Mandel v. McAnn

133 So. 477, 16 La. App. 125, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 465
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1931
DocketNo. 2999
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 So. 477 (Mandel v. McAnn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mandel v. McAnn, 133 So. 477, 16 La. App. 125, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 465 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

STEPHENS, J.

This is a petitory action in which the plaintiff seeks to. be decreed the owner, and as such entitled to the possession of, the SE% of SW% of section 14, township 15 north, range 11 west, Bossier parish, La.

The plaintiff alleges that the property in question was acquired by David I. Hooks under mesne conveyances out of the United States government on November 4, 1862. This is admitted by the defendant, and the titles pleaded by each show that David I. Hooks was the common author under which each party claims ownership; for each is. asserting title by mesne conveyances out of the said Hooks.

According to the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, the property in question was sold by the sheriff of Bossier parish under order of court, in the matter of the succession of David I. Hooks, on February 1, 1868, and was purchased by George A. F. Poole under deed duly recorded. Thereafter, the heirs of G. A. F. Poole, under date of November 12, 1909, had a partition of all the properties belonging to said Poole and his deceased wife in community, in which partition the said 40 acres together with the other lands, totaling 197 acres, more or less, were set aside to James R. Bryant, one of said heirs, the particular property set aside to the said James R. [126]*126Bryant, including said 40 acres, being described as follows:

“SE% of SWÍ4, NW14 of SWK and that part of the S% of NW% lying south o£ Plat River in Section 14; that part of the SE% of NEÍ4 lying South of Plat River, and the SWy, of NEy3 and 26 acres off of the North part of N¥% of SE^ of Section 15, T. 15 N., R. 11 W., containing 197 acres, more or less."

The plaintiff further alleges that the said 197 acres acquired by the said Bryant under the partition proceedings referred to were incorporated by Bryant into one plantation and has since that time, as one plantation and under the identical description, passed by mesne conveyances out of the said Bryant into the plaintiff. Plaintiff further alleged that the defendant, D. J. McAnn, was in the illegal possession of the 40 acres referred to, and the prayer of his petition is that he be decreed the owner of the 40 acres referred to and entitled to the possession thereof.

The answer, as stated, admitted that the 40 acres was acquired by David I. Hooks by mesne conveyances out of the United States government on November 4, 1862, but alleged that the sale of said property on November 1, 1868, by the sheriff in the succession proceedings of David I. Hooks, deceased, w^s null and void for the reason that no order of court authorized said sale, nor was there any commission issued to make said sale, and that by said sale the said George A. P. Poole-acquired no title to said property. The answer further alleged that on October 27, 1869, the sheriff of Bossier parish, in the matter of the succession of David I. Hooks, acting pursuant to a commission to him directed of date August 10, 1869, issued in said succession under authority of an order of the parish court of Bossier parish, La., sold said properties to pay debts of the succession, and that the land in question was acquired by John R. Griffin under deed duly recorded on November 6, 1869, in Conveyance Book 7, page 555, Records of Bossier Parish, La., together with other properties, which said properties purchased by the said Griffin in said succession sale are set forth in said deed as follows:

“Ey2 of SE% of Section 15; S% of SW % of Section 14, T. 15 N., R. 11 W., containing 160 acres, more or less."

And that said 160 acres sold to the said Griffin in said succession sale formed one solid body of land, each of the governmental subdivisions composing the same being contiguous tracts,, and that said defendant held title to the said 160 acres purchased by the said Griffin in said succession sale under mesne conveyances out of the said Griffin, which said conveyances were set forth in detail in article 14 of defendant’s answer. Defendant further pleaded that the respective owners of said 160 acres, which includes the 40 acres in controversy, had, during their ownership, been in actual corporeal possession thereof, cultivating a part of said 160 acres yearly, and that said deed under which each of the authors in title of defendant acquired the said 160 acres were translative of ownership, and defendant pleaded the prescription of ten years, acquirendl causa, as vesting absolute title in him in case it were found that he did not have a legal title to all of said land by virtue of the deeds under which he claimed title thereto. He prayed that certain parties, as his authors in title, be called in warranty; that after due trial plaintiff’s demands be rejected and his suit dismissed, but, should judgment be rendered in favor of plaintiff, then that the defendant have judgment against the parties called in warranty for the amount paid by him for said land, as well as for all damages he might sustain by virtue of said suit.

[127]*127Upon these issues the case went to trial and resulted in a judgment sustaining the plea of--prescription, and rejecting the. demands of the plaintiff, and from this judgment plaintiff prosecutes this appeal. Defendant has answered this appeal, praying that the judgment be amended so as to •decree him to have the legal as. well as the prescriptive title.

The plaintiff and defendant both hold title to the 40-aere tract by straight, unbroken chain out of the succession of David I. Hooks; the said David I. Hooks having acquired title by mesne conveyances from the United States government.

The defendant contends that the succession sale under which George A. F. Poole is alleged to have acquired title, and through whom plaintiff claims, is an absolute nullity for the reason that no order of court authorized said sale, nor was there "any commission issued to make such sale.

We are convinced of the correctness of defendant’s position. Defendant’s Exhibit 15 shows the entire proceedings, by which George A. F. Poole is alleged to have acquired title to the 40 acres in question. A petition was filed in the succession of •David I. Hooks by Anna J. Meriwether, as administratrix, in which she prayed thai a new and correct appraisement and inventory of all the property belonging to the succession be made, and that said property be sold for cash, subject to the benefit of appraisement by W. H. Hill, sheriff and ex-officio auctioneer.

The order which is attached to the petition in question authorizing the sale of properties to pay the debts, and directing that a new and correct inventory' and appraisement be made, was never signed, either by the parish judge or by the clerk of the district court. Thése proceedings further show that no writ of sale was ever issued to the sheriff to make said sale, and that there is no proces verbal attached to any writ executed by the sheriff showing said sale to be made. The instrument therefore, evidencing a transfer of title from the succession to plaintiff’s ancestor in title, which is in the form of a deed from W. H. Hill, sheriff, to G. A. F. Poole, is clearly a nullity. It was incumbent on the plaintiff in this case to show that the sale under which G. A. F. Poole acquired ■title from the succession of D. I. Hooks was based on an order of court and a commission directed to the sheriff in pursuance thereof. .

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Bluebook (online)
133 So. 477, 16 La. App. 125, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandel-v-mcann-lactapp-1931.