Delaware Improvement Corp. v. Shall

259 So. 2d 462, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5696
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 1972
DocketNo. 4509
StatusPublished

This text of 259 So. 2d 462 (Delaware Improvement Corp. v. Shall) 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
Delaware Improvement Corp. v. Shall, 259 So. 2d 462, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5696 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

REDMANN, Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment rejecting on the merits its claim to certain land also claimed (in divided portions) by defendants.

All parties’ titles are derived from Andrew T. Stafford, who first sold part of his larger tract to plaintiff’s ancestor in title, and then sold the entire tract (with exceptions) to defendants’ ancestor. The sale to defendants’ ancestor made two references to the sale to plaintiff’s ancestor: first, it excepted, though by a different and incomplete description, the portion sold to plaintiff’s ancestor; and second, it declared the sale to defendants’ ancestor was subject to the recorded sale to plaintiff’s ancestor. Perhaps the most difficult ultimate issue is whether the land involved in this suit is included in the description by which plaintiff’s ancestor bought. We conclude that, as to third persons like defendants, it is not. We therefore affirm the judgment appealed from.

Titles

Stafford acquired on July 24, 1923 a part of the rear or lake portion of Rosedale plantation in Jefferson Parish. The description referred to a 1919 Calongne survey. Stafford’s location was fixed by reference to other tracts and to Lake Pontchartrain, and his boundaries measured 602' on the south, 957' on the north (the lake), 14,250' on the west (the boundary line described as N8°W) and 14,103' on the east (S6°29'E).

(This sale purported to consummate an agreement to sell to Stafford and Alphonse K. Roy and Charles J. Derbes, which presumably explains the April 22, 1923 survey of the property by Calongne for “Stafford, Derbes and Roy” hereafter referred to in a footnote.)

Stafford sold on December 20, 1923, to plaintiff’s ancestor in title, S. F. and Vincent R. Perrin, by sale registered in the conveyance records December 29, 1923, a portion of lot 2 o'f Sec. 45, T12S R10E, “as per the survey of” parish surveyor Zander dated Dec. 14, 1923 (recited to be but not “attached hereto and made part hereof”),

“according to which survey said portion of ground begins at a distance of 14,424 ft. from the lake side of Cypress Street, and extends along a line almost due north 1,307 ft. to Lake Pontchartrain, thence west along Lake Pontchartrain in a meandering line a distance of 1,000 ft., more or less, thence south along a line parallel to the first line from Lake Pontchartrain, a distance of 1,407 ft., thence east along the proposed Hammond highway, a distance of 1,000 ft. to point of origin, said land being shown on the survey as consisting of squares Nos. 247-248-249-250-251, fronting on the proposed Hammond highway and also marsh prairie land between the squares and Lake Pontchartrain.” (Emphasis added.)

The description then added that vendor’s riparian rights were also sold to purchasers.1

Having apparently meanwhile made another sale of part, Stafford on April 11, 1924, by sale registered April 14, 1924, sold to Stafford, Derbes & Roy, Inc. (“SDR, Inc.”), by a description identical to that by which he had acquired (and with reference to no other survey than Calongne’s of 1919). But there was excepted from the sale “the following squares which have previously been sold * * *: Square 247 to 251 inclusive to S. F. & Vincent Perrin. Twenty-two squares to Miss Emma Coleman [not here pertinent].” (The failure to except the north marsh prairie lands conveyed with squares 247-251 is not precisely [465]*465pertinent since defendants’ titles do not include any of those lands.)

Later in the act, an exception to the Conveyance certificate recited the date, Notary and recordation data on Stafford’s sale to-the Perrins, immediately followed by the provision “The parties hereto declare that this sale is made and accepted subject to the existence of the foregoing inscriptions.”

(Then the act recited that Stafford was in reality the title holder for himself, Derbes and Roy as equal co-owners in in-división, and that the consideration for this sale — stock in their namesake corporation —belonged to the three equally.)

Other Facts

The trial judge personally inspected the conveyance records and found that plaintiff's act of acquisition did not have the 1923 Zander survey attached, and did not give any physical indication that the survey was ever attached.

The preponderance of the evidence is that the Hammond highway was at all times proposed to lie about 300’ from the lake shore in this area, and not 1,307 to 1,407' as plaintiff’s deed recited. Each of the several other contemporaneous surveys in evidence approximately so located the proposed highway (including a 1917 survey by Zander of an adjacent tract).2

Sometime after his transfer to SDR, Inc., Stafford apparently realized the inconsistency of the description in his sale to the Perrins. In 1926, the year of the Cal-ongne resubdivision placing 1000' more land south of the highway, Stafford sued the Perrins to have their title limited to land north of the highway, or to have the sale set aside for ’fraud. That suit was dismissed on exceptions of no right or cause of action and Stafford’s appeal was withdrawn by him.

Res Judicata

Because of that judgment against Stafford on his demand asserting what is presently defendants’ position here, res ju-dicata was pleaded by plaintiffs in this suit, but was rejected. We conclude the trial court was correct in rejecting this [466]*466plea. We indicate no view as to the correctness of the long-final judgment dismissing Stafford’s suit on exceptions. That dismissal was apparently based on the notion that the real question, the extent of land sold to the Perrins, could not be raised by Stafford since he had already sold the rest of the tract “excepting and subject to” the sale to the Perrins, and thus had no standing to seek resolution of what was at best a boundary dispute. Accordingly the Sta'fford-Perrin suit, not between the same parties and not decided on the merits, cannot support the plea of res judicata; C.C. art. 2286.

Merits

Unrecorded sales3 and contracts affecting land are “utterly null and void” except between the parties; C.C. art. 2266. We will apply the quoted words literally and consider nonexistent (as to defendants, who are third parties)4 the unrecorded agreement to buy and sell which culminated in the Stafford-Perrin sale. We need not inquire whether the Zander survey referred to in the recorded description but itself unrecorded is effective against third parties. Here the survey adds nothing except east-west location, which was discoverable from vendor’s own recorded title.

The more ancient (recorded) title to disputed land originating from the same owner prevails over the later title (unless the later proprietor has acquired by prescription), C.C. art. 847; the first recorded sale of the property having made it a thing belonging to another, its sale by its former proprietor would be null', C.C. art. 2452.

It accordingly is immaterial to the naked question of superiority of title whether a later sale of a remainder of a tract excepts (by good or bad description) the portion earlier sold (by recorded sale). Thus, had the sale to SDR, Inc.

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Schneidau v. New Orleans Land Co.
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Bluebook (online)
259 So. 2d 462, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 5696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-improvement-corp-v-shall-lactapp-1972.