Crowell & Spencer Lumber Co. v. Hawkins

174 So. 151, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 203
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1937
DocketNo. 1702.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 So. 151 (Crowell & Spencer Lumber Co. v. Hawkins) 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
Crowell & Spencer Lumber Co. v. Hawkins, 174 So. 151, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 203 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

Plaintiffs, the Crowell & Spencer Lumber Company, Limited, and the Meridian Lumber Company, Limited, sue to recover of the defendant as warrantor of a tract of land sold by him to the former company in 1907 in which there was found to be a shortage of 39.12 acres by reason of the title to this shortage having proven to be in another person. The amount claimed is on the basis of $28 per acre, which was the average price per acre for the larger tract in which this 39.12 acres was a part, making a total claimed for the shortage of $1,095.36 with legal interest on this amount from February 23, 1907, plus $42, being the costs incurred by plaintiffs in the suit in which the title to this 39.12 acres was tried and decided adversely to plaintiffs.

Judgment was rendered against defendant in this suit for $547.68 with legal interest thereon from February 23, 1907, based on $14 per acre for the shortage of $39.12 acres, plus the cost in the former suit of $42. The defendant has appealed.

In 1891, James C. Causey acquired from the state by patent the S % of S E 14 of section 21 and the N % of N E % of section 28, township 1 south, range 1 west, which land is in Evangeline parish. In 1893, Causey conveyed to Sam Haas 100 acres, more or less, being the swamp land out of this tract; and in 1897, Causey transferred to the defendant, Dr. W. E. Hawkins, 62 acres, more or les% and being all of the *152 tillable land in the lands which he acquired from the state. It is thus clear that he sold Haas all the swamp land and defendant all the tillable land. It appears that the swamp land lies in a diagonal position across the northwestern part of these two adjoining tracts in sections 21 and 28 which Causey had acquired from the state, except there is a small tract of swamp land in the northeastern part of the original Causey land. The tillable or high land is therefore the southeastern part of the tract, and, naturally, the boundaries separating the swamp land from the tillable lands are very irregular and do not follow lines fixed by governmental surveys.

Dr. Hawkins having a title to this tillable part of the lands embraced in the Causey tract made a deed to the Crowell & Spencer Lumber Company, Limited, in 1907, in which the lands conveyed were described as the S y2 of S i/2 of S y2 of S E % of section 21, and the N % of N % of N E ^4 of section 28, township 1 south, range 1 west, totaling 60 acres. This deed included a warranty of title to the property conveyed. In 1923, by the same description, the Cro-well & Spencer Lumber Company, Limited, conveyed this property, with other property, to the Meridian Lumber Company, Limited, reserving, however, all timber thereon with the right to remove same for a period of twenty-five years.

The swamp land which had been sold to Haas by Causey became the property of the minor, Martha A. Haas. In 1934, the two plaintiff corporations filed a joint suit against this minor, through her tutor, to try title to that part of the land embraced in their deed which covered part of the swamp land claimed by the minor under this prior Haas deed wherein the swamp land was conveyed to Haas. A survey and plat was made of the original Causey tract, and it was found that the swamp land embraced 101 acres situated as already stated in the northwestern part, and the hill land contained 64.47 acres situated across the southeastern part of the tract. It was found from this survey that 39.12 acres of the land described in plaintiffs’ deeds was in the swamp part and therefore covered in the Haas deed which primed the deed to Dr. Hawkins. The judgment in that suit decreed this 39.12 acres to belong to the minor, and decreed 20.88 acres, being the part of the land described in plaintiffs’ deeds located on the high land, to belong to plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs notified Dr. Hawkins of the filing of the suit against the minor to try title to this land under article-2519 of the Civil Code, and it appears that Dr. Hawkins appeared in that suit and filed an exception, which was overruled, whereupon Dr. Hawkins took no further part in the suit, but the judgment reserved to plaintiffs the right to sue Dr. Hawkins on his warranty of the title. This suit .has followed.

In the answer to this suit Dr. Hawkins does not question the fact that plaintiffs have been evicted from this tract of 39.12 acres of land described in the deed which he made to one of these plaintiffs in 1907, but he avers that this land was not worth over $5 per acre in 1907. In a supplemental and amended answer, defendant alleges that it was his intention to sell, and the intention of the Crowell-Spencer Company to purchase, the same property which defendant had purchased from Causey, being all of the high or tillable land, and that he owned no other land in the original Causey tract, except that described in the deed to him; that the error or mistake was made in the deed to the lumber company in attempting to describe the land by government numbers. He further averred that he has been and is willing to correct the mistake in the deed, but that plaintiffs refuse to accept a corrected deed. Defendant filed with his supplemental answer a corrected deed and tendered same to the plaintiffs, together with the sum of $52 to cover the costs expended by plaintiffs in trying title to the land in question and the costs accrued in the present suit up to the time of the tender.

Plaintiffs filed a motion to strike out this supplemental and amended answer on the ground that it changes the issues and is inadmissible and foreign to the issues in the present suit. This motion was overruled by the trial court.

Whether or noi defendant in this suit can raise the question and secure a correction in the description to the land conveyed by him to the Crowell-Spencer Company presents an important issue. As between parties to a deed the description of the land conveyed can always be corrected so as to show the land intended to be conveyed where there is error or mistake in describing the land. Waller v. Colvin, 151 La. 765, 92 So. 328; State v. Standard Oil Co., 164 La. 334, 113 So. 867.

It is urged, however, that defendant cannot in this suit obtain a correption of the *153 deed as a third party,’ the Meridian Company, has acquired rights on the face of the plain and unambiguous description of the property, and this description cannot be changed or corrected to the prejudice of this third party, citing Adams v. Drews, 110 La. 456, 34 So. 602, and other cases.

Ordinarily, an erroneous description of property in a deed cannot be corrected to the prejudice of a third party acquiring rights in good faith on the property erroneously described. It follows that if the Meridian Company is a third party quoad the deed and property involved in the transfer from defendant to the Crowell Company where the error is alleged to have occurred, and if the Meridian Company has acquired, in good faith, rights on this erroneously described property, defendant cannot now show as against it that he intended to sell and the Crowell Company intended to buy property other than that described in the deed.

The record shows that Mr. R. D. Crowell is the president of both plaintiff corporations; that he is also general manager of both corporations; that he has been general manager of the Meridian Company since its organization in 1913, and has been general manager of the Crowell Company.since 1923.

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Related

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12 So. 2d 713 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 151, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowell-spencer-lumber-co-v-hawkins-lactapp-1937.