Gibson v. Fitts

180 So. 509, 189 La. 753, 1938 La. LEXIS 1229
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 4, 1938
DocketNo. 34769.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 180 So. 509 (Gibson v. Fitts) 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
Gibson v. Fitts, 180 So. 509, 189 La. 753, 1938 La. LEXIS 1229 (La. 1938).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Plaintiffs, who are thé widow and the sole heirs of T. H. Gibson, brought suit against Mrs. Jewell Johnson Fitts, alleging that they are owners and in possession of the following described property, situated in the Rodessa Oil Field in Caddo Parish, La.:

“Six and one-half (6%) acres of land lying in the West half of the Southwest quarter of Section 10, Township 23, Range 16. Caddo Parish, Louisiana, described as follows: Commence at the Northeast corner of the W% of SW% of said Sec. 10, Twp. 23, R. 16, run thence South seven (7) acres in length; thence West one (1) acre in width; thence North seven (7) acres in length; thence East one (1) acre in width, to point of beginning; less right-of-way of one-half acre previously sold to Kansas-City-Shreveport & Gulf Railroad Company, as is further shown by map of survey made by George Dutton, Surveyor hereto- attached and made part hereof.”

Plaintiffs alleged that Mrs. Jewell Johnson Fitts had slandered, and' is continuing to slander, their title to the said property by claiming and asserting that she is the owner thereof, and by having recorded in the conveyance records of Caddo parish certain pretended sales and judgments affecting said property.

*755 It is further alleged that Mrs. Fitts has slandered plaintiffs' title by executing certain oil, gas, and mineral leases on the said property, and that the lessees under Mrs. Fitts are likewise slandering plaintiffs’ title by asserting that they own certain mineral rights therein. Mrs. Fitts and all those who claim interests in the property acquired from her are made parties, defendant. Plaintiff prayed for judgment recognizing them as owners of the property, recognizing that they are entitled to the quiet and peaceable possession of the same, and for judgment perpetually enjoining the defendants from slandering their title, and ordering canceled from the records the deeds, judgments, leases, etc., affecting the property.

The defendants filed certain exceptions which were overruled, whereupon the principal defendant, Mrs. Jewell Johnson Fitts, answered, setting up title' to the land in herself, especially alleging that she was the record owner thereof, and setting out her chain of title, which she traces by mesne conveyances back to the United States government. The other defendants filed answers, in which they alleged that they had acquired from Mrs. Fitts in good faith such interests in or upon the land as they claimed, and alleged that she was the record owner of the property.

Defendants having converted the suit into a petitory action by setting up title in themselves, plaintiffs in the possessory action then pleaded 30-year prescription acquirendi causa, especially alleging that they had been in actual corporeal possession of the said property continuously and as owners for more than 30 years prior to the date 'on which Mrs. Fitts, the defendant in the possessory action and the plaintiff in the petitory action, asserted title to the property by selling interests therein and leasing it.

There was judgment maintaining this plea of prescription, recognizing plaintiffs in the possessory action, defendants in the petitory action, as owners of the land involved, ordering canceled from the records the various instruments executed by Mrs. Fitts affecting in any way the title to the land, and perpetually enjoining her and those who held under her from slandering plaintiffs’ title. Mrs. Fitts appealed. The •other defendants in the possessory action, plaintiffs in the petitory action, did not appeal.

The Gibsons, who are plaintiffs in the possessory action and who became defendants in the petitory action, concede that they have no record title to the land involved, and concede further that Mrs. Jewell Johnson Fitts, who is the defendant in the possessory action and who converted the suit into a petitory action by claiming title in herself, has a perfect record title to the property. But the Gibsons claim that they have acquired title to the property by the prescription of 30 years acquirendi causa, under article 3499 of the Revised Civil Code, which provides that “The ownership of immovables is prescribed for by thirty years without any need of title or possession in good faith,” and they claim that their possession of the property meets the requirements of Article 3500 of the Code, which says:

*757 “The possession on which this prescription is founded must he continuous and uninterrupted during all the time; it must be public and unequivocal, and under the title of owner.”

Mrs. Jewell Johnson Fitts, defendant in the possessory action and plaintiff in the petitory action, concedes that the Gibsons have had corporeal possession of the property since about the year 1900. But her contention is that the Gibsons did not possess as owners during that entire period; that more than once during that period the Gibsons acknowledged that they were not the owners of the property; that on more than one occasion T. H. Gibson, husband of Mrs. Nora Gibson and father of the other plaintiffs in the possessory action, offered to purchase the land from M. A. Johnson, who was Mrs. Fitts’ author in title; and that on two separate occasions Mrs. Nora Gibson tried to purchase the property from the heirs of M. A. Johnson; and she relied upon article 3520 of the Code, which reads as follows:

“Prescription ceases likewise to run whenever the debtor, or possessor, makes acknowledgment of the right of the person whose title they prescribed.”

In addition to this article of the Code, counsel for Mrs. Fitts cite many decisions of this court holding that, if at any time during the thirty years the party claiming title by prescription has acknowledged the right of the one against whom the prescription is pleaded, the running of prescription is interrupted thereby.

The testimony adduced at the trial amply supports the judgment of the trial court, which recognized the Gibsons’ title based upon 30-year prescription. The record discloses that on March 19, 1901, Lee Johnson and M. A. Johnson, who are Mrs. Fitts’ authors in title, sold to T. H. Gibson the following described property:

“The NWÍ4 of the SE% and the NEJ4 of the SWyi, Section 10, Township 23, Range 16, and five (5) acres in a square in the extreme NW corner of the SE% of the SWJ4 of the same section.”

This sale is evidenced by deed of record in the notarial records of Caddo parish.

A reference to the description of the seven-acre tract of land involved in this suit will disclose that it is a narrow strip one acre wdde and seven acres long, lying west of and adjacent to the tract above described. The notarial records show that the Johnsons, who sold the above-described tract to Gibson in 1901, owned also, at that time, the seven-acre tract involved in this controversy.

The Gibsons contend, and the court permitted the introduction of some parol testimony to show, that the Johnsons intended to sell, and that T. H. Gibson intended to purchase, the seven-acre tract of land along with the other land. The ' testimony admitted to this effect disclosed that the seven-acre tract and the larger tract constituted one farm, all inclosed by one fence, the entire tract being cultivated as one field.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 509, 189 La. 753, 1938 La. LEXIS 1229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-fitts-la-1938.