City of Baltimore v. Lutcher

66 So. 253, 135 La. 873, 1914 La. LEXIS 1858
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 11, 1914
DocketNo. 20100
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 So. 253 (City of Baltimore v. Lutcher) 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
City of Baltimore v. Lutcher, 66 So. 253, 135 La. 873, 1914 La. LEXIS 1858 (La. 1914).

Opinion

PROYOSTY, J.

In 1769 the French government made a grant to one Pierre Delille Dupart of a tract of land described as follows :

“Thirty arpents of front to the. river upon the whole depth which shall be found unto Lake Maurepas, of the land where heretofore were two villages of the Colapissas savages.”

John McDonogh acquired all that part of this grant back of a line 80 arpents-from the river, and in his will bequeathed same, together with numerous other tracts of land and a large amount of other property, to the cities of Baltimore and New Orleans for school purposes. In 1857, the two cities made a partition, evidenced by an act in which the above-mentioned tract is described as follows:

“A very large body of land on the left bank of the Mississippi river in the parish of St. James, about sixteen leagues above the city of New Orleans, containing:
“1. One containing about 44,000 arpents commencing at 80 arpents from the Mississippi river in the rear of the plantation now or lately belonging to Dr. Louis Fortier, and running thence between lines to Lake Maurepas and Amite river. See note below.
[876]*876“Note. The lands described in No. 1 have been divided into several portions:
“1. Commencing at a distance of 80 arpents from the Mississippi river, and extending to the conflicting line of Wm. Conway, embraces an area of 10,118.84 acres.
“2. Commencing at the conflicting! line of Wm. Conway and extending by diverging lines to the Amite river, embracing an area of 47.-811.05 acres.”

Of the two tracts described in this “Note” as 1 and 2, the tract 1 fell to Baltimore in the partition, and the tract 2 to New Orleans.

The cities of Baltimore and New Orleans created each a board of trustees to have charge of the McDonogh bequest. The ordinance of the city of Baltimore creating said board provided that all lands and other properties under said bequest should “pass to and be vested in said board.”

In its annual reports, the said board of trustees for the city of Baltimore carried the said tract of land, which had thus fallen to the city of Baltimore in said partition, as:

“A tract of 10,000 acres, about 55 miles north of New Orleans, on the eastern bank of the Mississippi, situated in the parish of St. James”

—adding the following comment:

“In the report of the former agents, in 1860, they, however, spoke of this tract as ‘low swamp land, probably of no value.’ ”

In 1890, one J. L. Bradford executed a notarial act in favor of Allen Thomas, the material parts of which read as follows:

“Personally came and appeared J. L. Bradford, agent of the city of Baltimore in the sale of the following described property, namely, a certain tract or parcel of land belonging lately to John McDonogh, deceased, but now to the city of Baltimore, containing ten thousand one hundred and eighty (10,180) acres, more or less, the same being situated in the parish of St.James, Southeastern district of Louisiana, in townships 10 and 11, range 5 east, said land having recently been adjudicated to the city of Baltimore by the Department of Interior, and Allen Thomas, purchaser of said lands. Said J. L. Bradford does by these presents graht, bargain, sell, convey, transfer, assign, and set over under all the warranties of law and of substitution and subrogation and all rights, titles, and actions in warranty against any and all antecedent vendors or warrantors, unto the said Allen Thomas,'the said tract or parcel of land belonging lately to John McDonogh, deceased, and now to the city of Baltimore, containing ten thousand one hundred and eighty (10,ISO) acres, more or less, the same being situated in the parish of St. James, Southeastern district of Louisiana, in townships 10 and 11, range 5 east.
“It being agreed and understood that a survey of said land is now being conducted under the direction of the Interior Department of the United States government, and that when such survey is fully completed and approved by the Surveyor General of the United States for Louisiana, full and complete deeds to the same will be executed by the principal of said Bradford, agent, to said Allen Thomas, his heirs or assigns.
“This sale is made and accepted for the price and sum of three dollars ($3.00) per acre, one thousand dollars of which amount have been paid in ready money by the purchaser, who for the balance has furnished his several promissory notes, etc.
“And it is agreed that, should the official survey hereinbefore referred to determine that said parcel of land contains more than ten thousand (10,000) acres, then such surplus shall be paid for in cash at the date of maturity of the first note herein described. Should said survey find said tract of land to contain less than ten thousand (10,000) acres, the amount is to be deducted, at the rate of three dollars ($3.00) per acre, for such deficit from the first note herein described.”

On the same day on which Bradford, agent, thus sold to Thomas, the latter sold to one Carpenter by the same description; and the latter to the Louisiana Land & Lumber Company, still by the same description; and these several purchasers assumed payment of the notes executed by Thomas.

In 1891, the city of Baltimore brought suit in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana on the said notes against the Louisiana Land & Lumber Company, and obtained a judgment for their amount, less a credit which the defendant company had claimed in its answer, as follows:

“In the survey of the lands, it is found that the tract sold contains only 9,795 acres, instead of 10,000, which entitles this defendant to a credit on the first note for $9,000 of the sum of $015.”

In 1892, the Louisiana Land & Lumber Company executed an act of sale in favor [878]*878of the defendants to this suit by the following description:

“All that certain tract or parcel. of cypress swamp land, situated in the parish of St. James, in the state of Louisiana, commonly known as the Baltimore tract, and containing nine thousand seven hundred, and ninety-five acres, more or less, situated in townships 10 and ll south, range 5 east, hounded on the south by a line eighty arpents from the Mississippi river in the rear of sections 42 and 43, which front on said river, in said township 11 south, range 5 east, on the east by the upper side line of the land or tract commonly known as the Fontenot, on the north by the lower side line of the Wm. Conway division of the Houmas grant, now the line separating the parishes of Ascension and St. James, and on the west by lands commonly known as those of the heirs of Lobdell and Slidell, and now owned by the present purchasers, and being the same property acquired by vendors herein on the 3d of February, 1890, from E. P. Carpenter, agent, etc., recorded in St. James, La.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 So. 253, 135 La. 873, 1914 La. LEXIS 1858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-baltimore-v-lutcher-la-1914.