Ellis v. Prevost

13 La. 230
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 13 La. 230 (Ellis v. Prevost) 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. Prevost, 13 La. 230 (La. 1839).

Opinion

Rost, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a possessory action. The defendants have pleaded the general issue, and the possession of one year as owners. The case was tried by a jury, who gave a verdict in favor of the defendants, and after an unsuccessful attempt to obtain a new trial, the plaintiff appealed.

The plaintiff claims possession of the land, under a sale by notarial act, made to him in 1836, by a person who himself purchased the land in 1829, and who since occupied and cultivated a part of it, for more than one year. The plaintiff has never resided upon the land, and has abandoned the improvement made by his vendor. The defendants have occupied and cultivated, for several years, an inconsiderable part of the land in controversy, but they show no possession according to metes and bounds of that which is unenclosed, and some of the witnesses say, that the ancestor to whose possession they have succeeded, acknowledged to them that [233]*233the land belonged to Jumonville Devillier, under whose conveyance the plaintiff claims possession and holds title. A much greater number of witnesses state, that the defendants’ ancestor, and themselves, possessed as owners! The plaintiff has made the following points in this court:

1. That he has the right to join his possession to that, of his author, and that he is in actual possession since 1829.

2. That the defendants never could acquire possession, because their ancestor did not possess as owner.

3. That if they are entitled to the possession of any part, it is only of that which is enclosed.

The defendants answer, that the plaintiff has no capacity to complain of the judgment, because he had no right of action originally ; his being a mere civil possession, insufficient to maintain an action under the 49th article of the Code of Practice. This ground of defence must be first considered, for if it should be maintained, it would put an end to the case.

The 49th article of the Code of Practice provides, that in order that the possessor of real estate, or of a slave, or one who claims a right to which such estate may be subjected, may be entitled to bring a possessory action, it is required—

1st. That he should have had the real and actual possession of the property, at the instant when the disturbance occurred. A mere civil or legal possession is not sufficient.

2d. That he should have liad that possession for more than one year before the disturbance, quietly and without interruption.

The distinction between civil and natural possession, has been one of the cardinal uncertainties of the jurisprudence of modern times, and this arose from the fact, that it was peculiar to the Roman law, and that with us it is a distinction without a difference. By the law of the twelve tables, the Roman citizen who had possessed lands during two years, and moveables during one year, became the irrevocable owner of them, by a mode of acquisition called in the language of the law usu captio. Civil possession, was that which united all the requisites of the law, for that mode of [234]*234acquiring property ; and it was so named, on account of the peculiar effects which the civil or national law, emanating from the twelve tables, atlributed to it. All other possessions were held to be of an inferior degree, and were called, in contra-distinction, natural. The usu captio was not retained in the institutions of modern nations, but the commentators of their laws preserved the verbal distinction, after the foundation upon which it rested had ceased to exist, and created thereby great confusion and uncertainty; almost each of them adopted a different definition, and drew from them different and adverse doctrines.

The jurists who prepared our codes, to make assurance doubly sure, have made the legislature give us two definitions of civil possession, instead of one, and those two definitions are contradictory, and alike inconsistent with the textual dispositions of our laws on the subject of possession.

Article 3392 of the Louisiana Code, defines civil possession to he, when a person ceases to reside in the house or on the land which he occupied, bin without intending to abandon the possession. Article 3394 says, on the contraiy, that civil possession is the detention of a thing by virtue of a just title, and under the conviction of possessing as owner.

To which of these two definitions does the 49th article of the Code of Practice refer ? If to the last, it takes away the pos-sessory action, instead of givingit; it is sufficient- to have a good title, and to possess as owner under it, in order to be deprived of that right of action, even against a trespasser. If to the first, it leads to contradictions equally palpable, and to absurdities equally glaring. Admit that the possessor must have actually occupied and detained, without intermission, the estate, slave, or real right, during more than one year before the disturbance, and what follows 1 A person owns a tract of wood land, upon which, from the nature of the property, the only act of possession he can in most instances do, is the payment of the taxes; how is he to detain and occupy it? Must he pitch a tent, and remain upon it a year and a day, without intermission, before his right of action accrues ? , A slave absconds for a short time; does his master lose thereby [235]*235his right of action against a person in whose possession he may subsequently be found 1

No physical act in taking possession, is necessary under a sale bv notarial act. The intention of the purchaser, which the law presumes, coupled with the power which the act of sale gives, vests the possession in him. Thcrig7i2 is taken for the fact, and the buyer is seized of the thing cor-porally by the execution of the title.

A man has a right of passage upon another’s estate, which he may not have occasion to use more than once in many years; is it necessary that he should have been actually using it for more than a year, before he can be heard I

We cannot admit as sound, a doctrine which leads to such consequences. The acts by which possession is evidenced, vary according to the nature and situation of the thing possessed, but possession itself is all of the same nature, and the general context of our laws does not justify the doctrinal division of it, into natural and civil. Article 3389, defines possession to be the detention or enjoyment of a thing which we hold or exercise by ourselves or by another. This embraces all sorts of possession, the absolute as well as the precarious ; the just as well as the unjust; the civil as well as the natural. Article 2452 says, that traditiou, or delivety, is the transferring of things sold into the power and possession of the buyer; and article 2455 provides, that the law considers the tradition and delivery of immoveables, as always accompanying the public act which transfers the property. Every obstacle which the seller afterwards interposes, to prevent the corporal possession of the buyer, is considered as a trespass.

No physical act, in taking possession under a sale by notarial act, is necessary. The intention of the purchaser, which the law presumes, coupled with the power which the act of sale gives, vests the possession in him. The right is taken for the fact, and he is seized of the thing corporally.

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Bluebook (online)
13 La. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-prevost-la-1839.