Duhe v. Williams

199 So. 518
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 1941
DocketNo. 17355.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 199 So. 518 (Duhe v. Williams) 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
Duhe v. Williams, 199 So. 518 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

The plaintiff, Hubert A. Duhe, is the owner of a certain tract of land situated in the Parish of St. John the. Baptist near Reserve, Louisiana, meas'uring three-fourths of an -arpent front on the left bank of the Mississippi River by about 40 arpents in depth. This property was formerly owned in indivisión by his father, Jacques Duhe, and his uncle, Nicaisse Duhe, Sr., who acquired it by just title from Nicaisse Madere by act of sale dated January 28, 1890. Jacques Duhe died in the year 1934 and on April 1,' 1935, judgment was rendered by the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of St. John the Baptist putting his heirs in possession, including, among other sons and daughters, the plaintiff herein. On April 30, 1935, by dation en paiement, the plaintiff acquired all of the right, title and interest of his brothers and sisters in' and to the tract of land and on May 20, 1935, by act of partition between plaintiff and his uncle and co-owner, Nicaisse Duhe, Sr., plaintiff became the sole owner of the land.

On February 22, 1908, the defendant, Octave Williams, married Marcee Duhe, one of the daughters of Jacques Duhe, who was then a co-owner of the tract of land with his brother, Nicaisse Duhe, Sr. Soon after the marriage and sometime during the year 1908, the defendant constructed a dwelling on the tract where he and his family have lived continuously from 1908 up to the present time. In addition to the erection of a dwelling on the tract, the defendant fenced in a portion of the land surrounding his house, which land, according to a survey made on. July 18, 1939, by H. E. Landry, civil engineer and surveyor, comprises a plot of ground approximately 65 feet front and 135 feet in depth.

The plaintiff has brought this suit for the purpose of being recognized as the owner of that portion of the land which has been fenced in by the defendant and to compel him to vacate it and to remove therefrom the buildings and structures which he has erected.

*519 The defendant admits that the plaintiff is the record owner of the property and he does not attack the conventional. titles through which plaintiff acquired the land. He resists plaintiff's demand, however, on the ground that he has established a prescriptive title to that portion of the property on which he maintains his dwelling and he avers that he has been in notorious, public, physical, continuous and uninterrupted adverse possession of the property as owner thereof from the year 1908 .to the date this‘suit was filed in 1939 or for more than 30 years.

After a trial of the case on the foregoing issue, there was judgment in the district court recognizing plaintiff as the owner of the land and rejecting the defendant’s plea of acquisitive prescription by adverse possession of thirty years. The defendant has appealed to this court from the judgment below.

In support of his prescriptive title, the defendant submitted the following facts, which are not seriously disputed by the plaintiff: On February 22, 1908, the defendant married Marcee Duhe, one of the daughters of Jacques Duhe, who was then a co-owner of the tract of land in indivisión with his brother, Nicaisse Duhe, Sr. About the time of his marriage, defendant purchased certain lumber and other building material and sometime later in the year 1908 he erected a dwelling house upon the land. This dwelling house was occupied by him and his wife shortly after its erection and they have lived there continuously (with the exception of a short interval of a few months when the defendant was working on a plantation in St. Charles Parish) from the year 1908 to the present time. Sometime after the dwelling was erected, the defendant enclosed a part of the land surrounding it with a picket fence. This fence was repaired from time to time and it still stands as an enclosure of the property occupied by the defendant. The fence, according to the defendant’s testimony, was built by him during the latter part of the year 1908 and he asserts that Nicaisse Duhe, Sr., one of the then co-owners of the tract of land, assisted him in erecting it.

The main contention of the plaintiff is that, even if the court is convinced from the foregoing evidence that the defendant has been in continuous possession of the dwelling house and the land surrounding it which was fenced in by him since the year 1908 (or more than thirty years from the time this suit was filed), the defendant’s plea of a prescriptive title by adverse possession cannot be maintained because he has not shown that he possessed the land as owner and that, under Article 3500 of the Revised Civil Code, it is not only essential that the possession of the claimant of the prescriptive title be continuous, public, unequivocal and uninterrupted but it must also be exhibited that he possessed under the title of owner. In support of this contention, counsel for plaintiff .say that the evidence in the case warrants the finding that, when Williams occupied the house, which he had built shortly after his marriage to Marcee Duhe, he had no intention to possess the land on which it stood adversely to the lawful owners and that he was merely permitted or licensed to erect his home on the tract and live thereon through the indulgence of his father-in-law, Jacques Duhe.

Article 3499 of the Civil Code, which treats of prescription of thirty years, declares that “The ownership of immovables is prescribed for by thirty years without any need of title or possession in good faith.” Article 3500, which sets forth the essentials required for such possession, states: “The possession on which this prescription is founded must be continuous and uninterrupted during all the time; it must be public and unequivocal, and under the title of owner.” Article 3505 provides:

“All the rules established in the preceding paragraph with regard to the prescription of ten years, are applicable to the prescription of thirty years, except in the provisions contained in the present paragraph, which are contrary to or incompatible with them.”

Under the paragraph dealing with the prescription of ten years, it is provided in Article 3488 that, where a person has possession of the property, he is presumed to have possession as master and owner unless it appears that the possession began in the name of and for another. And Article 3490 declares: “The circumstance of having been in possession by the permission or through the indulgence of another person, gives neither legal possession nor the right of prescribing.”

Plaintiff maintains that there is no believable evidence submitted by the defendant Williams to show that, when he built a dwelling on the tract of land owned by his father-in-law and Nicaisse Duhe, he intended to possess the land upon which the *520 dwelling stood as owner thereof adversely to the real owners hut that, on the contrary, the conclusion is inescapable that the defendant’s father-in-law and Nicaisse Duhe granted to the defendant a license to live upon their land in recognition of the fact that, since the defendant was being married to Jacques Duhe’s daughter and that he was a poor man, it was necessary for him to have a place to live and rear his family.

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Bluebook (online)
199 So. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duhe-v-williams-lactapp-1941.