Ellis v. Acadia Parish School Board

29 So. 2d 461, 211 La. 29, 1946 La. LEXIS 864
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 31, 1946
DocketNo. 38170.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 29 So. 2d 461 (Ellis v. Acadia Parish School Board) 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
Ellis v. Acadia Parish School Board, 29 So. 2d 461, 211 La. 29, 1946 La. LEXIS 864 (La. 1946).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

Plaintiff, Earl M. Ellis, instituted this suit to recover from the Acadia Parish School Board the sum of $17,990, with legal interest from date of judicial demand until paid, under Act No. 250 of 1924, which provides that any owner or other person letting or leasing out land to be occupied and cultivated on a crop-share basis or for a money consideration, who fails or refuses to permit the lessee to occupy or cultivate the premises leased, shall be responsible to said lessee for the market value of the crop that could have been grown on the lands leased or on lands located in the immediate vicinity; or, in the alternative, to recover the sum of $14,207, the profit of which plaintiff alleged he was deprived and the expenses he was obliged to incur because of the failure of the School Board to deliver possession of the premises allegedly leased for the crop year 1942.

To plaintiff’s petition the defendant, Acadia Parish School Board, filed an exception of no cause or right of action, which was tried and overruled by the district court. Defendant then answered, with full reservation of its rights under the exception theretofore filed, and before trial on the merits objected to all offerings and all testimony on the trial for the reason that the exception of no cause or right of action should have been sustained.

After trial on the merits, the district court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $6446, with interest and costs, which amount the court found to be the market value of the crop that could have been grown on the land in the year 1942, less water rent, land rent, and the cost of producing, harvesting, and hauling the crop to market.

From this judgment the defendant, Acadia Parish School Board, appealed to this court. Plaintiff, Earl M. Ellis, answered the appeal, praying that the judgment of the trial court be increased to the sum of $17,669.04, with interest and costs.

Plaintiff in his petition alleged that on July 12, 1941, the Acadia Parish School Board at a regular meeting, by motion regularly passed, agreed to lease unto petitioner a farm situated in the Parish of Acadia, State of Louisiana, described as Section 16, Township 11 South, Range One East, in the Sixth Ward of that parish, and authorized the superintendent, S. D. Pollard, to execute a lease of said land to the peti *34 tioner; that petitioner was advised by the parish superintendent and members of the board that a written contract of lease would be prepared and executed later; that the contract of lease was prepared in writing by S. D. Pollard, parish superintendent of schools, and was duly executed on December 16, 1941, in duplicate by Pollard for the School Board and by petitioner, a copy of this lease being attached to, and made part of, the petition.

The lease, which is attached to the petition, discloses that S. D. Pollard, as treasurer of the School Board of the Parish of Acadia, executed and signed a lease to plaintiff, Earl M. Ellis, covering the sixteenth section of land for a term from December 1, 1941, to December 1, 1942, the consideration being one-sixth of the rice crop produced and one-third of the highland crops produced (cotton, corn, etc.).

Petitioner further alleged that in the early part of December, 1941, he began moving his farm machinery, tools, and implements to the leased premises but was denied possession thereof by two individuals who had raised a crop on this land during the year 1941; that, upon being denied possession of the property or admittance thereto, he so informed the officials of the School Board, who told him that the lease to the two individuals who had denied him the right of possession had expired, and that it, the School Board, would take legal steps to have these individuals ousted and evicted and would deliver possession of the property to petitioner; that, on being so advised by the School Board, he moved his agricultural machinery, tools, and implements from a farm in the Parish of Jefferson Davis and stored a portion of them in Crowley, to await the action of the School Board to put him into possession of the sixteenth section of land described in the lease; that the School Board gave notice to the occupants of the premises to vacate the property, and, they having failed to do so, instituted eviction proceedings in the district court of Acadia Parish; that after trial of the eviction proceedings judgment was rendered therein on January 26, 1942, in favor of defendants, occupants of the premises, and against the Acadia Parish School Board, for the reason that the School Board, after having agreed to lease said land to petitioner herein, had negligently permitted the lease to the two occupants of the premises to be renewed by re-conduction for a term of one year from June 30, 1941; that, soon after this judgment was rendered by the district court, the School Board informed petitioner that it would not be able to deliver to him possession of the leased premises.

Petitioner then in detail set forth the amount and kinds of rice that would have been produced under the terms of the lease from the leased premises in the year 1942 and the market value thereof, and alleged that, because of the failure of the defendant to place him in possession of said land, the School Board was responsible in damages *36 to petitioner for the market value of the 1942 crop that could have been grown on the land leased of on lands located in the immediate vicinity, and that he was entitled to judgment in this amount, less land rent of one-sixth of the crop and water rent of one-fifth of the crop, which amounted to $17,990. He prayed for judgment in this sum.

In support of his alternative demand, petitioner alleged that the School Board was liable to him in damages for the profit of which he was deprived and the expenses he was obliged to incur because of the School Board’s failure to deliver to him possession of said land, which damages he itemized in detail, alleging them to be $14,-207, and in the alternative he prayed for judgment in this amount.

Paragraph 1 of Section 30 of Act No. 100 of 1922 reads as follows:

“Parish school boards shall have authority to rent sixteenth section lands, or lease the mineral rights of same by resolution of the board and without the authority of a vote of the electors of the township in which such lands are located. All funds realized from the rent of sixteenth sections, or lease of mineral rights of sixteenth sections shall be credited to the current school funds of the parish.” •

. Plaintiff’s petition clearly discloses that it was under the above quoted provisions of Act No. 100 of 1922 that the lease to him was granted by the School Board, for he specifically alleged that the Acadia Parish School Board at a regular meeting by motion regularly passed agreed to lease to him the sixteenth section of land described in his lease for agricultural purposes, and authorized the superintendent, S. D. Pollard, to execute the lease, and that the lease was so executed in duplicate on December 16, 1941; or, stated differently, that the Parish School Board had authority to rent sixteenth section lands for agricultural purposes by mere resolution of the board and without the authority of a vote of the electors of the township in which the land is located. He contends that Section 30 of Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
29 So. 2d 461, 211 La. 29, 1946 La. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-acadia-parish-school-board-la-1946.