Lutcher & Moore Lumber Co. v. Whitman

48 F. Supp. 783, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2959
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 4, 1943
DocketNo. 421
StatusPublished

This text of 48 F. Supp. 783 (Lutcher & Moore Lumber Co. v. Whitman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lutcher & Moore Lumber Co. v. Whitman, 48 F. Supp. 783, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2959 (W.D. La. 1943).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

This is a petitory action or suit to try title to some 80 acres of land, being part of those passing to the state from the Government, under the Swamp Land Act of 1849, 9 Stat. 352. On June 29, 1883, James A. Nealy, using certificate No. 502, of what was known as John McEnery scrip, entered the S.E.¼ of N.E.¼ and N.W.¼ of S.E.¼ of Sec. 26 T 6 S.R. 13 W. and received certificate dated the same day, but it was not recorded in Beauregard Parish, where the land is situated, until September 6, 1906. The scrip was issued to McEnery under provisions of Act 23 of the State Legislature of 1880, to compensate him for services rendered-in recovering lands, the titles to which were not clear, or were in controversy at that time. Nealy conveyed the land in this case to Henry J. Lutcher and G. Bedell Moore, on November 4, 1889, by deed recorded in Beauregard Parish, November 6th of the same year and it passed by mesne conveyances to the plaintiff corporation. Claim[784]*784ing ownership plaintiff alleges that the defendant is in possession, as was necessary in a petitory action, and prays that its title be sustained with a consequent recovery of possession.

Defendant disputes the plaintiff’s claims and alleges title in himself under a patent from the state, dated June 2, 1906, recorded in Beauregard Parish, July 25th of the same year.

Subsequent to the filing of defendant’s answer on May 1, 1941, plaintiff on December 16th of that year, filed pleas of prescription of 10 and 30 years, alleging that it and its vendors had been “in actual, physical, uninterrupted, public, adverse possession, in good faith * * * under good and valid deeds, fair on their faces, since November 4th, 1889.”

It then set forth at length the nature and extent of the acts of possession exercised by it. Lutcher and Moore acquired this land along with other large bodies, mainly for timber that was from time to time manufactured therefrom, and the corporation to which they conveyed it began its operations on the land in 1906. It also manufactured turpentine from stumps thereon in 1920, and again cut the timber in 1928. In the latter year it also built tram roads thereon and executed rights of way deeds for pipe lines over and across the same. Mineral leases were likewise executed and plaintiff paid the taxes for some 40 years.

Defendant’s title began with a homestead entry on May 28, 1897, and he moved on the land about the same time. He built a house and barn and began cultivating small patches and grazed cattle thereon. The patent, which he received in 1906, was in completion of this homestead entry. However, Whitman moved off the property in 1902 “to. make a living”. He had begun cutting timber thereon in 1900 and while so engaged, a representative of plaintiff appeared and informed him that the land belonged to that company. After further investigation defendant concluded that Lutcher and Moore were “the law and gospel at that time and that what they did and said was the whole truth.” He testified that he verified the fact that plaintiff had purchased from Nealy but “later on Í decided there was no need of being beaten out of anything.”

Of course, being the plaintiff in a petitory action the burden is on plaintiff to establish title in itself. The history of McEnery scrip is fully detailed in Frellsen & Co. v. Crandell, 120 La. 712, 45 So. 558. Tlie plaintiff there had made application to enter large tracts on the theory that this scrip was void and in a suit attacked as unconstitutional Act 85 of 1906, which permitted the holder of a patent issued for scrip or warrants “which were not legally receivable in payment” to pay an additional $1.50 an acre within one year after the passage of the law, in perfection of his claim. The state supreme court, in disposing of the matter, emphasized the fact that patents had been issued as to all tracts sought to be acquired by Frellsen, and held that they “were conclusive against the state and all persons claiming under junior titles, until set aside or annulled”.

About 1939 Whitman, “after thinking a lot about” this land, moved back on it and constructed a small house near the spot on which he had built the first one in 1897. For the last three years he has paid the taxes on the land, although he had paid none prior thereto, because as he states, when he would go to pay them he found that the plaintiff had already paid the taxes. The first house which he built in 1897 was burned some two or three years after he moved off in 1902. The barn, crib and fences around some three or four acres of patches, which he had cultivated, were also burned some years later. He did nothing towards returning to the property until 1939.

In the Frellsen v. Crandell case, supra, it was held: “Held, that the patents issued to John McEnery’s assignees were conclusive against the state and all persons claiming under junior titles, until set aside or annulled in a proper action by some judicial tribunal, and that such patents vested the legal title in the patentees, segregated the land from the public domain, and deprived the land department of further jurisdiction in the premises, and that consequently the application and tender of plaintiffs, made in 1905, vested in them no contract rights whatever in the lands previously patented.”

Thus, it can be seen that the Frellsen case does not support the contention of counsel for plaintiff as authority for the one now before this court, unless the samé principles must be applied by analogy to certificates of entry. That cáse went to the United States Supreme Court (217 U.S. 71, 30 S.Ct. 490, 493, 54 L.Ed. 670) and in answering the plaintiff’s (Frellsen) con[785]*785tention that it included tracts upon which certificates of entry alone had been issued, that court, after stating that only state law was involved, the interpretation of which by the state court was conclusive, said:

“Counsel criticize the opinion of the supreme court of Louisiana, in that it speaks of all the lands as having gone to patent, while it is said in the petition that some of the assignees ‘stood upon the certificates.’ Whether the language of the petition technically justifies the construction placed upon it by the supreme court of the state is immaterial. Certainly, there is no naming of any single tract as covered by certificate alone, and not patented, and if any tract was held under a certificate of location, it was, within the scope of the ruling of the supreme court, not subject to other entry or purchase.”

In view of the state court’s finding that no certificates were involved, it would seem that the statement of the U. S. Supreme Court that “if any tract was held under a certificate of location, it was, within the scope of the ruling of the supreme court [of Louisiana], not subject to other entry or purchase”, was obiter, and the mere expression of opinion as to what the state court might have held, if, in fact such entries had been involved.

Frellsen v. Crandell was reaffirmed in Bowman-Hicks Lumber Co. v. Industrial Lumber Co., 127 La. 1057, 1058, 54 So. 349, but there again patent had issued for the McEnery scrip. Defendant also cites Burton Swartz Cypress Co. v. BakerWakefield Cypress Co., 163 La. 992, 113 So. 219. The only similarity to the case under consideration is that the land had been given to the state under the Swamp Land Act.

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

Related

Frellsen & Co. v. Crandell
217 U.S. 71 (Supreme Court, 1910)
Atchafalaya Land Co. v. F. B. Williams Cypress Co.
258 U.S. 190 (Supreme Court, 1922)
Burton Swartz Cypress Co. v. Baker-Wakefield Cypress Co.
113 So. 219 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1927)
Frellsen v. Crandell
45 So. 558 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
Bowman-Hicks Lumber Co. v. Industrial Lumber Co.
54 So. 349 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1911)
Betz v. Illinois Central Railroad
52 La. Ann. 893 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 F. Supp. 783, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lutcher-moore-lumber-co-v-whitman-lawd-1943.