Crichton v. Krouse

142 So. 635
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1932
DocketNo. 4323.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 142 So. 635 (Crichton v. Krouse) 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
Crichton v. Krouse, 142 So. 635 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

CULPEPPER, J.

Thomas Crichton, Jr., son of Thomas Crichton, Sr., deceased, brought this action individually and as agent and trustee for his widowed mother, Mrs. Kate Jackson Crichton, and his sister, Mrs. Kate Crichton Gredlar, and ■brother, Powell Crichton, the four constituting the widow and sole heirs of Thomas Crichton, Sr. They allege as such that they are the owners of the west half of northeast quarter and northwest quarter of southeast quarter of section 19, township 20 north, range 8 west, containing 120 acres, in Webster parish, La.

The defendants are: Mrs. Emma H. Davenport, Mrs. Eunice Miller, Mrs. Rosa Lee Alexander, C. P. (Phillip) Krouse, Maxey J. Krouse, Arthur R. Krouse, Emile S. Krouse, Erank O. Krouse, Mrs. Iona Botzong, Ruby Krouse, Bernard Krouse, Shirley Krouse, Curtis Krouse, Chester Krouse, D. W. Stewart, E. L. Stewart, E. E. Miller, Mrs. Juanita GLiilon, Miss Osceola Hunt, Mortimer L. Hunt, Bernice Durdin,- Vollie Wood, Irma Dudding, Annie Pay Meredith, Willie May Armstrong, Otto J. Miller, Oswell Miller, and Sybil Stroud, who claim to be the heirs and legal successors of Mrs. Eliza Leon, Mrs. Helen Geontgen, Bernard J. Geontgen, Dr. P. O. Krause, and his wife, Mrs. Rosaura Krouse.

Plaintiffs pray for service and citation upon defendants, “ * * * requiring said defendants to appear and test title to said property under Act 38 of 1908 and after hearing had that your petitioners be decreed the owners of said property and for possession of same as owners, and that the alleged title and claims of the defendants and each of them be decreed illegal, null and of no effect and that same be ordered cancelled as a cloud upon your petitioners’ title to the property. In the alternative and if the defendants on trial of the case show sufficient possession to sustain a petitory action, which is denied, as above alleged, then and in that event that your petitioners as plaintiffs, should be decreed the owners * * * in chain of title alleged. ⅜ * * ”

Plaintiffs set up what defendants admit to be a complete chain of title to the property, emanating from the United States government through grant to the Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Railroad Company, the grant becoming operative and effective after the completion of said road, the exact date of which is riot shown in the record.

The tract of land here involved is within the area between Shreveport and Monroe of the lands granted by the government. The ■abstract of title filed by plaintiffs shows that the written evidence of the selection was recorded in Webster parish, January 5, 1888, which might be taken to indicate «approximately the date on or about .which the railroad was completed.

Defendants rely solely upon the possession of thirty years, and make that as their special plea in bar of plaintiffs’ right of recovery. Paragraph 10 of the answer, which may be taken as setting forth under whom their alleged possession originated and the kind and character of possession relied on, is as follows:

“Further answering, defendants aver that they are the heirs and legal successors of Mrs. Eliza Leon, Mrs. Helen Geontgen, Bernard J. Geontgen, Dr. F. O. Krouse and Mrs. Rosaura Krouse. and as such are owners of all property and rights left by them and that each of said parties owned and had possession of the herein described tract of land, which possession was transmitted and delivered to defendants with all rights and privileges.
“That your defendants and authors had had continuous, exclusive, open, notorious, physical and visible possession of said entire tract of land for more than thirty years, and during said time have improved said property, clearing and fencing the entire tract and putting it in cultivation, built a store house, residence, tenant ¶ houses, barns and other structures on it at' a great expense to themselves, during which time neither plaintiffs nor their authors ever asserted any ownership or possession of same.”

In paragraph 6 they aver that “ * * ⅜ their authors and ancestors have had actual, physical and exclusive possession * * * as owners believing that they were the true and lawful owners, for more than thirty years next preceding the filing of this suit.”

In paragraph 3 they aver that said possession has continued since 1871, and that their ancestors had possession as owners at the time and long previous to the date of any of the deeds and records referred to in plaintiff’s petition.

Under the pleadings as made up in the case it appears, as stated by the trial judge in his written opinion filed in the record, that defendants must stand or fall on their plea of thirty years’ prescription, in the face of the complete recorded chain of title produced by the plaintiffs.

Upon trial of the case there was judgment rejecting plaintiffs’ demands, and they have appealed.

*637 None of the defendants have answered the appeal.

It will be noted here that C. P. Krouse, one of the defendants named in the petition, was not cited or served as a defendant, but he later filed, on his own behalf, a petition of intervention and third opposition as against both the plaintiffs and the defendants, claiming title in himself as owner by prescription of thirty years. His claims, however, were (rejected by the court in its judgment, and" he has not appealed; therefore, he has passed out of the case as a litigant. Suffice it to say that the interest which this party once owned in the property as son and legal heir of Dr. F. O. Krouse and his wife, Mrs. Rosaura Krouse, had been sold to E. E. Miller, one of the defendants, by the sheriff, under execution of a judgement obtained by a judgment creditor of said C. P. Krouse’s, prior to the filing of this suit, which left him without any interest in the property.

From the testimony in the record it is clear that Dr. F. O. Krouse, whose wife was at the time Mrs. Rosaura Krouse, established his home on the south 40 acres of this 120-acre tract many years before the grant of the land to the railroad company became effective, and that he held and occupied it and the other two forties as a home and a farm, in connection with several hundred acres of other lands adjoining and surrounding the 120 acres, continuously thereafter until his death, which occurred in 1890. It is also shown that his said wife, Mrs. Rosaura Krouse, continued to occupy said home and farm, left her by her husband, until her death in 1918.

One of Dr. Krouse’s sons, Oc-to Krouse, who it appears had been managing the farm and store on the property for his father, continued to do so for his mother until his death in 1S95, at which time C. P. (Phillip) Krouse, above referred to, took the place of Octo and managed the place for his mother until her death, and he has since continued to reside on the place down to the present time, using it as a home, cultivating and having it cultivated by tenants, pretty much in the same manner and fashion he did while his mother was living.

Plaintiffs admit, as set out in their petition, that they or their ancestors in title have never taken actual or physical possession of the property, but allege, and it is shown by the evidence, that they have had it assessed to them and paid the taxes on it, have given a number of oil and gas leases on it, and granted rights of way over it for oil and gas pipe lines, which it is contended constitute acts of ownership.

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Bluebook (online)
142 So. 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crichton-v-krouse-lactapp-1932.