Joseph Rathborne Lumber Co. v. Cooper

114 So. 112, 164 La. 502, 1927 La. LEXIS 1776
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 11, 1927
DocketNo. 27515.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 114 So. 112 (Joseph Rathborne Lumber Co. v. Cooper) 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
Joseph Rathborne Lumber Co. v. Cooper, 114 So. 112, 164 La. 502, 1927 La. LEXIS 1776 (La. 1927).

Opinions

CNIELL, C. J.

This is a possessory action, with a demand for damages for trespass, and an- injunction to prevent further trespassing. The deifendants are Michael H. Cooper, residing and domiciled in the parish of Tangipahoa, and the Lake Cypress Lumber Company, domiciled in the parish of St. Tammany. The land that the plaintiff claims to possess, as owner, and on which the defendant, Lake Cypress Lumber Company, was deadening, felling and removing: the cypress timber when stopped by the injunction, is partly in the parish of Tangipahoa and partly in the Parish of St. Tammany. It is designated on the government surveys as the Richard Smith headright, *505 composed of the irregular section 37 in township 8 south, range 9 east, and the irregular section 43 in township 8 south, range 10 east, the two sections together having an area of 640.12 acres, extending. approximately three miles along the northwest shore of Lake Pontchartrain and having a comparatively small depth. The dividing line between the parish of Tangipahoa and the parish of St. Tammany is the dividing line between ranges 9 and 10 east of the meridian, the consequence being that section 37 is in Tangipahoa and section 43 is in St. Tammany parish. The plaintiff bought the land from Ernest Lee Jahncke, Walter F. Jahncke and Paul P. Jahncke, together with a larger and adjacent area of land extending southwestward from section 37, nearly two miles further along the lake shore, and described as the south % of section 14, lot 4 of section 22, lots 1 and 2 of section 23, and ?.11 of the irregular sections 38, 39 and 40, in township 8 south, range 9 east, and therefore in the parish of Tangipahoa. The Jahnekes had bought the whole tract from a corporation styled Jahncke Realty Company, but theretofore the chain of title for the south % of section 14, lot 4 of section 22, lots 1 and 2 of section 23, and the irregular sections 38, 39 and 40, was not the same as for sections 37 and 43, composing the Richard Smith headright. The deadening and felling of the timber, by the Lake Cypress Lumber Company, which brought forth this suit, was done on the northeast end of section 43, being the northeast end of the whole tract, and therefore in the parish of St. Tammany. The suit was filed in the parish of Tangipahoa, which is in the Twenty-First judicial district, whereas St. Tammany parish is in the Twenty-Second judicial district.

The defendants took exception to the jurisdiction of the court, ratione persons et ratione materia. The exception filed by Cooper was promptly overruled because of his domicile being in the parish in which the suit was brought. The exception filed by the Lake Cypress Lumber Company was referred to the merits, because it required the taking of testimony to determine whether the court had jurisdiction by reason of the place where-the trespass was committed, and, if not, whether the court had jurisdiction because of a joint or solidary liability on the part of the two defendants, one of whom resided within the jurisdiction of the court.

The defendants also excepted to the allegations of the petition as being vague and indefinite, in that it was alleged merely that a trespass was committed on the Richard Smith headright, and was not alleged that the trespass was committed on any particular part of the headright, or whether it was committed on section 37 or on section 43. And, in that connection, the defendants moved to strike out of the petition the allegation of possession of that part of the land not included in the Richard Smith head-right, because it was not alleged that any act of trespass was committed on the land not included in the headright. The exception of vagueness was overruled, and the motion to strike out was referred to the merits, on the theory, very likely, that proof of possession of any part of the whole tract might become a factor in determining whether the plaintiff had that character of possession necessary to sustain the possessory action for a trespass alleged to have been committed on another part of the tract.

The defendants, reserving their exceptions to the court’s rulings on their previous pleas, filed separate but similar answers. They denied that the plaintiff or the plaintiff’s authors in title had been in possession of the Richard Smith headright, and averred that one Susie Smith Munsch was placed in possession on the 19th of April, 1924, by a judgment of the district court for Tangipahoa parish, rendered and recorded that day, in *507 the succession of Richard Smith, and recognizing her claim to be the daughter and only surviving heir of the deceased, Richard Smith. They averred that Susie Smith Munsch sold the land to Cooper on the 10th of April, 1924, by a deed duly recorded in both parishes, and that Cooper sold the timber on the land to the Lake Cypress Lumber Company on the 29th of April, 1924, by a deed duly recorded in both parishes, and that the company immediately took possession of the property and exercised acts of ownership, to the knowledge of the plaintiff. The defendants averred that their only purpose in setting forth their chain of title was to show their right of possession, or the nature and character of their possession of the property.

' The ease was tried on the issues so stated and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff, perpetuating the injunction, quieting the plaintiff in its possession of the property, and condemning the Lake Cypress Lumber Company to pay the plaintiff $1,362.40 for the value of the timber which the Lake Cypress Company had taken from the land. The defendants have appealed from the decision.

There was no merit in Cooper’s exception to the jurisdiction of the district court. His domicile was in the parish of Tangipahoa and therefore within the territorial jurisdiction of the court.

The plea that the petition was vague and indefinite was not well founded, because the date, or about the date, on which, it was alleged, the defendant went upon the land and deadened and felled and began removing the timber, was stated in the petition, and the defendants knew where their operations were going on.

The motion to strike out of the petition the allegations of possession of the land not included in the Richard Smith headright should have- been overruled also, because the plaintiff claimed possession of the whole tract of- land under one deed, and had the right to allege and prove such manifestations of possession of any part of the tract as might show an intention of possessing the whole or any part of it.

The most serious question was whether the trial court had jurisdiction of the suit against the Lake Cypress Lumber Company, whose domicile was not in the parish where the suit was brought, but in the adjoining parish, where, also, the trespass was committed. As a general rule, an action for damages for trespass must be brought either in the parish where the defendant has his domicile or in the parish in which the trespass was committed. Code of Practice, art. 165, subd. 8. A suit against a corporation for damages ex delicto, for any cause, must be brought either ip the parish where the corporation has its domicile or in the parish where the damage was done or the cause of action arose. Act 108 of 1908, p. 165, amending article 165, subd. 9, Code of Practice; Act 179 of 1918, § 1, subsec. (5), (d), p. 336.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 So. 112, 164 La. 502, 1927 La. LEXIS 1776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-rathborne-lumber-co-v-cooper-la-1927.