Hutton v. Adkins

186 So. 908
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 5830.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 186 So. 908 (Hutton v. Adkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutton v. Adkins, 186 So. 908 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

This is a petitory action in which plaintiff sues to be decreed the owner and to recover possession of that part of the W% of NWJi of Section 4, west of Caney Creek, Township 18 North, Range 7 East, Bienville Parish, containing 25 acres, more or less.

Mrs. Annie Miller, surviving widow of Elias W. Miller, deceased, his three surviving daughters, to-wit, Mrs. Emmie Miller Adkins, wife of E. PI. Adkins, Mrs. Lillian. Miller Cates, wife of R. E. Cates, and Mrs.- Bessie Miller Floyd, wife of O. G. Floyd, and said E. H. Adkins, were impleaded- as defendants. Mrs. Miller died after the suit was filed but before being served. Her said three daughters were substituted as defendants in her stead.

Plaintiff’s asserted ownership and her hope of succeeding herein depend upon the chain of title set up by her, to-wit:

1. Patent by the United States unto Thomas C. Scarborough, September 23, 1936;

2. Alleged deed from patentee to John Frazier;

*909 3. Act of donation from John Frazier unto Mrs. Mary Pride Lewis, May 28, 1851;

4. Succession and heirs of Mrs. Mary Pride Lewis (through partition) unto Mrs. Sallie Drake Webb, January 4, 1890; and

5. Succession of Mrs. Sallie Drake Webb unto plaintiff, her sole heir, by judgment of the Twenty-eighth District Court for Webster Parish, May 8, 1913. She alleges that defendants are in possession of the land without any title whatever and refuse to surrender same to her. Plaintiff also sues for $500 alleged to be due her for its illegal use and occupancy.

Defendants admit possession by them of the land and aver it to be legal and under just title. They deny that plaintiff is the owner thereof by and through the chain of title alleged by her. In their original answer these defendants assert that they acquired said land by inheritance as the. sole heirs of their father E. W. Miller; and they aver that he acquired title thereto in the following' described manner and through the below described instruments:

1. That on October 16, 1888, he purchased from J. J. Vanlandingham the E% of NE14 and NE14 of SEj4 of Section 5, Township 18 North, Range 7 West, in Bienville Parish and immediately assumed actual possession thereof as a home whereon he resided until his death, which occurred in September, 1932;

2. That on July 7, 1869, John Heflin purchased from Minerva K. Hanes “all that portion of land lying west of Caney Creek in Section 4 supposed to contain 100 acres”, and the NW^4 of Section 9, NEJ4 of Section 8, SEJ4 of SEJ4 of Section 5, and other lands adjoining, in Township 18 North, Range 7 West, containing in the aggregate 900 acres, more or less, and that Heflin took possession of said lands under said deed and continued in possession of the same until his death, excepting such portions as were sold off by him;

3. That on December 21, ,1891, John Heflin sold to said E. W. Miller that part of said land in Section 4, lying west of Caney Creek, but through error the deed only described the SWJ4 °f Section 4 lying west of said Creek, although the acreage given in the deed “included that part of the NWJ4 of Section 4 lying west of the Creek;” and

4. That E. W. Miller took possession under said deed to him of all the land actually described therein and also that which lies between the 120 acres he acquired from Vanlandingham and Caney Creek and continued such possession until he died; that such possession has been continued by his heirs.

The Miller heirs interpose pleas of prescription of ten and thirty years. G. E. Adkins filed a separate answer. He adopts all the allegations, admissions and denials of his codefendants, and avers that his possession of the land was by authority of his wife and her coheirs.

By amended _ answer, the Miller heirs allege that Thomas J. Heflin (presumably the same person as John Heflin) acquired from Mrs. M. K. Hanes all said land in Section 4, west of Caney Creek, and that Mrs. Hanes acquired the land from Marx Baer on May 10, 1865; and that Baer acquired same from John L. Lewis on November 11, 1864; that John Heflin' died some years ago leaving several heirs (named) of whom Mrs. Annie- H. Miller, mother of these defendants, was one; that should it be held that their father, E. W. Miller, did not acquire said land from Hef-lin, as alleged in their original petition, in such case title to the land was inherited by the Heflin heirs on his death, and that their mother’s inherited (one-seventh) interest devolved upon them at her decease. These defendants, in their amended answer,. renew the pleas of prescription formerly interposed by them.

After the case was tried and submitted, but before judgment was rendered, plaintiff filed a plea of prescription of ten years acquirendi causa, which was sustained, and defendants have appealed.

Plaintiff did not produce any deed from the patentee, Scarborough,, unto John Frazier. But for this break in the title her chain would be complete.

Defendants erred in alleging that E. W. Miller acquired any land west of the creek in Section 4 from John Heflin. All of the deeds constituting the chain of title upon which defendants rely were introduced in evidence. We here give a brief synopsis of them in the order of dates:

1. John Langdon Lewis to Marx Baer, November 11, 1864, conveying, — “All that portion of land lying west of Caney Creek in Section 4, supposed to contain 100 acres,” the NWj4 Section 9, NE*4 Section 8, SE14 of SE14 of Section 5, and other tracts adjoining, in Township 18 North, Range 7 West, containing 900 acres, in Bienville Parish.

*910 The record discloses no evidence indicating the source of Lewis’ title to any of these lands.

2. Marx Baer to Mrs. Minnie K. Hanes, May 10, 1865, conveying same 900 acres.

These two deeds were executed in Caddo Parish and were erroneously recorded therein. They were discovered after the present suit was threatened and then recorded in Bienville Parish.

3. Minnie K. Hanes to John Heflin, July 7, 1869, conveying same tracts composing said 900 acres.

4. John Heflin to John M. Gipson, January 12, 1873, conveying,- — “All that portion of land lying west of Caney Creek in SW^ of Section 4, supposed to contain 95 acres,” the NE14 of Section 9, containing 160 acres, the W% of SE^ of Section 9, Township 18 North, Range 7 West.

5. John M. Gipson to Newton Burgess, not dated but recorded July 25, 1874, conveying same -description of lands as in deed to Gipson, supra. The acreage is given as being 335.

6. Newton Burgess to Thomas C. San-defer, April 17, 1875, conveying same land.

7. Thomas C. Sandefer to Elias W. Miller, December 21, 1891, conveying, — “All that portion of land, except 5 acres, lying west of Caney Creek in Southwest Quarter of Section 4, supposed to contain ninety (90) acres, in Township 18, Range 7 West.”

It will be noted from the description in the deed from Heflin to Gipson that the land in controversy was therein first omitted. Hence, the alternative demand set up by the Miller heirs in their amended answer.

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutton-v-adkins-lactapp-1939.