Johnson v. Henderson

190 So. 171, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 318
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1939
DocketNo. 5826.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 190 So. 171 (Johnson v. Henderson) 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
Johnson v. Henderson, 190 So. 171, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 318 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*172 TALIAFERRO, Judge.

This is a jactitation suit. The plaintiffs are: Mrs. Mamie Ester Strayhan Johnson, Mrs. Willie Gray Strayhan Britt, Mrs. Roxie Strayhan Dawson, Mrs. Mamie P. Strayhan Graham, Mrs. Alice Strayhan Hollier and Grover H. Britt. They allege themselves to be the owners and in the actual physical possession of the following described land situated in .Bossier Parish, to-wit:

The W% of Section' 2, East of Red River; the East fractional part of the Westj^, East of Lots 1, 2, 3 and 6 of Section 11, Township 21 North, Range 14 West, containing 122.00 acres, more or less.

They further allege that their father, J. F. Strayhan, actually and physically possessed said lands from September 16, 1899, on which date he purchased lands adjoining on the east and west sides thereof, until his death; that they have in like manner been in possession thereof since his death. It appears, however, that Grover H. Britt’s wife and not him is an heir of Strayhan.

Plaintiffs charge that defendants, to-wit: Max Henderson, Mrs. Vashti Henderson, Martha Henderson, Maston Henderson, Margery Henderson, Mrs. Marcia Gray Bryan, the widow and heirs of James M. Henderson, deceased; and John Wagner, Mrs. Elizabeth Nattin Moressi and Miss Grace H. Larkin, successors in title to James M. Henderson, deceased, are slandering their title to said lands by having caused to be placed of record in Bossier Parish, a tax sale thereto purporting to have been made to said Henderson, deceased, on June IS, 1929.

Plaintiffs sue for damages caused by the alleged slander, and pray that defendants be ordered to either disclaim any title whatever to the lands or to exercise herein such rights as they may have against same; and for judgment cancelling said tax deed. They do not pray to have their alleged possession recognized, but do pray for “general and equitable relief”.

Other lands are described in the petition and as to these other persons were impleaded. After an exception of mis-joinder was sustained, plaintiffs dismissed the suit as to these lands and these defendants.

The remaining defendants filed what is referred to as an exception of no right of action in which they affirmatively allege that plaintiffs are not now nor have they ever been in the actual, physical possession of said lands, and therefore have no right to institute and prosecute this suit. This plea squarely made plaintiffs’ alleged possession of the lands an issue, and a trial was had and evidence at length introduced thereon. The trial judge ruled that defendants, under their plea or exception, carried the burden, of proof. If there was error in this ruling, it is not urged here. We are not asked to pass thereon. To the extent that the exception put at issue plaintiffs’ alleged possession, it was in reality an answer. Young v. Town of Morgan City, 129 La. 339, 56 So. 303; Williams’ Heirs v. Zengel, 117 La. 599, 42 So. 153.

There was judgment for defendants sustaining the “exception of no right of action” and dismissing plaintiffs’ suit. They have appealed.

The land in Section 2 contains about 32.64 acres. It is one mile long, north and south. The plat in the record indicates that the tract is between 160 and 170 yards wide at its south end and not over 40 yards wide at its north end. It was probably created by the river’s recession. The tract in Section 11 is also a mile long on its east side. Its west line (being common with the east line of Lots 1, 2, 3 and 6) is parallel, or nearly so, to its east line for practically one-half of a mile and from that point it gradually curves northeasterly until it reaches the north section line at the southeast corner of the tract in Section- 2. This tract, according to the plat, contains 89.36 acres. Said lots lie between it and Red River. Neither tract, apparently, has been surveyed or platted into lots by the state or United States.

It appears that in September, 1899, J. F. Strayhan acquired lands on both sides of this 89.36-acre tract in Section 11, and lands adjoining the tract in Section 2 on its east side. The deed to him was excluded from evidence because it did not include the lands involved herein. It also appears that Strayhan lived on and cultivated a large area of the lands described in his deed. His children, plaintiffs herein, were reared thereon. After his death they partitioned the succession property, but the tracts in question were not included. Therefore, if said heirs have a proprietary interest therein, it is in a state of indivisión; and since their father, from whom they inherited, had no deed to the *173 land, possession thereof by him or them must of necessity be restricted to those portions which he or they actually and physically detained.

It is admitted that these two tracts were adjudicated to J. M. Henderson, now deceased, in June, 1929, for due and delinquent taxes of the year 1928. The deed was not offered in evidence. It is not disclosed how Mrs. 'Moressi and Miss Larkin acquired interest therein.

On November 26, 1937, Mrs. Hollier, a plaintiff, executed a notarial act of sale to J. J. Waggoner, same as John Wagner, a defendant, wherein she sold and conveyed to him, inter alia, lots 1, 2, and 3 of Section 11 and that part of said 89.36-acre tract in Section 11 lying east of these lots. This description excludes from the 89.36-acre tract 26 acres or about off of its south end, which lies east of said lot 6. It may be accurately described as being that part of 5£¼ of SW^t of Section 11 east of lot 6..

The record discloses that as a concomitant of the negotiations between Mrs. Hollier and Waggoner preliminary to closing said sale, it was understood that the interest of the Henderson heirs and other defendants in that part of the 89.36-acre tract she was selling him, would also be deeded to Waggoner; and pursuant to this understanding, these parties did execute such a deed to Waggoner for the price of ■$200. The price to be paid to Mrs. Hollier was reduced to that extent. Mrs. Hollier was at -the time occupying a house and had in cultivation about five acres in the southern part of the 63.36-acre tract included in her deed to Waggoner. She also had approximately 35 acres of it enclosed in pasture. Her possession extended back for several years, but she conceded that defendants held a good title thereto and, in fact, appreciated that she was holding possession through their sufferance. Before Henderson died, she had an understanding with him to the effect that she was given a preference to acquire this part of the 89.36-acre tract. His heirs and others in interest simply carried out his agreement with her. Waggoner went into possession of the lands embraced in these deeds to him but such possession was less than one month old when this suit was filed. It is sufficient, however, to supplant the possession, regardless of its nature or character, of the other plaintiffs as heirs of Strayhan and, for this reason, in addition to others assigned herein as to this tract, they are without right to prosecute this action.

It is contended that the possession of Mrs. Hollier was in behalf of herself and her co-heirs and that it enured to their benefit, but we do not think the record sustains this position; rather, it negatives the thought that she was even possessing for herself as owner, particularly after Henderson’s tax purchase in 1929.

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Related

Russ v. Stephens
90 So. 2d 501 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1956)
Henderson v. Graham
199 So. 439 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 171, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-henderson-lactapp-1939.