Davis' v. Prevost's Heirs

1 Mart. (N.S.) 650, 12 Mart. 445
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Mart. (N.S.) 650 (Davis' v. Prevost's Heirs) 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
Davis' v. Prevost's Heirs, 1 Mart. (N.S.) 650, 12 Mart. 445 (La. 1823).

Opinion

The legal principles upon which this case depends, have been discussed with ability by two learned counsel, and most of the points of law and evidence adjudged by the court in the case of Prevost's vs. Johnston’s heirs. 9 Martin, 123.

Taking the law as it has been settled, and the evidence as it is acknowledged to be, I shall present only such considerations as have not been drawn into the argument, and endeavour to pin the attention of the court upon the points on which the case now depends.

It is not contended then, that the plaintiffs, [651]*651or any person, under whom they pretend to claim, have ever actually occupied or cultivated the land. They have had merely a civil or constructive possession under their title. Their grant is dated in 1777: since which they have made no claim, nor exercised any right of ownership over it.

Sept. 1823.

We must be quieted, unless they shew a betten legal title—which they cannot. 1st Because their title has been virtually released to the defendants. 2d. Because it has been lost by prescription.

If the present plaintiffs have any right, it is [652]*652derived from the recognitive act. This is merely confirmatory of the primordial title, and conveys no new right. It is evidence of the enumerations it contains; to wit: That the grantees had sold and conveyed all their right to La Houssaie. The heirs could sell no right, unless they inherited from the ancestor. They did not inherit from him, because he, by a judicial confession, has acknowledged a relinquishment of his title.

The board of commissioners was established by act of congress, to hear and determine upon the rights of individuals to lands, according to law. It was a court of record, with a limited jurisdiction. This board received written notices of claims; took evidence in writing, subscribed by witnesses, in the form of depositions; kept a record of its proceedings, by a clerk; and adjudged the rights of the parties—it was essentially a court. Before this tribunal the heirs of Macarty presented their claim to this land. There was a difficulty then, which is yet felt, in shewing title. The lapse of time, the death of witnesses, the conflagration of his house, the loss of papers, and, above all, there were existing grants on the land, to which La Houssaie had the legal title. They appealed to [653]*653the integrity of La Houssaie, the only person having an adverse right—and, perhaps, the only one acquainted with the transactions. He, with a noble disinterestedness, declared in writing, and under oath, "That he knows of Col. Macarty having purchased of Vincent Lessassier 80 arpents of land front, with the depth of 40 arpents on each side of the Bayou Teche; and that he, the said Lessassier, purchased the same of four other persons, and was bounded above and below, on said bayou, by lands of Madame Loisel.

[654]*654This declaration stands in the place of a recognitive act, and confirms our title. It makes all things plain. It supports a presumption, created by forty years’ abandonment. It corroborates the acknowledgment of Herbert, that Macarty had acquired the land in some way. It corresponds with the general understanding of the country. It accounts for their continued claim; the occupation of both sides of the Teche; the surveying of 80 arpents on both sides; and the payment of taxes during many years, before the change of government. It verifies the oath and recognitive act of Madame Lessassier.

Lands were of little value under the Spanish government. Titles were obtained without much difficulty or expense, and surrendered without ceremony. Sometimes, by the toleration and usage of the country, removed from one place to another; often exchanged or relinquished to others, as suited their interest or caprice; and among a people, few of whom could read or write, and of whom it may with truth be said, that integrity and good faith had almost superceded the necessity of law. These transactions were often informally and negligently made.

[655]*655It is impossible, in the nature of things, to explain every occurrence, and prove every act. After a lapse of thirty years, the law wisely presumes title.—Time supplies the place. It is not surprising that a sale should be lost, an exchange mislaid, or a chain of conveyance interrupted; and that after a length of time it should be forgotten by all but the immediate parties; and this has actually happened to the plaintiffs also. In the absence, then, of all law, and upon general principles of equity alone, the heirs of La Houssaie should not be heard to deny the truth, or the force of this declaration.

This avowal, made upon due notice, with great circumspection and solemnity, is, at least, not inferior to an act under private signature, which would convey or relinquish the title: One is a private, the other public, and of record. One is merely declaratory; the other has the sanction of an oath. One stands alone; the other is verified, by long acquiescence on one side, and continued claim on the other. But take from this tribunal its judicial attributes, and from the oath its legal sanctity, it would then stand as a written confession, but made in a proceeding of great public notoriety, and with great circumspection.

[656]*656La confession de celui à qui on impute un fait est un preuve suffisante en matiere civile, lorsqu’elle est faite duns les formes requises.

[657]*657The avowal of La Houssaie is full proof between him and Macarty and their ayant causes. The present plaintiffs hold, by a private act, from the heirs of La Houssaie. The evidence is therefore equally conclusive between them and those who hold under Macarty and his heirs, or ayant causes.

This confession of La Houssaie is either a judicial or a written confession; and in either case, is full proof between the parties, of what it contains; and they cannot evade the effect of any sale, or title, or confession, which he may have made.

The confession of La Houssaie was made in writing; subscribed by him before a parish judge; and is therefore equal to a notarial act, if it is not equivalent to a sale. But it was taken under oath, before the judge of the parish of St. Martin, by virtue of a dedimus,from the board of commissioners, to be read in a case then pending before them in relation to the title of Macarty. It is therefore a judicial confession. It is m de in a public office; and the same where the plaintiff’s sale was executed. It was taken, and deposited, in the office of the register of lands; the most public office in the district, in relation to lands. It is duly cert[658]*658ified by the judge,in the usual form of depositions, and a sworn copy of the register, filed in this cause. (Certified copies from the register’s office have heretofore been held good.)

An exception was taken to it in the court below, that it was ex parte. This is not parole evidence taken by deposition in the cause, by a dedimus from this court, in which notice would be required. It is a copy of an act which the law makes evidence; as a copy of any judicial proceeding, or writing is evidence.

“An Onondago commissioner (in New York) will be a competent witness to prove what persons deceased swore before the commissioners, in relation to a dispute about the title between the same parties.” 2 John. Rep. 17, Porter vs.

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Related

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19 La. 409 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1841)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Mart. (N.S.) 650, 12 Mart. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-prevosts-heirs-la-1823.