Industrial Lumber Co. v. Farque

111 So. 166, 162 La. 793, 1926 La. LEXIS 2322
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 29, 1926
DocketNo. 27948.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 111 So. 166 (Industrial Lumber Co. v. Farque) 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
Industrial Lumber Co. v. Farque, 111 So. 166, 162 La. 793, 1926 La. LEXIS 2322 (La. 1926).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 795 This suit was instituted as an action in jactitation. The defendants, in their answers, deny that plaintiff has any title in the property involved in the suit, but set up title thereto in themselves. Both the plaintiff and defendants plead the prescription of 10 years acquirendi causa.

Whether this is a possessory or petitory action, or whether it is merely a suit for slander of title, are issues which need not be discussed here, for, in our opinion, the trial judge correctly found, as a fact, that plaintiff took physical possession of the property shortly after the recordation of its deed thereto, and, after some months of actual occupancy, it has had uninterrupted civil possession for more than ten years. A judgment was therefore rendered maintaining plaintiff's plea of prescription and rejecting the defendants' demands. The appeal is taken from that judgment.

The tract of land in controversy is the E. 1/2 of the N.E. 1/4 of section 25, Tp. 9 S., R. 13 W., and is located in the parish of Calcasieu. It is unimproved and uninclosed marsh and cut-over timber lands, unfit for agricultural purposes.

The property was entered by Joseph S. Farque in 1889, during the existence of his first marriage. His wife died in 1891, leaving two minor heirs, issue of the marriage. *Page 796 In 1894 Farque made final proof and the land involved in this suit was patented to him. Farque was a widower when the patent issued, and therefore the lower court properly held that the land was his paraphernal property. In 1900 Farque sold the property to R.W. White. The deed was executed before Samuel A. Fairchild, notary public, but this deed was not recorded. At a later date, but during the same year, R.W. White sold the property to the Industrial Lumber Company, a Texas corporation, which was later reorganized as a Louisiana corporation, the plaintiff in this suit. The deed from White to plaintiff was also passed before Samuel A. Fairchild, notary public. This deed was promptly recorded, and a short time thereafter plaintiff entered upon and took physical possession of the property, had the land surveyed, had levels run thereon, placed marking stakes on all four sides of the property, 200 feet apart, built a tram railroad across it, and continued active operations thereon for about four months, during which time it cut and removed from the land approximately 250,000 feet of merchantable timber, which was all the timber of value thereon. After these operations were completed, plaintiff employed a man to look after this and other lands in the vicinity belonging to it, and has had an employee serving in that capacity continuously since that date. In addition to these acts of ownership and possession, plaintiff sold a canal right of way across the land, and has executed leases thereon for oil development purposes. Since the date of the deed from White to plaintiff the land has been assessed to and plaintiff has paid the taxes thereon.

In summing up the acts of plaintiff's ownership and possession, the learned trial judge says:

"The defendants first urge that these acts do not constitute such possession of the property as to enable the plaintiff to maintain this action, but in this contention the court is unable *Page 797 to agree. Plaintiff holding under a chain of title coming from the government, after placing its deed, valid in all respects, on record, went into actual, physical possession of the property, built a tram railroad across it, cut and hauled away from the land all of the timber suitable for use, physically occupying the land for three or four months. Defendants in their brief admit the good faith of the plaintiff and the truth of the testimony as to physical possession of the property by the plaintiff for three or four months is clear. After this period plaintiff maintained such possession and exercised such powers of ownership as are usual and customary or reasonable under the facts. The land was part marsh and the remainder cut over pine land, unfit for cultivation. Plaintiff paid the taxes thereon, paid a man to look after it, had it surveyed, had levels run on it, placed stakes at short intervals around the tract, gave a mineral lease thereon, granted a canal right of way and granted and refused permission to different parties to cut and remove wood therefrom."

"In the case of South La. Land Co. v. Riggs Cypress Co., 119 La. 193, 43 So. 1003, this court while holding that the facts in that particular case did not constitute the possession necessary to support the possessory action, had this to say as to the possession of swamp land:

"`There may be physical possession of swamp lands, the value of the land is in the trees. To cut them down and take them away requires considerable preparation and the use of different appliances. It may be that the mere cutting down of a few trees is not possession. It is different where operations are carried on with a view of pulling a number of trees, and when at every returning season work is done. The sound of the woodman's axe is heard; the stir of the hands; the swamp boat going up and down the small streams; its resounding whistle heard — all go towards denoting possession.'

"Plaintiff at least had civil possession after the three or four months of actual physical possession, and physical possession followed by civil possession is sufficient to support the possessory action. C.C. art. 3442; Handlin v. Weston Lbr. Co., 47 La. Ann. 401, 16 So. 955; Sallier et al. v. Bartley, 113 La. 400,37 So. 6; Jones et al. v. Goss et al., 115 La. 926,40 So. 357."

This court's interpretation of article 49, C.P., has been uniform since the decision handed down in 1841, in the case of *Page 798 Ellis v. Prevost, 19 La. 251, wherein the court said:

"Possession is acquired by the actual and corporal detention of the property; this is natural, or possession in fact; and it is preserved and maintained by the mere will or intention to possess, and this is civil possession, or possession in right. So where a person is disturbed in his possession, he has the right, within a year, and by virtue of his civil possession, * * * to institute the possessory action to recover it."

From the many authorities in point, we will cite, as a concise and clear statement of the rule, the case of Joseph D. Taylor v. Edwin Telle, 45 La. Ann. 124, 12 So. 118.

The defendants are S.A. Fairchild, Bassett Blakely, and H.G. Nelms. They claim to have acquired the property in dispute by a valid title, and that they and their authors in title have been in actual, open, public, continuous, and unequivocal possession of it since the year 1889.

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 166, 162 La. 793, 1926 La. LEXIS 2322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-lumber-co-v-farque-la-1926.