Jackson v. Gordon

186 So. 399
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1939
DocketNo. 1914.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 186 So. 399 (Jackson v. Gordon) 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
Jackson v. Gordon, 186 So. 399 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge. '

This suit involves the title to and ownership of'a certain forty acre tract of land situated in the Parish of St. Landry which is fully described in the plaintiff’s petition as follows:

“A certain lot of land containing forty acres more or less, situated near the At-chafalaya River, Parish of St. Landry, Louisiana, being the Southwest Quarter of Northwest Quarter of Section 35, in Township 2 South Range 6 East. Being the same property acquired by vendor of John Plar-monson, December 16, 1889, as appears by sale recorded in Conveyance Book Y No. 2 at pages 528 and 529, Recorder’s office, Parish of St. Landry.”

The plaintiff is the son of Needham E. Jackson who he alleges purchased the property by authentic act of sale from Gilbert Sanders on January 3, 1891. The chain of title outlined in the petition traces the property back to the United States government.

Plaintiff alleges that neither his father nor mother, Mary Lucas, ever disposed of the property or any - part of it while they *401 lived and that as their sole heir he became, after their deaths, and now is, the true and lawful owner thereof.

He avers that after the death of Gilbert Sanders, his father’s author in title, Kate Hayes, widow of R. A. Gordon, and the administratrix of his estate, acting in her capacity as such acquired by various transfers all set out in the petition, the entire interests of the heirs of said Gilbert Sanders and his wife, Hester Sanders, in their successions, and that in all of the transfers made there was described and attempted to be conveyed the aforementioned property which Gilbert Sanders had previously sold to his father Needham Jackson. He sets out four different transfers claimed to have been made to the estate of R. A. Gordon purporting to convey the interests of the heirs of Gilbert Sanders and his wife in a certain described one hundred and sixty acre tract of land which embraced the forty acre tract described in his petition and from which latter tract, he avers, no title could have been conveyed for the reason that the said heirs could not have acquired any interest from their father therein inasmuch as he had divested himself of title by the sale which he had made to Needham Jackson. In spite of this he alleges that the" admin-istratrix of the succession of R. A. Gordon and R. L. Gordon, sole heir of R. A. Gordon, who is also made party defendant, are claiming title to the said forty acre .tract by virtue of the transfers from the heirs of Gilbert Sanders.

Plaintiff avers that he is not in the actual possession of the said property, and, on information and belief, he ¿lieges that neither are the said defendants in possession thereof and that he brings this action under the authority of Act No. 38 of 1908 which provides for the adjudication of title to real estate when neither the plaintiff nor the defendant is in actual possession. In the alternative he avers that if the defendants be shown to be in possession, that the action be considered as petitory in character and that he be decreed to be the owner of the property.

It may well be stated at this point that on the day of trial in the lower court at plaintiff’s own suggestion a motion filed on behalf of Robert L. Gordon to be dismissed as a party defendant was sustained by the district judge.

The defendant estate through Mrs. Gordon, administratrix, filed an answer in which she put at issue first the legitimacy of the plaintiff on the ground that his father Needham E. Jackson and Mary Lucas had never been married, the only valid marriage Needham Jackson having ever contracted being with Mary V. Sanders, a daughter of Gilbert and Hester Sanders, and that the property described in plaintiff’s petition having been acquired by Need-ham Jackson during that marriage it fell into the community then existing between them. Defendant then sets out an acquisition of the interest of Mary Sanders by the Gordon estate, as well as the interest of the other heirs of Gilbert and Hester Sanders, and with regard to the interest of Mary Sanders she alleges that as there were no children born of her marriage with Needham Jackson, she had acquired the whole of the forty acre tract after his death, which would none the less make the estate the owner thereof under the title acquired from her. She avers that the estate of R. A. Gordon has been in the actual, open and peaceable possession of all the property in controversy for more than ten years, in good faith, and she therefore pleads the ten years’ prescription as to the interest acquired from those of the Sanders heirs reckoning from March 1, 1927.

To the proceedings as thus made up at that time then came and appeared Mary V. Sanders as intervenor claiming the entire forty acre tract of land in controversy and alleging her ownership of one-half thereof as widow in community of Need-ham E. Jackson and as having acquired his half interest in the community in default of any legitimate heir of his as she avers that the plaintiff, Charles Jackson, was an illegitimate child. As an alternative she pleads that she was left a widow in necessitous circumstances of Needham Jackson and urges therefore that the property should be sold in order to satisfy her claim of $1,000 which the law, under Civil Code, Article 3252, accords her. She denies that she ever conveyed her interest to the Gordon estate in this particular forty acre tract and that all she ever intended to and did convey by any sale to that estate was her undivided interest in the estate of her deceased father, Gilbert Sanders. In the event it be held that her sale of that interest embraced the forty acre tract, then she pleads that it be set aside on the ground of lesion beyond moiety. The prayer of her petition is for judgment decreeing her to be the sole owner of the forty acre tract of land in dispute.

*402 The allegations in the petition of intervention were all put at issue by an answer filed thereto by the defendant administra-trix on the day of the trial of the case in the court below. The plaintiff had not on that clay prepared his answer to the intervention but it was agreed that the case should be taken up and heard as though an answer had been filed with the understanding that plaintiff be given a delay in which to prepare and file the same. In his answer which was subsequently filed plaintiff denied the validity of his father’s marriage to the intervenor, Mary V. Sanders, and consequently denied that she had any interest whatever in the forty acre tract of land. In the alternative and in the event it be held that her marriage to Needham Jackson was valid he then plead her renunciation of the community in his father’s succession proceedings made by her for the purpose of claiming the $1,000 as widow in necessitous circumstances. To her alternative claim of $1,000 he pleads two marriages by her subsequent to that with his father by which, he contends, she has forfeited the same and he also pleads the prescriptions of three and ten years against the same.

On these multiple and highly conflicting and controverted issues the district judge, after trial and submission of the case, rendered. judgment recognizing the plaintiff, Charles Jackson, and the intervenor, Mary V. Sanders, as owners of the property in the proportion of an .undivided one-half each, and he decreed accordingly. The defendant took both a suspensive and a de-volutive appeal to this court and later'both the plaintiff and the intervenor appealed dévolutively.

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Bluebook (online)
186 So. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-gordon-lactapp-1939.