Choppin v. Michel

11 Rob. 233
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Rob. 233 (Choppin v. Michel) 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
Choppin v. Michel, 11 Rob. 233 (La. 1845).

Opinion

Garland, J.

The plaintiffs allege they are the owners, and that they, and those under whom they^claim, have always been in possession of a tract of land of fifteen arpents front on Pausse Riviere, by a depth of forty arpents; That notwithstanding their title, which has been confirmed by the United States, and their actual possession, the defendant pretends to be the owner of a part of said land. They say the land now claimed is a [234]*234part of a tract of forty arpents front on the Mississippi river, by the same depth on the lower channel of Fausse Riviere, which was granted on the 9th February, 1767, by Desmazillieres, then Commandant of Pointe Coupée, to Pierre Perreault, and is derived from him by a regular chain of titles. They ask a judg-mentfor the land, and for $1,000 damages.

The defendant denies generally the allegations in the petition, and specially denies that the plaintiffs are either the owners or possessors of the land claimed, or that they have any title to the same. He further says, that he is the bona fide owner and possessor of a plantation, situated on the river Mississippi, with a front of -about twenty-seven arpents, with such depth as will make, a superficial quantity of 800 arpents, the same having been granted, located and surveyed under the Spanish government in Louisiana, bounded on the upper side and rear by vacant land, and on the lower line by Estevan Watts, and on the point by the river. This land he says was granted to Joseph Moliere by Governor Gayoso, on the 14th February, 1799 ; and was, on the 4th June, 1800, regularly located by Lareau Trudeau, Surveyor of the Province, &c. That he holds, owns and occupies this land by regular conveyances from Moliere; therefore he sets up his title, and pleads the prescription of ten, twenty and thirty years. The answer concludes by a prayer, that, in case of eviction, he may have a judgment for $10,000 for improvements, he being a possessor in good faith.

Choppin, one of the plaintiffs, was a defendant in the case of Devall v. Choppin et al., 15 La. 566, and, with the other plaintiffs, now claims the fifteen arpents front on Fausse Riviere, by a depth of forty arpents, running towards the Mississippi, under the same title which the defendants in that suit set up to protect themselves from the claim of Devall, in which they succeeded. For the particulars of this title, see pages 571, 572, 573 of the report mentioned. The rights of Dupré and Demonville, the other ,plaintiffs, are derived from Choppin and the heirs of Francois Lebeau, whose title formed a part of the suit alluded to; and, in fact, had Devall succeeded in his suit, his titles, derived from Conway, would have covered a considerable portion of the land to which the plaintiffs assert a title. In this case, it [235]*235is further proved by Charles Morgan, that on the 4th of August, 1806, he, as a United States surveyor, and in pursuance of an order of the Surveyor General, surveyed the tract of land called Pointe du Manoir, for Pierre Perreault or Perreau, and gave it forty arpents front on Fausse Riviére by the same on the Mississippi, making 1,468 acres, equal to about 1,600 arpents. Bau-din lived for some time on the land. ■ L’Hermite, also a surveyor, says that, in February, 1821, he surveyed the land for Alexander Baudin, and followed a plat that appeared to have been made by Morgan. The lines then extended to that of Labauve, and included the fifteen arpents front, claimed by the plaintiffs, it being exactly forty arpents from the Mississippi to the limit of Labauve. Baudin then occupied the land, as he had previously. In 1820 he presented his claim to the Land Office in New Orleans for confirmation. He represented it as being situated at a place called Pointe du Manoir, at the eastern mouth of Fausse Riviere, containing forty arpents front on the Mississippi, and forty arpents in depth, bounded on one side by the channel of Fausse Riviere, and on the other by the Mississippi. The claim was supported by the titles now again presented; it was recommended for confirmation, and was actually confirmed, as reported, by an act of Congress passed the 28th February, 1823; but from the plat of survey obtained from the Surveyor General’s office, in May, 1844, it appears that the claim has been located for only 875 98-300 acres; anditis evidently not located according to the confirmation, from which the Surveyor General says, “ there is no confliction known to this office.”

The defendant’s title is based upon a requéte, signed in New Feliciana, the 26th November, 1798, by Joseph Moliere, who prays the Governor to accord to him eight hundred superficial arpents of cypress land in the district of Pointe Coupée, “ a dos y media leguas del fuerte o antiguo reducto rio abaxo y lindando por el sur contieras apeadas a favor de Dn. Estevan Watts.” On the 14th February, 1799, Governor Gayoso gave the usual order on this application, directing the Surveyor General to put the party into possession of eight hundred arpents of vacant land as prayed for, without causing prejudice to' any other proprietor, &c. On the 4th June, 1800, Lareau Trudeau located [236]*236the claim as fronting on the Mississippi, bounded on the lower side by Don Estevan Watts, and above and in the rear by vacant land. The claim was presented by Moliere, or his heirs, for confirmation, and by the commissioners rejected, as, there was no proof of possession on the 1st October, 1800. On the 2d July, 1818, the parish judge of East Baton Rouge offered the land at public auction, as a part of the property belonging to the heirs of Moliere, who had died in the year 1811, or previously. At this sale, the land was adjudged to Pierre Gautier for $800, payable in one, two and three years. The land is sold with an express stipulation of no warranty on the part of the vendors, and at the risk and peril of the purchaser, to whom the title was exhibited. On the 29th March, 1820, Gautier sold, by public act, before the same parish judge, to the defendant, the same tract of land, describing it as the one purchased of the estate of Moliere on the 2d July, 1818, as would more fully appear by the act, then of record in said office. In this act, Gautier only, warrants against himself, his heirs, or persons claiming under him. The defendant took possession of the land soon after this sale, and has held it ever since. He has paid taxes on it as Gautier did, and also cultivated it. In 1820, he presented it to the Land Office in New Orleans, for confirmation: it was reported on favorably, and confirmed by Congress at the same time that the claim of Baudin was. The confirmation was in the name of the heirs of Moliere, for the use of Michel. The claim has been located by the Surveyor General of the United States, and the full quantity of eight hundred arpents allowed it.

One witness testifies that, in the year 1804, he was on the land for several days with Moliere, who had one or more cabins on it, for the use of himself and some slaves who were there getting timber, and that it appeared as if he, or some other persons, had been there at other times. It is also shown that one Robin Delogny was also on the land, or near it, cutting timber; but whether he had permission from some of the parties, or was a trespasser, is not proved. No title to any land in that quarter is exhibited, or pretended to exist in the name of Delogny, further than may be inferred from his name being mentioned in [237]

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Related

Choppin v. Michel
12 La. 590 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1846)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Rob. 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/choppin-v-michel-la-1845.