Harrill v. Pitts

193 So. 562, 194 La. 123, 1940 La. LEXIS 967
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 9, 1940
DocketNo. 35531.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 193 So. 562 (Harrill v. Pitts) 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
Harrill v. Pitts, 193 So. 562, 194 La. 123, 1940 La. LEXIS 967 (La. 1940).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is a petitory action in which the plaintiffs seek recognition as owners of an undivided 22/48ths interest in 108 acres of land in the Rodessa oil field, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, described as:

“The W% of the SE1/^ and the East 28 acres of the NE% of the SW(4 of Section 13, Township 23 North, Range 16 West, Caddo Parish, Louisiana.”

Minerals have been produced from the property and the plaintiffs have also prayed for an accounting of their share of the proceeds of the sale thereof.

The defendants pleaded prescription of ten and thirty years (Rev.Civ.Code, arts. •3478, 3499) acquirendi causa, estoppel under Article 1839 of the Revised Civil Code, and estoppel en pais.

The district judge rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, as prayed for, and ordered an accounting, but on motion of the defendants, a new trial was granted. Additional, testimony was introduced and the trial judge .then rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, sustaining their plea of ten years acquisitive prescription and rejecting the plaintiffs’ demands. The plaintiffs have appealed.

The defendants have answered the appeal and pray that their pleas of estoppel be sustained and that the deed of their author in title be recognized as translative of title and the proper basis for a plea of ten years acquisitive prescription.

The following facts are undisputed:

On January 10, 1896, T. R. Simmons and his wife sold to N. E. Drake the property in controversy. Although N. E. Drake was at the time a married woman, there was no reference in the deed to her marital status.

At the time of the purchase on January 10, 1896, Mrs. N. E. Drake was married to W. M. Drake. This marriage continued until December 19, 1899, when W. M. Drake died intestate, leaving as his heirs the three children of his marriage with Mrs. N. E. Drake — Bertha M. Drake, Olive C. Drake, and Alvin E. Drake,.

On February 7, 1903, Mrs. N. E. Drake deeded the property in controversy (by a description which plaintiffs contend was defective) to M. T. Atkins, for $125. The vendor in this deed was referred to as Mrs. N- E- Drake, but there was no other reference to her marital status.

*130 On June 21, 1906, Alvin E. Drake died without issue and without having ever been married, leaving as his sole heirs, his mother, Mrs. N. E. Drake, and his two sisters, Bertha M. Drake and Olive C. Drake.

On September 21, 1925, M. T. Atkins sold the property in controversy to A. C. Pitts, the husband of Mattie Spearman Pitts. A. C. Pitts subsequently died and the District Court of his domicile recognized Mrs. Mattie Pitts as his widow in community, and his two children, Mancel Pitts and Gladys Pitts, as his sole heirs.

Bertha Drake subsequently married Otis' Gray. Mrs. Bertha Drake Gray died in 1931, leaving as her sole heirs her two children, Geneva Gray, and Edith Gray, who is now Mrs. Edith Gray Asbury. Olive C. Drake married T. C. Harrill, Jr., and is now Mrs. Olive C. D. Harrill.

On September 18, 1934, the widow and heirs of A. C. Pitts executed an oil and gas lease in favor of R. W. Norton, covering the property in controversy. This lease was assigned by Norton to United Gas Public Service Company, and by United Gas Public Service Company to Union Producing Company.

The defendants averred that when M. T. Atkins purchased the property from N. E. Drake on February 7, 1903, he acquired the same in good faith on the representation and under the belief that his vendor was the sole owner thereof; that Atkins, under a deed translative of title, went into actual, physical, open and peaceful possession of the property, believing himself to be the owner thereof; that immediately following his acquisition of the property, he constructed a residence on it, cultivated and improved the land, and paid all of the taxes due thereon; that he exercised acts of control and ownership thereof continuously from 1903 until he sold the property to A. C. Pitts on September 21, 1925, without any question as to his title or his right to possession and ownership thereof; that during the 22 years that Atkins and his family remained in exclusive possession of the property as owners thereof, various contracts, mortgages, leases and other documents affecting the property were executed by him and recorded, which constituted notice to the plaintiffs and all others of the rights which he claimed in the property; that A. C. Pitts, his widow and heirs, during the 13 years that they possessed the property as owners, executed and recorded upon the public records of Caddo Parish, La., various contracts, leases, mortgages and other documents affecting the property, which evidenced their possession and claim of ownership thereof and constituted notice to the plaintiffs and the world that they were exerting exclusive rights of ownership and possession of the property; that Pitts, his widow, and his heirs had actual, physical possession of the property during the. entire .period of their ownership; that they cultivated and improved the same peaceably and continuously to the date of this suit, February 18, 1938; that plaintiffs, knowingly, for more than 35 years, have permitted Atkins and his vendees in title to take exclusive possession and control of the property and to remain in possession of the same as sole, owners, without any notice whatsoever to defendants of their .claim; and that plaintiffs are estopped fo deny the *132 validity of the defendants’ title, the defendants having dealt in good faith with the apparent owners of the property, and having acquired valuable rights and expended considerable money thereon, under the belief that they were dealing with the true owners thereof. The defendants introduced evidence to establish the above-recited facts.

The plaintiffs admit that the defendants have been in possession of the property for more than ten years, but contend that the plea of prescription of ten years cannot prevail, because, first, the defendants do not have deeds translative of title, and second, because of the alleged bad faith of the defendants.

Under the first proposition, the plaintiffs argue that the deed from N. E. Drake to M. T. Atkins is defective because of the failure to properly describe the property. Their contention is that the description of the property is defective because the deed describes 120 acres by governmental description, giving the quarter sections, section number, township number and range, and ending with a reservation of 12 acres therefrom, but does not describe the excepted 12 acres and, therefore, the grantee cannot locate the 108 acres which were intended to be purchased.

We quote the following from Volume 16, American Jurisprudence, page 619:

“If an exception' is not described with certainty, the grantee shall have the benefit of the defect. . In other words, the exception, and not the whole deed, is void; and the grantee is invested with title to all the property mentioned in the deed disregarding the exception.”

The above text is supported by a number of decisions of the Supreme Court of various states.

The rule on the subject is thus stated in Volume 18, Corpus Juris, pages 347 and 348:

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 562, 194 La. 123, 1940 La. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrill-v-pitts-la-1940.