Haas v. Dezauche

37 So. 2d 441, 214 La. 259, 1948 La. LEXIS 956
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 2, 1948
DocketNo. 38576.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 So. 2d 441 (Haas v. Dezauche) 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
Haas v. Dezauche, 37 So. 2d 441, 214 La. 259, 1948 La. LEXIS 956 (La. 1948).

Opinion

PONDER, Justice.

. The plaintiffs brought jactitation proceedings against the defendants alleging that the defendants were slandering their title to the NE^ of the SWj4 of Section 20, T 6, R 7E, located in St. Landry Parish by asserting rights in this property under recorded mineral deeds and mineral leases. The proceedings were opposed by the defendants on the ground that the plaintiffs did not have the necessary possession to maintain the suit and in the alternative the defendants set up their title to the property. The plaintiffs interposed a plea of ten years acquisitive prescription under title translative of property. On trial of the case, the lower court gave judgment in *263 favor of the plaintiffs and the defendants have appealed.

We have arrived at the conclusion, 'after a careful consideration of the evidence, that the plaintiffs, and their authors have been in possession of the property continuosly for more than ten years under a translative title. The reason for our conclusion will be fully set out in this ■ opinion. In view of this conclusion, the superiority of the title is of no moment. If the defendants’ title was of earlier origin, it could not prevail over the plaintiffs’ and their authors’ possession of the property for a period of more than ten years under a title translative of property.

The land involved in this suit is a portion of land acquired from the United States under Act of Congress, March 2, 1849, c. 87, 9 Stat. 352. The defendants’ ancestors in title, Abner Smith and Robert R. Chapman, were issued patents to this property by the State of Louisiana on June 26, 1896. The defendants, the Smith and the Chapman heirs, executed deeds conveying mineral interest in the property and mineral leases to the defendant Dezauche, all of which were duly recorded. The plaintiffs claim that these instruments are casting a cloud on their title.

The plaintiffs trace their title to a deed executed on January 27, 1900, wherein the State of Louisiana, through the Auditor and ■the Register of the State Land Office, transferred a tract of land containing 18,335.84 acres, including the forty acres in dispute herein, to the Board of Levee Commissioners of the Red River, Atchafalaya and Bayou Boeuf Levee District. After various transfers this large tract of land eventually became the property of J. E. Dunlap. Dunlap transferred the land in its entirety to Leonce M. Soniat on April 9, 1915. Soniat entered into a timber contract on February 5, 1917 with Soniat and Deblieux, Inc. giving the corporation the right to remove the merchantable timber from the entire tract of land in consideration of the payment of a stipulated sum per thousand feet of the timber removed and the payment of the taxes during the life of the contract. During that same year the corporation entered into a contract with E. S. Moorman & Son authorizing the cutting of ash timber on a stumpage basis on the portion of the tract of land lying south of the Colorado Southern Railroad, which ran through the land. The corporation also entered into a contract with A. A. Waterhouse Lumber Company, Inc., in the same year authorizing the cutting and removing on a stumpage basis all the hardwood timber from 17,000 acres of this land, except the ash timber lying south of the railroad. Timber operations under these contracts began in 1917 and continued through 1920. In removing the timber a number of ox teams were used when the water conditions permitted. This large tract of land is subject to periodical overflow and is traversed by a number of watercourses. Gas boats and a steam boat were *265 used to tow the timber through these watercourses. From sixty to one hundred and fifty men were used in removing the timber. During the operations, which covered a period of three years, timber was removed from practically all portions of the land, except the forty acres in dispute. The operations were generally known and not interfered with. Most of the outer limits of the entire tract were blazed when these operations started. The operations were very extensive in 1919 and the corporation built a tramroad from Krotz Springs to a point near Mary King Lake, located in the center of the southern portion of the land and near the forty acres in dispute. The timber was loaded with a steam loader on flatcars at that point and hauled by locomotives to the railroad at Krotz Springs. Miany float roads and log roads were opened during these operations. Between the years 1920 and 1924, the corporation conducted timber operations on this tract of land and a spur was built some four miles long in the northeast portion of the lands lying north of the railroad. Timber operations were carried on by the Deblieux Lumber Company, the successor of the corporation, until 1927, at which time most of. the merchantable timber had been removed. Thereafter, a cooperage company cut all of the timber suitable for the manufacture of staves from the entire tract of land, except the forty acres in dispute. All of the timber operations were carried on under the original timber contracts by various successors. These stave operations continued until some time in 1929. Timber was removed from various portions of these lands under contracts with the plaintiffs from 1929 to 1941.

The plaintiffs and their predecessors in title have paid taxes on the property since it was first acquired from the levee board. The plaintiffs have executed various mineral leases, including the lease to their present lessee, the Gulf Refining Company, and assignments since the year 1926. A number of timber contracts executed by the plaintiffs and their predecessors have been recorded since 1917 in the records of St. Landry Parish. Geophysical operations were conducted on the lands from 1936 to 1944. The forty acres in dispute was explored for oil in 1938. There has been drilling and completion of oil wells on portions of the land. Surveys have been made and roads have been built in connection therewith. It appears that a road had been recently built across the forty acres in dispute.

The evidence shows that this large tract is swampland and subject to annual inundation. The evidence further shows that the land is valuable only for its timber and minerals.

It is no’ longer open to dispute that the cutting and removing timber from open swampland is a sufficient character of possession to support the prescription of ten years if the operations are general in character and carried on for a considerable *267 length of time when accompanied by public signs showing an intention to possess the land, such as building roads and other works and the payment of the taxes. We recently reviewed and approved the jurisprudence to this effect in the case of Veltin v. Haas, 207 La. 650, 21 So.2d 862. The evidence in the present case conclusively shows that the plaintiffs and their predecessors have exercised dominion over the entire tract of land since 1917 to the date that this suit was filed in the only manner that the nature of the land would permit. This dominion has been open and notorious by the many acts performed on the land and the many contracts placed of record, together with the payment of the taxes.

The defendants contend that where several contiguous tracts of land are conveyed in the same deed that the rule, of possession of part of an estate is sufficient, does not apply as provided in Article 3437, Revised Civil Code, which reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
37 So. 2d 441, 214 La. 259, 1948 La. LEXIS 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-v-dezauche-la-1948.