Jourdan v. Barrett

13 La. 24
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 La. 24 (Jourdan v. Barrett) 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
Jourdan v. Barrett, 13 La. 24 (La. 1839).

Opinion

Bullard, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs assert title to different portions of land [38]*38possessed bjr the defendant, which they purchased of the United States, in virtue of the acts of congress granting to front proprietors the right of purchasing, public lands back of, and adjacent to their front tracts. The evidence of title which they exhibit, to wit, certificates of purchase, and an apportionment of the lands among conflicting claimants, under the same acts of congress, under the superintendence of 4he surveying department, appears to us sufficient to authorize a judgment in their favor, unless the title of the defendant be older or better, or the plea of prescription which he sets up should be sustained. Our attention, therefore, must be directed principally to the title of the defendant.

The latter claims under Bringier, by several mesne conveyances, and the record shows that Bringier was the proprietor of a tract of land on the river Mississippi, having a front of about twenty-seven arpents, with the ordinary depth of forty, and was clearly of that class of persons who had a right under the pre-emption laws, to purchase, to a greater or less extent, the adjacent public land in the rear of their plantations. Under the act of 1820, to which we shall hereafter allude more particularly, Bringier did purchase a quantity of land in his rear, not exceeding the superficies of his front tract. This purchase embraces the locus in quo. Neither party has a patent, and in this respect both parties stand upon the same footing. The question, therefore, presented for our consideration is, whether Bringier purchased- more land than he was entitled to under the act of 1820, in-relation to the plaintiffs, who were also front proprietors, and, in consequence of a bend in the river, were entitled to purchase a part of the same land entered by Bringier. This renders it necessary to examine critically the acts of congress-under which the parties claim.

The right of preference in question was first extended to the proprietors of front tracts by the 5th section of an act of congress p.assed in 1811, entitled “an act providing for the final adjustment of claims to lands, and for the sale of the public lands in the territories of Orleans and Louisaina, etc.” This part of the statute expired by its own limitation in three [39]*39years, and was revived for two years by the act of May 11th, 1820, entitled “an act supplementary to the several acts for the adjustment of land claims in the state of Louisiana.” It was twice afterwards revived for limited periods, in 1832 and 1835. Bringier purchased under the act of 1820, and the plaintiffs under those of 1832 and 1835, after a lapse of many years, during which no such law existed.

The act of congress of the 5¡0th May, 1820, grants the right of pre-emption to front proprietors, to purchase an equal (piantily of land in their rear, and adjacent to their front tract, not exceeding the same, and extending notmore than forty ar-pents in depth; provided, notice is given and payment madewith-in three years; otherwise, the right of preemption shall cease and become void. Where back concessions or claimed byseve-propne°tors,fr0si-¡Jenaof driver6 the surveyor ge-v¡dé and appor-equitable manner among such front pro-prieto™ as avail SeS^priviiege ‡'8 a?l> converging of ther/'ínorthe ants.

That act of congress accords to every owner of a front tract of land, “ a preference in becoming purchaser of any vacant tract of land adjacent to and back of his own tract, not exceeding forty arpents in depth, nor in quantity of land that which is contained in his own tract.” it is made the duty of the principal deputy surveyor of each district, “under the superintendence of the surveyor of public lands south of the State of Tennessee, to cause to be surveyed the tracts claimed by virtue of this section ;” and it provides, that he shall “in all cases where by reason of bends in the rivers, etc., etc., bordering on the tract, and of adjacent claims of a similar nature, each claimant cannot obtain a tract equal in quantity to the adjacent part already owned by him, to divide the vacant land applicable to that object between the several claimants, in such way as may appear to him most equitable.” The same section, after providing for the manner of giving notice, and fixing the mode and time of payment, concludes by declaring, that “if any such person shall fail to deliver such notice within the said period of three years, or to make such payment or payments at the time above mentioned, the right of pre-emption shall cease, and become void, and the land may thereafter be purchased by any other person, in the same manner, and on the same terms, as are or may be provided by law for the sale of other public lands, etc.”

1 . ... . , The front tracts of all the parties to this suit are situated upon a point formed by a bend of the river, and the side lines converge in such a manner as that there is not sufficient land in the rear to give to each the quantity equal to that contained in his original tract. It is, therefore, clear that if all had purchased under the act of 1820, it would have become the duty of the surveying department to apportion the land [40]*40among them. But in point of fact, Bringier alone delivered his notice and made his purchase, daring the existence o~ that act congress, of a tract not exceeding the quantity contained in his front tract: and the question is whether the 4 7 1 purchase of Bringier is to be curtailed, so as to allow to the plaintiffs their equitable proportion, they having given their notice and made payment, under a subsequent law, after an interval of more than ten years.

But where proprietor l°nt vliege underPthe act of congress land, in a bend con-ver^ing.Uneí, he is entitled to his full quantity, and the survey-boumintoaiay it off to him. This tingeni, and the qUim(ityiiabieto be reduced, so jong as {he aof was in force, but iute^nd^ested thePacT which could not revirai^of bthe ja"r subseqoent-operations of the ral.Ve)°l sene

[40]*40We may premise, that, in our opinion, the absence of patents can have no influence upon the rights of the parties in this case, hut that those rights are to be determined by the rules which regulate the contract of sale. The sovereign having made an offer or proposition to sell, subject to certain conditions and restrictions, and that proposition having been accepted, and the terms as to pajunent of the price complied with, we have only to inquire whether the title thus acquired by Bringier became indefeasible and absolute, as soon as the law expired, when no other proprietor, whose pretensions might interfere with him, had thought proper to avail himself of the privilege proffered by the act of congress; and whether his title could be affected by the revival of the same law ten years afterwards. If Bringier’s front tract had been situated on a straight part of the river, and the side lines parallel to each other, and he had been the only purchaser or claimant, there can be no question but that he would have acquired a good title, and it would have been the duty of the surveying department to lay it out according to the directions of the statute. ■ Whatever may be the situation of the front tract, the owner has a right to purchase a quantity equal in suPei'ficies to his front tract, subject to the operations of the surveyor, if his neighbors, situated on the same point, avail themselves of the same privilege.

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Bluebook (online)
13 La. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jourdan-v-barrett-la-1839.