Coyle v. Burton

3 La. App. 34, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 529
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1925
DocketNo. 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 3 La. App. 34 (Coyle v. Burton) 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
Coyle v. Burton, 3 La. App. 34, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 529 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CARVER, J.

This is a petitory action in which the plaintiffs seek to recover a tract of land described as the northwest quarter of southwest quarter of Section 9, Township 23 North, Range 11 West.

Plaintiffs, except Coyle, claim the land by inheritance from George F. Brailey and his wife.

Coyle claims as purchaser from another one of the heirs.

Brailey bought the land in contest in 1886 and had actual possession until his death in 1888. The widow and heirs continued in possession for a time not definitely fixed but probably beyond 1896.

The deed by which Brailey acquired embraced the whole southwest quarter of Section 9 and the northeast quarter of northeast quarter of Section 17 which cornered with it. He, and his widow and heirs after his death, lived on the land in Section 9 but not on the “40” in dispute.

[35]*35Under one fence were enclosed a part of the lands in dispute and a part of the rest of what Brailey bought.

A patent had issued from the United States government in 1861 to one Liverman covering the forty in dispute and also the east half of southwest quarter of Section 9, but this patent had remained in Washington and the Braileys seem not to have known of it prior to 1917.

In posting the Liverman entry on the tract book in the Natchitoches land office it was erroneously posted as covering east half of southwest quarter and northwest quarter of southeast quarter instead of east half of southwest quarter and northwest quarter of southwest quarter.

In the book of government entries on file in Webster parish—furnished, no doubt, by the register and receiver of the Natchitoches land office—the error made on the tract book was repeated, and it seems the same error was made on the tract book in the general land office at Washington.

By reason of this error the land in dispute appeared by the tract books at Natchitoches and Washington and the land entry book in Webster parish to be vacant public land of the United States.

Up to a time not definitely fixed in the testimony it had been generally recognized as belonging to the Braileys, but some time before 1899 its supposed vacant condition, as shown by the erroneous book entries became known, and in the spring of 1899 William Barnes began cultivation of the clearing on it and on April 12 of that year made formal application at the Natchitoches land office to enter it under the homestead law. He had bought what was probably a supposed settlement right from J. A. Smith, a half-brother of Mrs. Brailey, who had made some effort to homestead it. The testimony does not show the extent of this effort or the time at which it was made.

Barnes fenced about twelve acres of the forty, using some of the old rails remaining of a fence which had been allowed to go down, together with new rails made by himself, and made a crop on it that year. He died in the winter of 1899. He lived during that year in a little cabin that he thought was on the land. His widow remained in the house about a month after his death, when she moved away to Spring-hill, a distance of about three miles, to be near her relatives. In moving, she had no intention of abandoning her rights. She visited the place from time to time, tried to rent it, sold some timber from it to Bodcaw Lumber Company at a time not fixed by the testimony, and on October 14, 1901, sold a right of way over it to the Louisiana and Arkansas Railway Company.

On January 2, 1906, she submitted final proof on the homestead entry, receiving final certificate May 5, 1906, and a patent August 27, 1907. The patent was recorded in Webster parish March 27, 1915.

After moving away from the place she never cultivated it either herself or by any tenant, never lived on it, never paid taxes except, perhaps, for the year 1914 or 1915. Her visits to the place, efforts to rent it, selling the timber and granting the right of way to the railway company, were the only acts of dominion or possession performed by her from the time she moved away until she sold it to the defendant, Mrs. Burton, in 1915.

In making her final proof she and her witness testified that the cabin she and her husband had lived in though thought to be on the land was about twenty feet from the line and that her husband had not built any house on it except a corn crib which was then (January, 1906,) no [36]*36longer there, presumably having burned or rotted down.

The proof taken in this ease leaves it somewhat uncertain whether the dwelling house was on -or just off the land. This house was on or near the southeast corner. It seems there was also a little house on the northeast corner.

The testimony conclusively shows that the Braileys never had any possession and that Mrs. Brailey at least never intended to have any after the discovery was made that, according to the records in Webster parish, the land belonged to the United States. Mrs. Brailey permitted the fence to go down- and built another one along what was supposed to be the line between this land and the rest of her land.

The testimony shows that the building of this line fence was a definite and deliberate yielding of possession to Barnes. Indeed, she had apparently abandoned possession before this, having left the fence go down on this land.

When Mrs. Burton was negotiating to buy from Mrs. Barnes, Mrs. Brailey showed her what was supposed to be the line between her land and the Barnes land, and said she was glad Mrs. Burton was going to buy the Barnes land.

Between the time Mrs. Brailey built the line fence in 1899 and the time she showed the supposed line to Mrs. Burton in 1915, and, indeed, until the steps taken in settling the succession of Mr. and Mrs. Brailey in 1919, the Braileys had no possession whatever and never made any claim to the land. They lived adjoining it and knew of Barnes’ possessing it and claiming it and of Mrs. Barnes’ proving it up, making no objection to any of this. Coyle says he considered the land vacant till he got a letter from the commissioner of the General Land Office, which was in 1917.

Thus we see that possession was lost from Mrs. Brailey to Barnes, if not indeed before that- to Smith, by Mrs. Brailey’s virtual consent. Civil Code, 3448, which reads as follows:

“Possession is lost with the consent of the possessor:
“1. When he transfers this possession to another with the intention to divest himself of it.
“2. When he does some act which mani"ests his intention of abandoning possession, as when a man throws into the street furniture or clothes, of which he no longer chooses to make use.”

As to the other Braileys, if they did not consent to the abandonment they at least lost possession to Barnes under Civil Code, 3449, which reads as follows:

“A possessor of an estate loses the possession against his consent:
“1. When another expels him from it, whether by force in driving him away, or by usurping possession during his absence and preventing him from re-entering.
“2. When the possessor of an estate allows it to be usurped and held for a year, without, during that time, having done any act of possession, or interfered with the usurper’s possession.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 34, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coyle-v-burton-lactapp-1925.