Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Marks

74 So. 2d 36, 225 La. 805, 1954 La. LEXIS 1265
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 31, 1954
Docket41248
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 74 So. 2d 36 (Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Marks) 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
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Marks, 74 So. 2d 36, 225 La. 805, 1954 La. LEXIS 1265 (La. 1954).

Opinion

MOISE, Justice.

Magnolia Petroleum Company deposited $25,352.69 in the Registry of the First District Court for the Parish of Caddo, and instituted a concursus proceeding for the purpose of distributing royalties on oil produced from a well on the Northeast Quarter (NE%) of the Northwest Quarter (NW %), Section 29, Township 11 North, Range 10 East, called the Shelley-Marks unit in the Holly Ridge Oil Field of Tensas Parish. The unit contains 40.504 acres.

This litigation involves the royalties due on oil produced from that portion of the unit lying east of Big Choctaw Bayou, containing 18.955 acres, which consists of parts of Lots 5, 6 and 7 of Pin Hook Plantation, per plat of E. E. Scott, C. E., dated October 1938.

Many parties were interpleaded, but we are concerned with the two major interests — namely, the Marks interest and the Jordan heirs. From a judgment of the district court, in favor of the Marks interest and against the Jordan heirs and their two former attorneys, David H. Caplow and G. P. Bullis, these parties have appealed. No appeal was taken by the intervenor, Samuel J. Tennant.

The Jordan heirs assert that the oil producing property involved herein was owned by Henry Jordan, their father and grandfather, and that they acquired it by inheritance from him. They contend that a tax sale of the property, which will be hereinafter discussed, was invalid because the assessment at that time was not in the name of Henry Jordan, deceased, nor that of his heirs.

By an act of December 10, 1887, Henry A. Garrett conveyed to Henry Jordan the following property:

“All that portion of the NE% of the NE% of Section 29, T 11, Range 10 East, which lies East of what is known as ‘Big Choctaw’ Bayou, containing fourteen .50 acres of land, being the same 14% acres surveyed by A. L. Hopkins, Parish Surveyor, on the 30th Nov. 1887, for said Jordan, to which and the accompanying process verbal due reference is hereby made.”

It is argued that Henry Jordan actually purchased the NE% of the NW%, instead of the NE% of the NE%, because only the *811 the NW]4 was east of Big Choctaw Bayou, and the description reads:

“ * * * which lies east of what is know as. ‘Big Choctaw’ Bayou * * * ”

It is shown that H. A. Garrett, Henry Jordan’s vendor, did not own the NE1/^ of the NE]4> and he could not have sold such to Henry Jordan.

Article 1945 of the LSA-Civil Code reads in part :

“That the intent is to be determined by the words of the contract, when these are clear and explicit and lead to no absurd consequences”.

In the case of Snelling v. Adair, 196 La. 624, 199 So. 782, 787, it is stated:

“It is a settled rule of law in this state that if a portion of the description of property in a deed is either erroneous or misleading, it is nevertheless susceptible of conveyance if the property intended to be conveyed by the parties can be ascertained with certainty by the aid of such extrinsic evidence as is admissible under the rules of evidence. Thornhill v. Burthe, 29 La.Ann. 639; Bryan v. Wisner, 44 La.Ann. 832, 11 So. 290; Willis v. Ruddock Cypress Co., 108 La. 255, 32 So. 386; Suthon v. Laws, 127 La. 531, 53 So. 852; Suthon v. Viguerie, 127 La. 538, 53 So. 855; Bayard v. Baldwin Lumber Co., 157 La. 994, 103 So. 290; Tircuit v. Burton-Swartz Cypress Co., 162 La. 319, 110 So. 489; Harrill v. Pitts, 194 La. 123, 193 So. 562; 13 Cyc. 627; and 36 Cyc. 591. And ‘a deed, which was sufficient to convey property as between parties thereto * * * would be sufficient * * * basis upon which to rest plea of prescription of 10 years.’ Harrill v. Pitts, supra.”

In the case of Cupples v. Harris, 202 La. 336, 11 So.2d 609, the rule above set forth was sustained.

We find the following statement in the case of Thornhill v. Edmund Burthe, 29 La. Ann. 639:

“If the description of a tract of land in an act of mortgage informs the public what property is covered by it, without stating the township or other divisions, it will be sufficient (Consolidated Ass’n of Planters v. Mason, 24 La.Ann. 518), as, for example, where it is described as being on a particular river in a named parish, adjoining named proprietors (Ells. v. Sims, 2 [La.] Ann. 251), or the bayou upon which it is situated is named with the parish, the number of acres it contains, and reference is made to the conveyance by which the mortgagor acquired it. Baker v. Bank, 2 [La.] Ann. 371; [City Nat.] Bank v. Barrow, 21 [La.] Ann. 396. It has been said that ■ a distinction may well be made between urban and rural estates in the minuteness and particularity of detail requi *813 site for a proper and sufficient description of them, a greater accuracy being required for the former than the latter. [City] Bank v. Denham, 7 Rob. 39. And if a part of the description would mislead, it must be read with and be controlled by other parts which explain it. Marcotte v. Coco, 12 Rob. 167. The error in the number of the range in the description in defendant’s mortgage was cured by other descriptive parts thereof which left no doubt of the particular tract that was intended to be mortgaged. * * * ” See Bryan v. Wisner, 44 La.Ann. 832, 11 So. 290.

We find further in Emerson v. Cotton, 209 La. 1003, 26 So.2d 16, 19, the following:

“Description of property in deeds must be liberally construed to sustain rather than defeat a conveyance.”

In Lawrence v. Young, 144 La. 1, 80 So. 18, it is written in the syllabus by the Court:

“A court will not presume, upon a strained interpretation of a description contained in a conveyance of real estate, that the grantor intended to convey property that belonged to another.” See also, Snelling v. Adair, supra.

At the time Henry Jordan purchased the land from Henry A. Garrett, the NE]¡4 of the NE]4 of Section 29 had been sold by Martin Guthrie to Jordan’s son, Perry. We think that the property was readily identified because of Jordan’s living on and going into possession of the NE% of the NW% which was east of the Big Choctaw Bayou, and because of the undisturbed possession through the years that this NE]4 of the NW]4 of Section 29 was the property intended to be conveyed.

It was Mr. Justice Cardozo, in discussing a case, who said:

“We must know the relation of the step to the movement as a whole. One line is run here, another there. We have a filigree of threads radiating from the center and dividing one another into sections and cross-sections. We shall be caught in the tentacles of the web, unless some superintending mind imparts a secret of the structure lifting us to the heights where the unity of the circle will be visible as it lies below.”

In these cases the perplexities of the judge become the scholar’s opportunity.

After the acquisition by Henry Jordan, hereinabove recited, he was not again mentioned until May 21, 1928, when Fred Skinner made an assignment to Mrs. Bessie S. Goldman of certain judgments rendered in the suits — N. B. Hunter v. Abe Jordan, N. B. Hunter v. Thomas Jordan, and N. B. Hunter v.

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74 So. 2d 36, 225 La. 805, 1954 La. LEXIS 1265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-petroleum-co-v-marks-la-1954.