Franks v. Scott

191 So. 175
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 1939
DocketNos. 2008, 2009.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 So. 175 (Franks v. Scott) 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
Franks v. Scott, 191 So. 175 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

In December, 1902, John A. Cochran obtained a patent to the NE% of NE14 of Section 34 and the NW1! of NW% of Section 35, .Township 5, Range 13 West, in Beauregard Parish, containing 80.60 acres of land. At the time that he secured the patent to this land, Cpchran was married to Lucinda Cochran, and the property accordingly fell into the community existing between them. The wife of the patentee died in April,' 1903, leaving four minor children.

Without opening the succession of his deceased wife and without taking any proceedings to transfer the interest of the minors in. said lands, Cochran executed the following deeds .to parts of this property:

In.- July, 1904, ..a ■ deed to J. W. Bishop covering one acre of land in the SE'.corner of the W⅛ of NW1^ of NW% Section 35. However, Bishop 'r'etransfe'rred this ácre 'to CO'chran in January, 1908.'

In 'October, 1921, ■ Cochran- executed a deed to G. T. Bfoxson covering • this' one acre' of land, and the' latter conveyed the one acre tó G. W. Brdxson, one'of the defendants,- in October, 1926.

In October, 1907, Cochran conveyed to M. P. feyr’d the I⅛½ of NE% Section 34 and the W% of NW1! of Section 35, less the one acre which at that time had been, transferred to Bishop, and on January. 11, 1912, Byrd executed a deed to the same property to Mrs. Emmer Brox-son, wife of ,G. T. Broxson. And in August, 1919, Mrs. Broxson, joined by her husband, G. T. Broxson, conveyed to W. A. Moon the S½ of NE% of NE% of Section 34, and the Wy2 of NW% of NW% of Section 35, less 5 acres.

Mrs. Lucinda Cochran died intestate and left as her sole heirs four minor children; namely, Myrtie, Mittie, J. Thomas and Herman, all of whom were still minors when the surviving husband executed the deed to M. P. Byrd. The plaintiffs in the two suits are Myrtie Cochran, married to Thomas Franks; Mittie Cochran, the wife of Carl Franks, and Mrs. Martha L. Cochran, widow of J. Thomas Cochran, deceased, and natural tutrix of his three minor children. Plerman Cochran transferred his interest in the property to Mrs. Myrtie Cochran Franks before the suits were filed.

These heirs of Mrs. Lucinda Cochran have filed suit against the heirs of W. A. Moon, who died shortly after acquiring the title from the Broxsons, asking to be recognized as owners of an undivided half interest in the property described in the deed from the Broxsons to Moon, and that said deed be cancelled from the. records insofar as it purports to transfer their half interest in said property.

In a separate petition these same plaintiffs have filed a suit against the heirs of Mrs. Emmer Broxson and G. T. Broxson to recover an undivided half interest in the N% of NE1/^, Section 34, and 5 acres in .the Wy¡ of NW^i, of NWyt, Section 35 (which includes the one acre tract conveyed to G. W. Broxson by G. T. Brox-son, the former being one of the Broxson heirs to the other tract as well as having a title to the one acre'tract).

Both the heirs of .Moon in .the one suit and the Broxson heirs in the other .filed pleas of ten years prescription which were sustained and the 's.uits dismissed.' PlainT tiffs have appealed. , ,.

The suits were consolidated for the purpose of trial, but separate judgments were entered in each case. Both cases have-been briefed together in this court, and. as th.e issues and facts in one case are more dr less relevant and determinative in the other, we will consider the cases together.

From the factual situation outlined above, it is obvious that .the interest of the heirs of Mrs. Lucinda. Cochran in this community property has never been divested unless prescription has. cut off their rights. It is conceded that the pleas of prescription are the only issues before this court.

The pleas of prescription depend principally on the title from M. P. Byrd to the Broxsons in January, 1912. That deed included all of the property involved in these two suits, except the one acre tract which must be considered from a different factual situation. Practically the whole issue on appeal has resolved itself into the two questions of whether or not the Broxsons were in good faith when they received the title *177 from Byrd and whether that title was such a valid title on its face as to serve as the basis for the ten year prescription. The possession of the Broxsons from the time they acquired the property is not seriously denied,, and while the possession of Moon and his heirs of the property acquired from the Broxsons in 1919 is denied by the plaintiffs, the trial judge, we think, correctly found that possession of that part was continued in the Moons sufficiently to connect their possession with their authors in title. If the possession of the Broxsons began in good faith when they acquired the title from Byrd and if that title was sufficient to serve as the basis for the ten years prescription, it is practically conceded that the pleas were correctly maintained in both suits.

The evidence shows that the Broxsons with their children and a cousin, Tom Blackman, left Vernon Parish in the latter part of 1911 on their way to Texas in search of a new home. They traveled in a two-horse wagon over rough roads with the entire family and all their earthly belongings. Sometime during the first part or middle of December they reached the Sabine River at Whitman’s Ferry and found the water so high that they were unable to cross. They set up their tent and camped .in the vicinity of the Ferry for several days. During their stay there waiting for the water to subside they met Mr. M. P.Byrd, who lived some two or three miles below. A trade was gotten up between Byrd and the Broxsons whereby Byrd was to sell the land in consideration for the two ponies, the wagon, tent, wagon sheet and harness. Just where and when the trade was made is a disputed point in the case.

At this time Byrd had a title to the land, but the house on the land was unoccupied. Cochran and his family had moved away a short time after the deed was made to Byrd, but the Cochrans returned in the early part of 1911 and moved into a house located on the one acre tract. There is some evidence to the effect that the Coch-rans cultivated some of the fields on the Byrd land in 1911 and stored some corn and meat in some outhouses. If they did so it was no doubt with the consent of Byrd. The fact remains that the title to the land was in the name of Byrd and the dwelling house on the property was vacant when the trade was made between Byrd and the Broxsons. The Cochrans lived about a quarter of a mile from the house which was located on the property. .

Plaintiffs rely largely on the testimony of Mrs. Emma Cochran, the second wife of John A. Cochran, to prove bad faith on the part of Mr. and Mrs. Broxson when they purchased the land from Byrd. She testified that the Broxsons came to see Cochran and asked permission of him to move in the vacant house on the old place; that on one Sunday before the Broxsons bought the property they and M. P. Byrd were at the. Cochran home and the Broxsons and Byrd got up a trade for the place; that Cochran told Broxson that there were heirs behind the property, whereupon Broxson said he did not care anything about the heirs as he would be moved away before they got big enough to do anything. This witness further testified that the Broxsons and Cochrans visited each other quite frequently and the Broxsons knew that Cochran’s first wife was dead and that she left minor children.

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Bluebook (online)
191 So. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franks-v-scott-lactapp-1939.