petition affecting the acquisition of its asserted title to the property involved in the suit, and pleaded the prescription of one, two, three, five, ten, and thirty years.

Mrs. Alice Louise Pfankuchen, widow of Bert Champion, did not answer the suit, and a judgment by default was regularly entered and confirmed as to her.

The case was tried, argued, and submitted and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs as prayed for in their petition. The Nylka Land Company, Limited, appealed from the judgment. Pending the appeal, Mrs. Julia H. Klein and Miss Edna E. Early died, leaving as their sole, heirs the other plaintiffs and appellees in this suit, who, by proper motion, in this court, are substituted for the said deceased herein.

The property involved in this suit is one square of ground and eleven lots in an adjacent square in the Third district, in the city of New Orleans. The record discloses that this property was acquired by Jean Soulagnet, the author of the plaintiffs’ title, from *400 Thomas Barwood, in 1869. The property is described in the deed from Barwood to Soulagnet as follows:

“1st. A certain portion of ground situate in the Third District of this city, in the square bounded by Manuel, Jeanne, Bolivar and Barthelomy streets, designated by No. ‘One hundred and fifty-five’, on a plan drawn by L. H. Pelie, surveyor, on the 3rd day of March 1866, a copy whereof is annexed to an act passed in this office on the 16th day of June, 1868; said portion of ground containing eleven lots,” etc.
“2nd. A certain square of ground situate in the same District designated by the No. ‘One hundred and fifty-six,’ on the plan above mentioned, and bounded by Manuel, Pauline, Bolivar and Jean streets,” etc.

For some unexplained reason, the squares were not correctly numbered on the assessment roll, but the boundaries clearly identified the property and Soulagnet paid the taxes thereon until 1874. Thereafter, until 1898, as counsel for appellee correctly say:

“The assessor misdescribed, or rather seemed to drop, the part square bounded by Jeanne, Bartholomew, Manuel and Bolivar, and substituted for it a square or squares two or three blocks further West, or-up river (Early 10 to 12, Yol. of Ex., pp. 14 to 17); the Appellees’ ancestors continuing to pay taxes all the while. * * * They did not seem to know that the assessor had, beginning in 1875, switched their 11 lots bounded by Jeanne, Bartholomew, Manuel and Bolivar back to the original owner, Thomas Bar-wood, and assessed them with some property previously assessed to and belonging to Bar-wood.
“After 1899 the family continued to pay ■taxes on the 11 lots, but the assessment had been corrected from that year, and remains so to this year. (Early 13 to 15, Vol. of E'x., pp. IS to 20.)
“The foregoing be it noted was as to the part square bounded by Jeanne, Bartholomew, Manuel and Bolivar.
“As to the whole square bounded by Pauline, Jqanne, Manuel and Bolivar, it was correctly assessed by its boundaries and assessment roll square numbers to the family throughout and taxes were paid regularly every year for 62 years. (Early 9 to 26, vol. of Ex. pp. 12 to 36.)”

We will note here that appellees’ ancestors owned no other property in the locality of the square and part squares Soulagnet acquired from Barwood in 1869, and it may be presumed that, from 1874 to 1899, when it was discovered that the 11 lots in the square bounded by Jeanne, Bartholomew, Manuel, and Bolivar streets had been switched on the assessment roll to another square, that they were paying the taxes on their property as it was correctly assessed prior to 1874.

The Nylka Land Company, Limited, claims that its author in title acquired the property involved in this suit from the state and that it was adjudicated to the state in 1885 for the nonpayment of the taxes due thereon for the years 1882 and 1883, under an assessment to Thos. B. Barwood. The assessment. for each of those years is exactly the same. We will therefore quote the assessment for 1S82. which is as follows:

*402 “Square No. 2543 to 2545 — Elmira to Pauline, Manuel, Bolivar: Thos. B. Barwood— Part of Square Jean Soulagnet — Part of Square.
“Square No. 2546 — Pauline, Jeanne, Manuel, Bolivar: Jean Soulagnet — Square 22 lots 244x341.
“Square No. 2547 — Jeanne, Bartholomew, Manuel, Bolivar: Budget Boguille — Bartholomew 13 lots 158x341.
“Thos. B. Barwood — Jean 11 lots 119x341.”

The property which was assessed to Bar-wood, and which was adjudicated to the state for the nonpayment of the taxes due thereon for the year 1882, is described as:

“Part of a certain square of ground and improvements thereon in the Third District of the City of New Orleans, in Square Nos. 2543 to 2545, bounded by Elmira, Pauline, Manuel and Bolivar Streets.
“Thirteen Certain lots of ground and improvements thereon in the Third District of the City of New Orleans, bounded by Jeanne, Bartholomew, Manuel and Bolivar Streets, said lots measure 119 feet front on Jeanne street by 341 feet in depth.”

The property which Philip 6. Veith, the author of the title of the Nylka Band Company, Bimited, made application to the auditor to purchase, is the following:

“Two certain squares of ground in the Third Dist of New Orleans, 9th Ward, being Sqrs. #2543-2647, etc.
“Sqr. 2543 bounded by Manuel, Bolivar, Congress and Elmira Sts.
“Sqr. 2547 bounded by Jeannet, Bolivar, Manuel and Bartholomew.”

In the auditor’s sale to Veith the property conveyed is described as follows:

“Part of a certain square of ground and improvements in the 3rd Dist. in Sqrs. No. 2543 to 2547, bounded by Elmira, Pauline, Manuel and Bolivar Streets.”

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Bluebook (online)
156 So. 429, 180 La. 396, 1934 La. LEXIS 1531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champion-v-herrick-la-1934.