Irvine v. Noone

2 La. App. 675, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 232
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1925
DocketNo. 2102
StatusPublished

This text of 2 La. App. 675 (Irvine v. Noone) 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
Irvine v. Noone, 2 La. App. 675, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 232 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CARVER, J.

Plaintiffs, as the heirs-of Francois Barbier, sue to recover from the defendant a tract of land of which he is in possession under a patent from the United States based upon a homestead entry made in 1910.

They claim to own it by virtue of a Receiver’s receipt signed by George Purvis, Receiver, reading as follows:

“No. 23190, Receiver’s Office at Monroe, La., Aug. 8, 1861.
“Received from Francois Barbier, of Rap-ides Parish, La., the sum of thirty-nine dollars and 77 cents; being in full for the Southwest quarter of Sec. 4 and S. E. quarter of Section No. 5 in Township No. 4 N. of Range No. 3 East containing three hundred and eighteen acres and 14 hundredths, at $12% /100 per acre.
“$39.77/100.
“GEO. PURVIS, Receiver.”

A copy of Barbier’s application and of its approval by R. W. Jemison, Register, the original of which was found on file in the United States Land Office at Baton Rouge, was introduced in evidence and reads as follows:

[676]*676“No. 23190, Land Office at Monroe, La., August 8, 1861.
“I, Francois Barbier, of Rapides Parish, La., do hereby apply to purchase the SW% of Section 4 and SE% Section 5 in Township 4 North Range 3 East, containing 318.14 acres, according to the returns of the Surveyor General, for which I have rate of 12 %c per acre. Francois Barbier.
“I, R. W. Jemison,' Register of the Land Office at Monroe, La., do hereby certify that the lot above described contains 318.14/100 acres as mentioned above, and that the price agreed upon is 12%c per acre.
$39.77/100.
(Signed) R. W. JEMISON, Register.”

Defendant plead prescription and also that the Receiver’s receipt on which plaintiff declared was null and void because at the date of its issuance the State of' Louisiana had seceded from the Union; that the United States Land Office at Monroe had been closed; and that no one was authorized to represent the United States in the disposition of its lands.

The District Judge sustained the plea of prescription and plaintiffs appealed.

D. K. Parrott, acting Commissioner of the General Land Office testified that R. W. Jemison took office as Register on September 29, 1860, and resigned February 19, 1861; that G'eorge Purvis took office as Receiver on September 29, 1860; and that “a letter is found in the files of this office which indicates that he resigned April 3, 1861”; that no successors were appointed (meaning, of course, soon thereafter) ; that the land in question was within the boundaries of the Monroe Land Office District; that Louisiana apparently seceded January 26, 1861; that the Barbier entry was not reported to the General Land Office or entered on its books nor was the price he paid sent there; that though his office had no record of a formal closing of the Monroe Land Office, the last abstract of cash entries sent to the General Land Office before the breaking out of hostilities between the north and south was February 1, 1861; that the last cash entry reported before the Civil war was 23027, dated January 31, 1861;. that the office was re-opened for business on December 23, 1867; that .the first cash' entry after re-opening was January 7, 1873, being number 23028, and the first homestead entry was December 28, 1867; that the General Land Office does not recognize the acts done by the persons in control of the office while it was closed, because they were not lawfully constituted agents of the United States Government; that the persons so in control remitted no moneys and made no reports to the General Land Office during that period.

An extract from the Tract Book in the United States Land Office at Baton Rouge, to which office the records of the Monroe office were transferred, shows, opnosite the description of the land in question as follows:

“Claim of Francois Barbier No. 23190, Posted from Surveyor General’s map 12/7/06. L. 19379.”

A pen is run through Barbier’s name, evidently to erase it.

An extract from the Baton Rouge tract book shows opposite the SE% of Section 5 as follows:

Francois Barbier 1861 August 8 23190 Cons.

A pen is run through the description of the land, evidently to erase it.

The official plat of Township 4 North Range 3 East on file in the General Land Office does not show Barbier’s name.

The plat on file in the Baton Rouge office shows that across the SE}4 of Section 5 and SE14 of Section 4, which together form one body of land, is written

“Francois Barbier receipt No. 23190”.

[677]*677The copy of this plat filed in evidence bears the following notation:

The north, south, east and west boundaries of this township were surveyed by Charles DeErance deputy surveyor in the year 1813 and 1814 and the sectional lines were surveyed by Edmund H. Wailes deputy surveyor in November, 1824. Ser•veyor’s Office, Washington, Miss., June 9, 1827. G. Davis, surveyor of public lands south of the state of Tennessee.

Surveyor General’s Office, New Orleans, La., January 29, 1908.' I certify the above map to be a correct copy of the original now on file in this office.

Surveyor General of Louisiana.

We have not been referred to any law of the United States .authorizing Registers and Receivers to sell United States land at a price to be agreed on between land Register and Receiver and the purchaser, nor to any law of the United States, authorizing the sale at so small a price as 12%c per acre nor have we found any such law.

Neither Jemison’s approval of Barbier’s application to purchase nor Purvis receipt, though signed by them, respectively, Register and Receiver, and though they had been appointed Register and Receiver, respectively, in 1860, appears to have been signed by them as officers of the United States.

This circumstance and the fact that they had resigned and the further fact that they made no remittance of the purchase money nor any report of the sale to the General Land Office and could not in view of the war in progress have remitted or made report, coupled with other facts of which we think we have the right to take judicial notice convince us that in making the sale and issuing the receipt Jemison and Purvis did not assume to act for the United' States and the entryman must have known it. At any rate, he must be presumed to have known that the authority of the United States had been set aside, not as of right but as a fact, and that the state and the Confederacy of which it had become a part, were claiming sovereignty and actually exercising dominion over the territory embracing the land in question'and that the state was asserting ownership of all unappropriated land in said territory.

He must be presumed to have known that under prevailing conditions he could, not have obtained from the United States or its officers any rights that would be recognized or respected by the power in actual control, and further, that in dealing with the United States or its officers' would be regarded as disloyalty to the power- so in control, probably entailing severe penalties.

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Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 675, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvine-v-noone-lactapp-1925.