Generes v. Bowie Lumber Co.

79 So. 413, 143 La. 811, 1918 La. LEXIS 1543
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 11, 1918
DocketNo. 22789
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 79 So. 413 (Generes v. Bowie Lumber Co.) 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
Generes v. Bowie Lumber Co., 79 So. 413, 143 La. 811, 1918 La. LEXIS 1543 (La. 1918).

Opinions

O’NIELL, J.

This is a petitory action to recover two tracts of swamp land in the defendant’s possession. The plaintiff claims also $47,100.56, alleged to be the value of forest timber taken from the lands by the defendant. The lands are described as the N. Ys of N. W. % of section 4, and all of that portion except the N. E. *4 of N. E. % of section 6 that lies on the north side of Bayou Chevruil, in T. 14 S., R. 18 E., in the Southeastern district of Louisiana, west of the Mississippi river.

The plaintiff claims title by inheritance from his parents, Louis F. Generes and Mrs. Josephine Abat Generes, his coheirs (collateral relations) having renounced and succession of their deceased parents, and he having been recognized as the sole heir of his .father by a judgment of the civil district court for the parish of Orleans.

He alleged that the lands were acquired by Louis F. Generes by purchase from the state of Louisiana, the land in section 4 by patent No. 2187, and that in section 6 by patent No. 2188, both'dated the 13th of December, 1875.

The plaintiff alleged that the defendant had no title whatever to the land in section 4; that the defendant claimed the land in section 6 by virtue of a deed from the Acme Land & Timber Company, dated the 12th of November, 1908; but that the Acme Land & Timber Company had had no title whatever, and had made the sale without warranty and for an inadequate price. The plaintiff alleged that the sale was therefore absolutely • null, and that the defendant was a mere trespasser on both tracts of land.

After certain dilatory exceptions, which we need not consider, had been filed and disposed of, the defendant filed a plea of prescription of 30 years, based upon articles 1030 and 3548 of the Civil Code. The plaintiff obtained a rule on the defendant to show cause why the plea of prescription should not be considered an answer to the suit.

The rule was tried and dismissed, and the plea of prescription was tried and disposed of as such.

[815]*815The evidence adduced on the trial of the plea of prescription disclosed that the plaintiff’s father, Louis P. Generes, died in Havre, France, on the 28th of October, 1875; that his succession was opened and his will probated in New Orleans, his last domicile, in that year. The inventory of the estate, made in November, 1875, did not mention the lands involved in this suit, probably because the patents had not then been issued. It appears that the widow, Mrs. Josephine Abat Generes, mother of the plaintiff, was present at the making of the inventory, in her capacity of widow in community and tutrix of her minor children, and signed the procés verbal of the notary public. The plaintiff was then a minor, having been born on the 22d of September, 1856; Two- of the daughters of Louis F. Generes renounced his succession on the 30th of November, 1875. All other heirs, except the plaintiff, renounced the succession in 1916. The final account of the administrator was filed on the 2d of July, 1S85.

On the petition of the plaintiff, filed in March, 1916, an ex parte judgment was rendered by the civil district court for the parish of Orleans on the 4th of May, 1916, recognizing the plaintiff to be the sole heir of Louis F. Generes.

The plaintiff’s mother died intestate on the 6th of October, 1905.

This suit was filed in August, 1916, four months after the plaintiff was informed that the defendant had cut the timber from the land. No .evidence was offered to show the nature or duration of the defendant’s possession of the property. The district judge assumed, from the character of the suit, that the defendant had been in possession of the land longer than a year. He sustained the plea of prescription against the plaintiff’s right to recover property of the estate of his father, and overruled the plea as to the plaintiff’s right of action as the heir of his mother, the widow in community of Louis F. Generes.

The plaintiff prosecutes this appeal. The defendant, answering the appeal, contends that the land in dispute belonged to the separate estate of the plaintiff’s father, and prays that the judgment appealed from be amended so as to maintain that the plea of prescription bars the plaintiff’s right of action for any part of the land sued for.

Opinion.

[10] Although it would have been expeditious to have referred the plea of prescription to the merits of the ease, or to have tried it with the merits, it was not an error to refuse to consider the plea as an answer to the suit.

[1, 2] The essential fact upon which the district court maintained the plea of prescription, under articles 1030 and 3548 of the Civil Code, is that 30 years had elapsed from the date the plaintiff became of age when he formally accepted the succession of his father and asserted title to the property in contest.

Article 1030 of the Code declares:

“The faculty of accepting or renouncing a succession becomes barred by the lapse of time required for the longest prescription of the rights to immovables.”

Article 3548 provides:

“All actions for immovable property, or for an entire estate, as a succession, are prescribed by thirty years.”

The judgment rendered in this case is based mainly upon the decision rendered in the Succession of Waters, 12 La. Ann. 97, where our predecessors interpreted the expression in article 1030 of the Code “the faculty of accepting or renouncing” to mean, not either the right to accept or the right to renounce, nor the privilege or choice of either accepting or renouncing, but the right of accepting and the right of renouncing.

It was virtually conceded in the two opinions rendered in the case cited that the interpretation adopted by the court destroyed the effect of that part of the article (1023 of

[817]*817the Code of 1825) providing for the prescription of the right or faculty of renouncing. The Chief Justice, speaking for the court, said it was not then found necessary to put a construction upon that part of the article, and that it would he in time to consider the difficulties presented by it whenever a case might arise in which an explanation, if possible, would be required. An explanation of the provision for the prescription of the right or faculty of renouncing was then utterly impossible, because in its interpretation the court had suppressed that part of the article completely.

Mr. Justice Spofford, in his concurring opinion in the case cited, recognized, or manifested, that the court was giving effect to cne half and suppressing the other half of the law to be interpreted. He said, apologetically, that the rule that some effect should be given to all of the words of the law was qualified by the condition that it be possible, and that, if the lawgivers had nodded, or added idle words to their statutes, it was no more than the great masters of wisdom in all departments of letters had done before them. . He added that he thought the Legislature of Louisiana had intended, by the article in question, merely to fix a term of prescription against the right of acceptance, and to intimate the consequence of its lapse without an acceptance. He said that that consequence, he thought, was that the successible became a stranger to the succession.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 413, 143 La. 811, 1918 La. LEXIS 1543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/generes-v-bowie-lumber-co-la-1918.