Hutchinson v. Jamison

38 La. Ann. 150
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1886
DocketNo. 9484
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 La. Ann. 150 (Hutchinson v. Jamison) 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
Hutchinson v. Jamison, 38 La. Ann. 150 (La. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Todd, J.

The plaintiff, as tutor of his two minor children, owners of .13-96 of certain city property known as No. 200 Camp street, and 1-16 of other property known as No. 198 Camp street, of this city, seeks to effect a partition of the same by this suit, and also to recover their share of the revenues of the last mentioned property from the 1st of January, 1865.

The defendant, Mrs. Jamison, in her answer, asserts ownership of the entire property by inheritance and prescription; resists the demand for rent in any event, and reconvenes for the value of the improvements made by her on the property, 198 Camp street, as a possessor in good faith, should plaintiff’s alleged interest in the property be recognized and its partition ordered.

The other defendants, the Blakeleys, answer by general denial, but otherwise make no defense.

There was judgment recognizing plaintiff’s interest in the property as claimed, ordering its partition, decreeing the payment of rent from [151]*151judicial demand only, overruling the pleas of prescription, and allowing to the defendant, Mrs. Jamison, the value of her improvements on property 198 Camp street.

From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed. The defendant and appellee, Mrs. Jamison, acquiesces in the judgment as rendered, save as relates to the value of the improvements, which she seeks to increase by a motion to amend.

The only points of contention left for our determination relate solely to the matter of rent and the value of the improvements — -all other issues being eliminated under the pleadings.

For a clear understanding of this controversy, it would be well to state that the minors-plaintiffs and the defendants are all the descendants of one Thomas Stackhouse, who died in 1843. He was twice married. The issue of his first marriage were two children, Margaret and Reynolds, and of his second marriage, three children. Of the latter, one died in infancy, leaving Ann (Mrs. Jamison) and Thomas Stack-house, Jr., as the only issue of the second marriage.

Margaret, daughter of the first marriage, became the wife of John A. Turn ell, and died leaving two (laughters. One of these daughters married Thos. Hutchinson, and died subsequently. The issue of that marriage are the two minors, plaintiffs herein, represented by their father and tutor. The other daughter of Mrs. Tnrnell married one Blakeley, of which marriage the Blakeleys, co-defendants herein, are the issue.

The property, 200 Camp street, belonged to Thomas Stackhouse, Sr., at his death.

The property, 198 Camp street, was purchased by Rebecca Johnson, his surviving widow, after his death.

Mrs. Jamison, defendant, went into possession of this property at the death of her mother in 1864, claiming to be her sole heir.

After the death of Thomas Stackhouse, Sr., there was a settlement among his heirs, in which the entire property of his estate, which included 200 Camp street, purported to have been conveyed to hL surviving widow, the mother of Mrs. Jamison. This property, Mrs. Jamison, on the death of her mother, claimed to inherit as her only heir.

All these facts are fully set forth in the case of Jamison vs. Smith, decided by this Court and reported in 35 Ann. p. 609, but are again recited for the elucidation of the present case.

In that case the title of the minors Hutchinson, the plaintiffs herein, to an interest in the property above mentioned as 200 Camp street, [152]*152and sought to be partitioned in the present suit, was finally adjudicated. We held that Mrs. Jamison was not the sole owner of this property (200 Camp street) as she claimed to be, by virtue of the conveyance to her mother, Widow Stackhouse, in the settlement of 1849, and her (Mrs. Jamison’s) inheritance from her mother, but that the said settlement was void as to the descendants of Margaret Stackhouse (Mrs. Turnell),for the reason that John A. Turnell, as tutor of his minor children, issue of his marriage with Margaret Stackhouse, was without authority to convey the interest of said minors in the property. Hence, that the title of the heirs of Margaret Stackhouse and of their descendants — among whom are the plaintiffs — was not divested by said settlement.

Neither did Mrs. Jamison inherit-from her mother the entire property known as 198 Camp street, for we held in the same case that-Thomas Stackhouse, Jr., her german brother, survived his mother; and he, therefore, inherited jointly with Mrs. Jamison this property, and at his death his interest in the same passed in part to the descendants of Margaret Stackhouse (Mrs. Turnell) his half sister.

This brings us at once to the question of the rents of this property, 198 Camp street, as claimed in the present suit — no claim being made by the plaintiffs to the rents of other property, No. 200 Camp street. This question of rent is dependent on the fact whether Mrs. Jamison was,a possessor in good or bad faith. If in good faith, rent can only run from judicial demand. If in bad faith, from the death of Thomas Stackhouse, Jr., -which is presumed to have occurred in 1865.

Mrs. Jamison went into possession of this property on the death of her mother in 1864. She claimed to be the owner of it by inheritance. She was an heir of the deceased and assumed, at the time, to be the sole licir. There were good reasons to induce an honest belief on her part that she was the only heir of her mother.

Her brother, Thomas Stackhouse, Jr., had been absent several years, had joined the army during the late war between the States, and had not been heard from for some time previous to his mother’s death. There were just grounds for the conclusion that he had died before his mother, in which case Mrs. Jamison would in truth have been the sole heir.

In point of fact, Thomas Stackhouse, Jr., never returned to his home and has never been heard of since. This Court held in the case of Jamison vs. Smith, above referred to, that from these circumstances there.was a legal presumption that Stackhouse, Jr., was dead, but that this presumption did not extend so far as to support the conclu[153]*153sion that he died before his mother; and thus holding, the Court decided that Stackhouse survived his mother and inherited jointly with Mrs. Jamison her property. Plaintiffs, therefore, as the descendants of his half sister, Margaret Turnell, became vested at his death with an undivided interest in his estate with Mrs. Jamison.

This conclusion of the Court does not, however, place Mrs. Jamison in the attitude of a possessor in bad faith. As said before, there were sufficient reasons for an honest belief on her part that she was the sole owner of the property.

“Article 3451 declares that “the possessor in good faith is he who has just reason to believe himself the master of the thing which he possesses, although he may not be in fact.”

Another article defines the possessor in good faith as one “who possesses as owner by virtue of an act sufficient in terms to transfer property, the defects of which he was ignorant.” C. C. 503.

This article is a reproduction of Article 550 of the Napoleon Code, and a text writer commenting on this article (550) says :

“Le titre translaiif de propriété s’entend d/u titre héréditaire comme de tout autre titre.” 6 Laurent, No. 208, Journal du Palais, 1848, p. 218.

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Bluebook (online)
38 La. Ann. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-jamison-la-1886.