Land Development Co. v. Schulz

124 So. 125, 169 La. 1, 1929 La. LEXIS 1932
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 8, 1929
DocketNo. 29888.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 124 So. 125 (Land Development Co. v. Schulz) 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
Land Development Co. v. Schulz, 124 So. 125, 169 La. 1, 1929 La. LEXIS 1932 (La. 1929).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The plaintiff, claiming %o interest in two lots in New Orleans, and conceding that the defendant Mrs. Ellen Seyer Schulz owned %oo interest, and alleging that the other defendant, John Jenkins, owned !%00 interest, sued for a partition, of the property. Plaintiff averred that it was not known where John Jenkins was, 'or whether he was dead or alive, and prayed for the appointment of a curator to represent him if alive, or to represent his heirs if he was dead. The curator was appointed, and, in answer to the suit, claimed for Jenkins or his heirs the i%q0 interest, in the land, and opposed the demand for a partition. • Mrs. Schulz, in her answer to the suit, claimed that she was the sole owner and possessor of the property, under a just and valid title more than 10 years old, and pleaded the prescription of 10 years. The court gave judgment in her favor, sustaining the plea of prescription, declaring her to be the. sole owner of the property, and rejecting the plaintiff’s demand. The plaintiff has appealed from the decision.

The plaintiff and1 Mrs: Schulz both claim title through mesne conveyances from John Jenkins, who bought the two lots from the widow of Charles Caffin deceased, on the 5th of August, 1873, by notarial act, which was duly recorded'. The lots were sold to Don F. Watts on the 23 d of July, 1903, for .the taxes of 1902, assessed in the name of John Jenkins. On the 29th of February, 1904, Watts sold the property to John N. Jenkins, for $30 cash, by an act of sale under private signature, acknowledged before a notary public and duly recorded. It is not known whether John N. Jenkins was the John Jenkins who formerly owned the lots; but it is probable that John N. Jenkins was not the John Jenkins for whose delinquent taxes the property was sold to Don E. Watts, for, in the sale by Watts to John N. Jenkins, which was not in the form of *5 a redemption but in the form of an ordinary easb sale, it was declared that the property was acquired by Watts by tax sale for taxes assessed in the name of John Jenkins. That, however, does not affect the question whether the defendant Mrs. Schulz acquired title by the prescription of 10 years. On the 18th of May, 1911, the city treasurer sold %o interest in the property to the plaintiff for the city taxes of 1909 assessed in the name of John M. Jenkins — not John N. but John M. Jenkins — and on the 5th of March, 1917, the city treasurer sold %oo interest in the property to B. J. Zahn for the city, taxes assessed in the name of John N. Jenkins. On the 23d of March, 1917, Mrs. Schulz bought the two lots from Don F. Watts, for $20 cash; and four days later she bought from B. J. Zahn, for $35 cash, “whatever rights he acquired” by the tax sale of y2oo interest in the lots, dated March, 5, 1917.

It appears that the land was unfenced and vacant when Mrs. Schulz bought it. She immediately fenced the land and cultivated it, and afterwards established a dairy on it, and 3 years later built a double cottage on the lots at a cost of about $2,000. It is not disputed that Mrs. Schulz was in actual possession of the property, openly and continuously, for 10 years and 11 months before this suit was brought. She paid promptly all taxes assessed against the property after she bought it. The plaintiff paid no taxes at all on the property during the 12 years preceding the filing of this suit.

There is no doubt that Mrs. Schulz believed that she was acquiring a good title to the lots when she bought them from Don F. Watts and obtained also whatever claim B. J. Zahn had. She was so advised by an attorney at law before she bought the property, and she showed her faith in his advice by spending a considerable sum of money in improving the property long before she could have relied upon a plea of prescription or statute of repose.

Appellant contends that the recitals in the deed which Mrs. Schulz obtained from Watts, and the smallness of the price which she paid, were such as to preclude good faith on her part, and that the deed, therefore, could not be the basis of a plea of prescription of 10 years. The deed is an act under private signature, and purports to “grant, bargain, sell, convey, transfer, assign, set over, abandon, deliver, and quitclaim, without warranty, unto Ellen Seyer, wife of James E. Schulz, * * * Two certain- lots of ground,” etc.; and at the end of an accurate description of the two lots is the statement: “Said lots were acquired by Don F. Watts for the taxes of 1904, tax bill No. 1267, from the city of New Orleans, and same for the year 1904 and 1902 for the state taxes, as assessed in the name of John N. Jenkins, hereby transferring all right and title so acquired, unto said purchaser, without warranty and without recourse to [meaning for] -the restitution of the purchase price.”

Appellant argues that Mrs. Watts was not acting in good faith when she bought the lots from Watts, on the 23d of March, 1917, because she could have discovered by an examination of the -conveyance records that Watts had sold the lots -to John N. Jenkins, 13 years before. If no one could invoke successfully the prescription of 10 years who could have discovered by an examination of the public records before buying the property that the seller had no -title, the plea would never be available, because no one could invoke it except one having a valid title and having therefore no need for the prescription. Article 3474 of the Civil Code declares that the prescription of 10 years applies “when the possessor has been in good faith *7 and held by a just title during that time.” Article 3478 repeats that “he who acquires an immovable in good faith and by a just title” has the benefit of the prescription of 10 years. Article 3480 declares that the good faith spoken of in the preceding article is defined in the chapter which treats of possession; and, turning to that chapter, we find that article 503 defines a “bona fide possessor” as one “who possesses as owner by virtue of an act [meaning a title] sufficient in terms to transfer property, the defects of which [title] he was ignorant of.” Article 3451, under the head of “Prescription," repeats that a possessor in good faith is one who has just reason to believe that he is the owner of the property which he possesses, although in fact he may not be the owner, as in the case of one who buys property which he believes belongs to the person selling it, but which in fact belongs to another. Article 3484 declares that the term “just title,” as used in relation to the prescription of 10 years, does not mean a valid title, but means merely a title, or title deed, which, on its face, would be sufficient to transfer the ownership of the property if the transferor actually owned it; viz:

“By the term just title, in case of prescription, we do not understand that which the possessor may have derived from the true owner, for then no true prescription would be necessary, but a title which the possessor may have received from any person whom he honestly believed to be the real owner, provided the title [meaning title deed] were such as to transfer the ownership of the property.”

It cannot be disputed that the deed which Mrs. Schulz acquired from Don F. 'Watts was sufficient to transfer the ownership of the property if Watts owned it.

The answer to appellant’s argument is found in Eastman v. Beiller, 3 Rob. 223, repeated literally in Hall & Turner v. Mooring, 27 La. Ann. 596, and in Pattison v. Maloney, 38 La.

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124 So. 125, 169 La. 1, 1929 La. LEXIS 1932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/land-development-co-v-schulz-la-1929.