Harrell v. Harrell

142 So. 138, 174 La. 957, 1932 La. LEXIS 1757
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1932
DocketNo. 31030.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 142 So. 138 (Harrell v. Harrell) 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
Harrell v. Harrell, 142 So. 138, 174 La. 957, 1932 La. LEXIS 1757 (La. 1932).

Opinion

*959 LAND, J.

Fifty years ago J. 0. Harrell and his wife, Mrs. Frances Harrell, formerly the Widow Meyer, died possessed of some real estate in the northern portion of Caddo parish, and were survived by the following named children and heirs at law:

(1)' Robert H. Harrell, who died in March, 1929;

(2) Mrs. Parthena Hartzo, who died 30 years ago, survived by one son, Dr. J. D. Hartzo ;

(3) Joe Harrell, who died 8 years ago;

(4) Mrs. Alice Burkes;

(5) Mrs. Lillie Williams, who died 36 years ago; and

(6) S. Price Harrell, who died in June, 1927.

Mrs. Frances Harrell, formerly the Widow Meyer, was survived by two children, issue of her previous marriage, viz. Tobe Meyer and Mrs. E. R. Stoddard, wife of W. J. Stoddard.

The real estate left by decedents consists of S. W. U and S. E. % of N. W. %, and S. W. % of N. E. % of section 34, T. 22, R. 16, containing 240 acres, and sometimes referred to as the “Alman Place”; and N. E. % of S. E. % and N. % of section 12; and N. W. % of N. E. % and N. E. % of N. E. % of section 11, T. 21, range 16.

In 1879, after the deaths of J. C. and Frances Harrell, an informal partition was executed between the Harrell children on the one side and the Meyer children on the other. The property in section 34, or the “Alman Place,” was allotted to the Meyer children in the settlement of their interest in their mother’s estate, and the Harrell children received the other properties in sections 11 and 12.

Subsequently, the “Alman Place” in section 34 was assessed to W. J. Stoddard, husband of one of the Meyer children, and was sold in 1886 to G. W. Huckaby for nonpayment of taxes of 1884. (Sup. Tr. 118.)

In 1892 the N. % of section 12, and N. E. % of N. E. % and S. W. % of section 11, assessed to L. F. Hartzo, in whose name title had been placed by the Harrell heirs, were sold to S. Price Harrell for delinquent taxes of 1890 and 1891. (Sup. Tr. 77.)

In 1896 the N. W. % of N. E. % of section 11, assessed to the succession of Mrs. F. B. Harrell, was adjudicated to S. Price Harrell for unpaid taxes of 1895. (Sup. Tr. 75.)

The Alman, tract, adjudicated to G. W. Huckaby in 1886, passed by meSne conveyances to J. Dixon and J. McAneny, one of the links being a second tax sale of date August 19, 1890, under an assessment to Mrs. E. R. Stoddard, one of the Meyer children. (Sup. Tr. 109.)

By 1900 S. Price Harrell had acquired, by mesne conveyance from the tax purchaser, the “Alman Place,” and by tax sales the other tracts mentioned above, or all of the lands involved in this litigation. (Sup. Tr., pp. 48-75, 79-111.)

Mrs. Lillie Williams was the fifth child of J. O. Harrell and his wife, Mrs. Frances Harrell, and died in 1894, leaving five minor children.

In 1911, after becoming of age, these children filed suit against their uncle, S. Price Harrell, and recovered a one-sixth interest in the property. Williams v. Harrell, 132 La. 1, 60 So. 699.

*961 On July 23, 1914, after the judgment in Williams v. Harrell, a partition was effected between S. Price Harrell and the Williams heirs, the latter receiving three 40-acre tracts and relinquishing to S. Price Harrell their rights in the other property. (Sup. Tr. 66.)

In 1925, S. Price Harrell sold the “Home Place,” the N. % of section 12, to his brother, Robert H. Harrell, partly for cash and partly on credit, and the property was-adjudicated January 7,1928, in foreclosure proceedings to J. A. Thigpen for the price of $5,000. (Sup. Tr. pp. 33-47.)

After the death of S. Price Harrell in June, 1927, his surviving widow, Mrs. Ida M. Harrell, qualified as administratrix of his estate.

The mortgagee foreclosed his special mortgage in the sum of $23,654.65 on the remaining property involved in this suit, and on November 23, 1927, the property was adjudicated to J. A. Thigpen for $20,000; the sum of $17,643.81 being retained by the adjudicatee to pay prior special privileges and mortgages resting on this and other property of the succession of S. Price Harrell. (Sup. Tr. 30.)

On January 26, 1928, J. A. Thigpen sold to Mrs. Ida M. Harrell, widow of S. Price Harrell, all of the property he had purchased at those foreclosure sales, reserving the mineral rights, for the sum of $72,860, in ten notes payable on January 1, 1928, and annually thereafter, J. A. Thigpen specially agreeing to pay prior privileges and mortgages resting on the property in the sum of $17,643.81. Of these ten notes only two have become due and exigible. (Sup. Tr. 15.)

The present, suit was filed by the heirs of Joe Harrell May 8, 1929, in order to effect a partition, plaintiffs claiming an undivided one-sixth interest in the property.

Later on J. D. Hartzo, Mrs. Alice Burkes, and the heirs of Robert H. Harrell joined with plaintiffs, the heirs of Robert • H. Harrell claiming an undivided one-sixth interest between them, and J. D. Hartzo and Mrs. Alice Burkes claiming an undivided one-sixth interest each in the property. (Sup. Tr. 45.)

All of the children of J. O. Harrell are parties to the suit, either in their own right or through successors in title, but the two Meyer children, heirs of Mrs. Prances Harrell are not parties.

The judgment of the lower court rejected plaintiffs’ demands and recognized defendants in possession to be the owners of the respective tracts claimed by them. (Tr. 69.)

Plaintiffs appealed.

The defendant, Mrs. S. Price Harrell, was decreed to be the owner of all the property involved in the suit, except N. E. % of S. E. % of section 12, N. W. % of S. W. % of section 34, and west 33% acres of N. W. % of N. E. % of section 11, which was decreed to belong to the defendants Ruth Winters, Nadie Williams Tyson, and A. J. Murff, and except 17.60 acres of N. W. % of S. W. % of section 34, which was decreed to belong to Julius Malcolm Daniels.

1. Plaintiffs contend that the decree in the case of Williams v. Harrell, 132 La. 1, 60 So. 699, is decisive of the claims of title re-urged herein by those claiming under S. Price Harrell ; that the Supreme Court in that case recognized, against. S. Price Harrell, the heirs of Mrs. Lillie Williams as owners of an undivided interest in the same property involved herein; and that plaintiffs in the present case *963 occupy the same relation to a recognition of their interests in the property ns did the heirs of Mrs. Lillie Williams in the previous case.

Defendants have pleaded 3 years’ prescription in aid of the tax titles of S. Price Harrell upon which they rely, estoppel, and 10 and 30 years’ prescription.

Whatever validity the claims of the present plaintiffs might have had in 1911, when the case of. Williams v. Harrell was decided, it must he remembered that the tax sales to S.

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Bluebook (online)
142 So. 138, 174 La. 957, 1932 La. LEXIS 1757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrell-v-harrell-la-1932.