McCaleb v. Pradat

25 Miss. 257
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 Miss. 257 (McCaleb v. Pradat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaleb v. Pradat, 25 Miss. 257 (Mich. 1852).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Yerger

delivered the opinion of the court.

The questions presented by this record for consideration are rather of fact than of law. The subject of litigation is a tract of land situated in the county of Harrison, fronting five arpents on the bay of Biloxi. Both parties trace their title to Jacques Maturin Ladner, who was an actual settler on a tract of land known as the “ Point á Cadet ” tract, and entitled to it as a donation by virtue of an act of congress passed in reference to actual settlers in the territory, at the date of its acquisition by the United States. The bill alleges, that the “ Point á Cadet” tract contained, originally, twenty-five arpents front on the bay [262]*262of Biloxi, and that on the 10th day of November, 1815, Ladner sold and conveyed to George B. Dameron a portion of this tract of land, containing twenty arpents front, and reserved for himself the remainder, containing five arpents front, being the land in controversy, and on which his dwelling-house was situated at the time of the sale. A copy of the deed from Ladner to Dameron accompanies the bill, by which he conveys to Dameron “ the tract of land known by the name of the Point á Cadet, containing twenty arpents front, bounded on the south by the bay of Biloxi, east by the bay of Biloxi, north by the bay of Biloxi, and west by the property of the seller.” The bill avers, that “ the property of the seller ” referred to in this deed, as the west boundary of the tract sold, is the five arpents in controversy. The bill further states, that after this sale Dameron sold his portion to a man named Garrow, who sold the same to • Thomas F. McCaleb, the father of appellant Charles E. McCaleb ; and that Charles E. McCaleb, pretending that the sale to Dameron embraced the entire tract owned by Ladner, had obtained a patent from the United States embracing the whole tract, as well the five arpents reserved as the part sold to Dameron.

The bill further states, that after the sale to Dameron a line was surveyed and marked out, in the presence and at the request of Dameron, for the purpose of dividing the twenty arpents sold to him from the five arpents reserved by Ladner; and that Ladner, from the period of the sale, continued to reside on the five arpents till his decease; and that after his decease, his children were in the occupancy of it till the year 1832, when they sold it to complainant, who has had possession ever since; and that Dameron, during the lifetime of Ladner, always recognized his title to the five arpents, and never pretended to assert any title thereto.

The answer of McCaleb admits the sale from Ladner to Dameron, and the conveyance by the description stated in the bill, but denies that Ladner reserved any part of the tract to which he was entitled as a donation; and avers, that the sale embraced the whole tract to which he was entitled, including the five arpents in controversy. It alleges that the words, [263]*263“ the property of the seller,” used in the deed, had reference to a small tract of land lying west of the land sold to Dameron, on which one of the sons of Ladner then resided, and to which Ladner then made claim, but which has since proved to be a part of the Dorsette Richards tract.

. It will thus be seen, that the controversy is narrowed down to this question: Did Ladner, in the deed to Dameron, intend to designate the five arpents in dispute, by the words the property of the seller,” which was given as the western boundary of the tract sold. In our opinion, the' testimony fully shows that he did.

Augustine Fayard proves, that in 1815, Jacques Maturin Ladner owned a tract of land near Point a Cadet, bounded on the south by the Gulf of Mexico, north and east by the bay of Biloxi, and on the west by lands supposed then to belong to John Ladner,'but which were since recovered by Dorsette Richards. At that time Jacques Maturin Ladner resided on the southeast corner of the land, near the present residence of Pradat, and near the line of Dorsette Richards’s tract. His son, John Ladner, then claimed the land lying on the west, which is now a part of the tract known as Dorsette Richards’s.

This witness further proves, that from his first remembrance Ladner resided at this place, and continued to reside there till 1818 or 1819, when he removed. One of his sons, named Dominique, continued after his removal to- reside there till the sale in 1832 to Pradat, when possession was delivered to him and he has continued to reside there ever since. This witness heard Dameron say, in 1818 or 1819, that Ladner’s tract contained twenty-five arpents front; that he had bought twenty arpents, and that Ladner reserved five arpents front on the western side. He did not see the land surveyed, but saw the lines after it was surveyed, and thinks there were more than five arpents west between the line marked as the boundary of the land sold and the land claimed by John Ladner. On these five arpents is Pradat’s residence, and on them was the residence of Lad-ner when he sold to Dameron. His house was near the centre of the five arpents, and one of his sons hired on the eastern part, near the line, for a year or two. He never knew Ladner [264]*264to claim any other tract of land than the Point á Cadet tract, and after the sale to Dameron, in 1815, till the sale to Pradat, in 1832, Ladner, or some one of his sons, always lived on the five arpents, claiming it as their own.

Louis A. Caillavat proves substantially the same facts, and also, that Elihu Carver, in 1815 or 1816, ran a line, dividing the twenty arpents sold to Dameron from the five arpents reserved, and that Ladner and his sons then resided and continued to reside on these five arpents from the sale to Dameron, in 1815, till the sale to Pradat, in 1832, which sale was made by witness as the agent of Ladner’s heirs. Dameron built a house on the part purchased by him. He resided four or five years after the purchase in Biloxi, and witness never heard him claim the five arpents on which Ladner lived; but heard him frequently say, that he only bought twenty arpents, and that Lad-ner had reserved five. Elihu Carver proves, that he was county surveyor of Hancock county in 1815, and that in that year, at the request of Dameron, he ran the west boundary line of the tract sold by Ladner to Dameron. This line divided the twenty arpents sold from the land reserved. The land reserved was five arpents, immediately west of the line he ran between it and Dorsette Richards’s tract. At the time the line was run, there adjoined the five arpents on the west, a tract of four ar-pents then claimed by John Ladner, a son of Jacques, but which four arpents were embraced by Dorsette Richards’s claim, and are now a part of it.

John J. McCoughn and B. A. Ludlow were appointed to make a survey of the lands in controversy since this suit was commenced. They state, that Carver went with them and pointed out the lines of the survey which he said was made by him in 1815. This line divided the five arpents in controversy from the remainder of the Point á Cadet tract, and seemed to be an old line, between twenty and thirty years old. After Carver had shown them the beginning of the line at one corner, he did not continue with them, as they, ran it out, but rode round to the other side of the tract, and when they reached that end of the line they found him at it. From their testimony, it would seem, if we allow for the diminution in quantity caused [265]

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Bluebook (online)
25 Miss. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaleb-v-pradat-miss-1852.