Lewis v. Bodcaw Lumber Co.

120 So. 859, 167 La. 1067, 1929 La. LEXIS 1733
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 28, 1929
DocketNo. 29399.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 120 So. 859 (Lewis v. Bodcaw Lumber Co.) 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
Lewis v. Bodcaw Lumber Co., 120 So. 859, 167 La. 1067, 1929 La. LEXIS 1733 (La. 1929).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The plaintiff sued to be declared the owner of the mineral rights in the 40 acres of land described as N. E. % of N. W. % of section 15, Tp. 21 N., R. 10 W., in the parish of Webster. The defendant Bodcaw Lumber Company sold the land to Walton H. Lewis on the 10th of November, 1917, by notarial deed, which was promptly recorded, and contained the following reservation of the mineral rights for the period of 15 years, viz.: “Reserving to the grantor,' its successors and assigns, for fifteen years from Nov. 25th, 1916, all of the gas, oil and minerals and mineral rights in and under said land, with the right to prospect for and exploit same,” etc. Walton H. Lewis sold the land to the present plaintiff, E. D. Lewis, on the 4th of November, 1918, by notarial deed, which was promptly recorded, and which contained the following declaration, immediately following the description of the land, viz.:

*1069 “Together with all improvements thereon, and all rights -thereto belonging, except that this sale is made subject to the mineral reservation made by the Bodcaw Lumber Company of Louisiana when they deeded the land herein to this vendor, as per deed recorded in Yol. 29, page 142.”

The Bodcaw Lumber Company gave a mineral lease on the land to the Humble Oil & Refining Company on the 13th of June, 1924. This suit is brought against the Bodcaw Lumber Company and the Humble Oil Refining Company, and the petition contains a prayer for annulment of the lease. The suit was filed within 10 years — exactly 9 years and 7% months — after the plaintiff had bought the land from Walton H. Lewis.

There was no attempt on the part of either the Bodcaw Lumber Company or the Humble Oil & Refining Company to exercise the mineral rights which were reserved by the Bod-caw Lumber Company in selling the land to Walton H. Lewis. The plaintiff therefore claims that the mineral rights are prescribed by nonuse for 10 years. The defendants contend that the mineral rights were not subject’ to the prescription of 10 years, because of the time limit of 16 years, stipulated in the contract ; and, in the alternative, the defendants contend that, if the rights were subject to the prescription of 10 years, the prescription was interrupted by the acknowledgment, in the deed from Walton H. Lewis to the present plaintiff, that the sale was made subject to the mineral reservation made by the Bodcaw Lumber Company. The judge of the district court decided that the mineral rights which were reserved by the Bodcaw Lumber Company, in selling the land to Walton H. Lewis, were subject to the prescription of 10 years, but decided also that the prescription was interrupted - by the acknowledgment made in the deed from Walton I-I. Lewis to the present plaintiff, on the 4th of November, 1918, and was interrupted again by the filing of this suit. The plaintiff’s demand was therefore rejected, and his suit dismissed. He has appealed from the decision that the prescription was interrupted, and the defendants have appealed from the decision that the mineral rights were subject to prescription. t

That the mineral rights were subject to the prescription of ten years, notwithstanding the limitation of 15 years stipulated in the contract, is settled by the decision rendered today in the case of Bodcaw Lumber Co. of Louisiana v. Magnolia Petroleum Co. et al., No. 29398, ante, p. 847, 120 So. 389.

The district judge in this case cites the case of Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Nabors Oil & Gas Co., 149 La. 100, 88 So. 723, in support of his ruling that the prescription of 10 years was interrupted by the acknowledgment made by the plaintiff in his deed from Walton H. Lewis. The acknowledgment which was held to have interrupted prescription in the ease of Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Nabors Oil & Gas Co. was something more than a mere acknowledgment that the land was sold subject to the reservation already made of the mineral rights, for it was itself a reservation of the mineral rights from the new sale. The new reservation was made thus:

“It is further stipulated that all mineral rights are expressly reserved, having heretofore been sold by the present vendor to the Louisiana Coal & Lumber Company, Limited, subject to the stipulations contained in such sale of mineral rights to said company.”

In the present case, the acknowledgment made in the plaintiff’s deed from Walton H. Lewis was merely “that this sale is made subject to the mineral reservation made by tlie Bodcaw Lumber Company of Louisiana-when they deeded the land herein to this vendor, as per deed recorded in Yol. 29, page 142.” Inasmuch as the reservation of the mineral rights by the Bodcaw Lumber Company in its sale of the land to Walton H. Lew *1071 is was on record, ttie subsequent sale of the land by Walton H. Lewis to the present plaintiff could not have been made otherwise than “subject to- the mineral reservation made by the Bodcaw Lumber Company,” etc. The acknowledgment of that fact, therefore, was merely an acknowledgment of something which AValton II. Lewis and the present plaintiff were compelled to take notice of and could not deny. The purpose of the declaration in the deed from Walton H. Lewis to the present plaintiff, that the land was sold subject to the Bodcaw Lumber Company’s previous reservation of the mineral rights, was manifestly to protect Walton H. Lewis, as a warrantor of the title of the property which he was selling. The declaration did not purport to express the intention of interrupting the prescription which was then accruing.

The theory of the decision rendered in Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Nabors Oil & Gas Co. was that there was a new reservation of the mineral rights, in favor of the party who had already reserved them, from the sale of the land. The doctrine that the prescription of ten years by which servitudes are extinguished may be interrupted by a written acknowledgment was announced in Baker v. Pena, 20 La. Ann. 52, in January, 1868. In that case, Madame. Leauthier, who owned nearly all of a square of ground in New Orleans, had it surveyed into lots, and, On the 15th of April, 185-1, sold four of the lots to Amar Freres (or Brothers), with the use of a 9-foot alley, common to all of the lots; and, through subsequent conveyances, each containing the stipulation for the use of the alley, the plaintiff, Baker, on the 6th of October, 1865, became the owner of one lot and half of another lot which Freres had bought. On the 31st of May, 1860, Madame Leauthier sold the remaining part of her property to the defendant, 'Pena, by a deed which described the property as being bounded on one side'by the “alley nine feet wide, opening on Erato street, and common to said conveyed property, and another sold to Amar Brothers.” Baker made no use of the alley during a continuous period exceeding 10 years, after which Pena closed the alley, and, in defense of the suit to compel him to open it, pleaded that the servitude was prescribed by nonuse for 10 years. The court held that the prescription was interrupted by the acknowledgment, which we have quoted, in the deed from Madame Leauthier to the defendant, Pena, on the 31st of May, 1860. It is said in the syllabus of the decision:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

LeBleu v. LeBleu
206 So. 2d 551 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)
Armour v. Smith
170 So. 2d 347 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1964)
Hinchee v. Long Bell Petroleum Co.
103 So. 2d 84 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1958)
Texas Co. v. Crawford
212 F.2d 722 (Fifth Circuit, 1954)
Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Miller
69 So. 2d 21 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1953)
Wise v. Watkins
62 So. 2d 653 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1952)
Haynes v. King
52 So. 2d 531 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1951)
Goree v. Sanders
14 So. 2d 744 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1943)
Spears v. Nesbitt
2 So. 2d 650 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1941)
Hightower v. Maritzky
195 So. 518 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1940)
Bailey v. Porter-Wadley Lumber Co.
28 F. Supp. 25 (W.D. Louisiana, 1939)
Vincent v. Bullock
187 So. 35 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)
Goldsmith v. McCoy
182 So. 519 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1938)
English v. Blackman
179 So. 306 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1938)
Ventress v. Akin
177 So. 117 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)
Frost Lumber Industries, Inc. v. Federal Petroleum Co.
20 F. Supp. 612 (W.D. Louisiana, 1937)
Frost Lumber Industries, Inc. v. Union Power Co.
162 So. 37 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1935)
Myers v. Cooke
142 So. 790 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1932)
Mulhern v. Hayne
132 So. 659 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)
Palmer Corporation of Louisiana v. Moore
132 So. 229 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 So. 859, 167 La. 1067, 1929 La. LEXIS 1733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-bodcaw-lumber-co-la-1929.