Childs v. Porter-Wadley Lumber Co.

182 So. 516, 190 La. 308, 1938 La. LEXIS 1287
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 30, 1938
DocketNo. 34818.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 182 So. 516 (Childs v. Porter-Wadley Lumber Co.) 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
Childs v. Porter-Wadley Lumber Co., 182 So. 516, 190 La. 308, 1938 La. LEXIS 1287 (La. 1938).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This is a suit for slander of title brought by Phares F. Childs against Porter-Wadley Lumber Company, a corporation, and the other defendants named in the petition.

Plaintiff alleges that he is the owner of and in actual physical possession of S.W.¼ of N.W¼ of Section 20, Township 21 *311 North, Range 9 West, Webster Parish, Louisiana, which he acquired from Charles S. Childs by notarial warranty deed dated December 17, 1923, and duly recorded in the conveyance records of the parish. That defendants are slandering his title to the oil, gas and other minerals on the property by claiming ownership thereof under a reservation made by Porter-Wadley Lumber Company in a deed to O. N. Cavin, dated February 12, 1916,'and by an affidavit signed by J. K. Wadley, Mrs. Lillian J. Porter and Margaret Porter, in which the affiants claim that they and the. other defendants are the owners of the oil, gas and other minerals on the property; both deed and affidavit being recorded in the conveyance records of Webster Parish. And plaintiff specially pleads the. prescription of ten years acquirendi causa and liberandi causa.

Defendants, in their answer, deny the substantial allegations of the petition, except the allegations as to the mineral reservation in the deed to Cavin and the recordation of the affidavit referred to in the petition, which they admit.

Defendants aver that the Porter-Wadley Lumber Company was dissolved and its charter surrendered in the State of Arkansas on May 3, 1917, and that after that date the property of the corporation reverted to the stockholders, who are defendants in this suit.

Defendants further aver that at the time of the dissolution of the lumber corporation, Margaret Porter, a stockholder in the corporation, was a minor and did not reach her majority until March 16, 1931; and that during the minority of Margaret Porter the running of prescription was suspended not only as to her but also as to her co-owners, who together with the minor are defendants herein.

Defendants further allege that plaintiff is a brother of Charles S. Childs, from whom he attempted to acquire the property, and that he and his brother knew, or should have known, from the public records that neither Charles S. Childs nor the plaintiff acquired any mineral rights in the property, but that the same were wholly reserved in the deed from Porter-Wadley Lumber Company tó O. M. Cavin; and that the plaintiff, by attempting to acquire the mineral rights by prescription, is barred because he was and is in legal bad faith.

In the alternative, defendants aver that if the prescriptions pleaded by plaintiff should be found to apply, then they have a contract which is binding on all parties for a period of thirty-five years from February 12, 1916, whereby the exclusive right coupled with an interest was given defendants to develop the property for minerals, the consideration being the. payment by defendants of one-half the net proceeds received from the sale of the minerals resulting from the development.

On the trial of the case, plaintiff filed a plea of estoppel, which was predicated on its offering in evidence a number of oil and gas leases made in the years 1926, 1929 ana 1933, in which the Porter-Wadley Lumber Company, acting through J. K. Wadley and John W. Wheeler, its Commissioners and *313 Liquidators, purported to lease and convey mineral rights in the Parish of Webster.

The trial judge, pretermitting as unnecessary any discussion of the plea of estoppel, the plea of ten years’ prescription liberandi causa, the effect of the dissolution of the corporation and whether title vested in its stockholders on May 3, 1917, sustained plaintiff’s plea of ten years’ prescription acquirenda causa and recognized plaintiff as the owner of the tract of land described in the petition, together with the oil, gas, sulphur and other minerals on, in and under the same, and ordered the inscription of the instruments complained of cancelled and erased from the parish records so far as .they affect the land described in the petition.

The case was submitted to the district court on depositions of two witnesses and on a partial statement of facts agreed on by the attorneys of the parties.

After the judgment was rendered in plaintiff’s favor in the district court, defendants filed a motion for a new trial predicated on the alleged fact that plaintiff was not a possessor in good faith and that defendants’ admission to that effect in the agreed statement of facts was erroneously made. The trial judge overruled the motion and signed the judgment. Defendants appealed.

Defendants’ Counsel, in oral argument and in printed brief, presents a number of interesting questions, but only three contentions are made by defendants under the pleadings. These contentions are as follows, viz.:

1st. That the reservation of' the minerals being for thirty-five years, with the agreement .to pay vendee and his assigns one-half of the net revenues obtained from the sale of said minerals, constitutes a mandate coupled with an interest, and that, therefore, no prescription can accrue until the end of the stipulated period.

2nd. That even though the deed to plaintiff makes no mention of any mineral reservation, plaintiff is bound' by the records, and the reservation contained in the prior deeds.

3rd. That the Porter-Wadley Lumber Company was dissolved on May 3, 1917, and that on that date the property of the corporation became vested in the stockholders, one of whom, Margaret Porter, was a minor, and that, therefore, the running of prescription was suspended on that date and until the minor reached her majority, which was on April 28, 1931.

The record shows that on February 12, 1916, Porter-Wadley Lumber Company sold to O. M. Cavin, with reservation of the minerals, about 2,000 acres of land, including the land involved in this suit. On December 27, 1917, Cavin sold the property to the North American Investment & Development Company, making the same mineral reservation as contained in the deed to him. On December 27, 1917, the North American Investment & Development Company, with reservation of the minerals, sold the property to W. T. Gleason. On January Sth, 1918, W. T. Gleason sold the property to Charles S. Childs, excepting there *315 from the minerals as reserved in the deed to him. On December 17, 1923, Charles S. Childs made an exchange with Phares F. Childs, the plaintiff, wherein plaintiff became the owner of the property involved in this suit, no mention being made in the act of exchange of the reservation of any minerals.

The record also shows that the land involved in this suit never has been drilled for oil, gas or other minerals.

We do not find any merit in the defense that the reservation of the minerals for thirty-five years, with the obligation on the part of the vendor to pay the vendee or assigns one-half of the net revenues derived from the sale of the minerals constituted a mandate coupled with an interest and 'therefore was imprescriptible. The reservation covered all the minerals, with a mere personal obligation on the part of the vendor and assigns 'to pay to the owner of the land one-half the benefits received therefrom.

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 516, 190 La. 308, 1938 La. LEXIS 1287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childs-v-porter-wadley-lumber-co-la-1938.