McDonald v. Richard

13 So. 2d 712, 203 La. 155, 1943 La. LEXIS 965
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 12, 1943
DocketNos. 36850, 36900 and 36901.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 13 So. 2d 712 (McDonald v. Richard) 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
McDonald v. Richard, 13 So. 2d 712, 203 La. 155, 1943 La. LEXIS 965 (La. 1943).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

There is no dispute about the facts of this case. On June 25, 1929, the Morley Cypress Company sold to Dr. J. A. Richard an undivided half interest in 640 acres of land described as Section 35 in T.7 S., R.ll E., and reserved all of the mineral rights in the land. On July 27, 1936, Dr. Richard, notwithstanding he had no mineral rights in the land, made a sale to D. G. Laux of one-eighth of the mineral rights, declaring in the deed that he, Dr. Richard, owned an undivided half of the mineral rights in the whole section of land, and that it was his intention to sell to Laux one-fourth of his mineral rights. On September 3, 1936, Dr. Richard, having yet no mineral rights in the land, made what purported to be a sale to Laux of a sixteenth interest in the mineral rights in the whole 640 acres of land, declaring again in the deed that he, Dr. Richard, owned a half interest in the mineral rights in-the whole section and that it was his intention to sell to Laux one-eighth of his half interest in the mineral rights. On September 5, 1936, Dr. Richard, still having no mineral rights in the land, made what purported to be a sale of a thirty-second interest in the mineral rights to Charles P. Schuh. By the three acts of sale, therefore, Dr. Richard sold — or pretended to sell- — seven thirty-seconds interest in the mineral rights which in fact belonged to the Morley Cypress Company.

On September 9, 1936, Dr. Richard sold an undivided fourth interest — being half of his half interest — in the 640 acres of land to Francis J. Whitehead; and on April 11, 1938, Dr. Richard sold his remaining fourth interest in the land to Whitehead. On April 14, 1938, Whitehead sold a fourth interest in the land to Charles G. McDonald, declaring in the deed that the interest sold was the same interest which he, Whitehead, had bought from Dr. Richard on April 11, 1938.

The Morley Cypress Company did not exercise its mineral rights in the land and therefore, on June 26, 1939,- — which was at the end of ten years from the date on which the company created the mineral servitude by selling a half interest in the land to Dr. Richard and reserving the mineral rights- — ■ the mineral servitude of the Morley Cypress Company was lost or forfeited by the prescription of ten years, as far as Whitehead’s and McDonald’s interest in the land was concerned.

Charles G. McDonald, as plaintiff in these suits, claims a fourth of the mineral rights in the 640 acres of land by virtue of his being the owner of a fourth interest in the land at the time when the Morley Cypress Company’s mineral servitude expired or was forfeited by the prescription of ten years. McDonald brought two suits for the fourth of the mineral rights in the 640 acres of land. One of the suits was brought against D. G. Laux and certain individuals to whom Laux had made what purported to be transfers of parts of his mineral rights. The other suit was brought against Charles P. Schuh and certain individuals to whom Schuh had made what purported to be transfers of parts of his *161 mineral rights. The defendants in the two suits claimed title to the fourth interest in the mineral rights by virtue of the deeds from Dr. Richard to D. G. Laux and the deed from Dr. Richard to Charles P. Schuh. The two suits were consolidated in the district court and were tried as one suit.' The judge gave judgment for McDonald in both suits and the defendants appealed. Some of the defendants in the suit against D. G. Laux et al. took a suspensive appeal and others took a devolutive appeal. All of the .defendants in the suit against Charles P. Schuh et al. took a devolutive appeal. The three appeals were consolidated in this court and were heard as one appeal.

The question in the case is this: If the owner of a tract of land sells the land and reserves the mineral rights, and if, thereafter, within the period of 10 years, the purchaser of the land sells the mineral rights (which he does not own) to a third party, and if, thereafter, but within 10 years from the date of the sale of the land, the buyer sells it to a fourth party, and if the original seller of the land loses his mineral servitude by the liberative prescription of 10 years for nonuser, to whom do the mineral rights inure, — to the party who bought the mineral rights from one who had no such rights, — or to the party who owned the land at the time when the servitude or mineral rights reserved by the original landowner lapsed by the prescription of 10 years? The judge of the district court decided that,-inasmuch as the mineral rights reserved by the Morley Cypress Company were merely a real obligation, or mineral servitude imposed upon the land, the lapsing of the obligation or servitude inured to the party who owned the land at the time when the obligation lapsed. Our opinion is that the judgment is correct.

D. G. Laux and Charles P. Schuh, from whom the defendants claim the mineral rights, did not acquire any mineral rights in the land by virtue of the sales made by Dr. Richard to Laux and Schuh, because Dr. Richard never had any mineral rights in the land. The sales made by Dr. Richard to Laux and to Schuh were in fact sales of property belonging to another,— belonging to the Morley Cypress Company. According to article 2452 of the Civil Code the sale of property belonging to another is null. It is only a relative nullity, in the sense that it may be ratified by the owner of the thing sold. Long v. Chailan, 187 La. 507, 175 So. 42. The purchaser in such a case acquires merely the right to an action of warranty. Brady v. Falgout, D.C., 42 F.Supp. 532. He is entitled of course' to the benefit of any title which the seller afterwards may acquire. If, in this instance,-Dr. Richard had not disposed pf the land, after he sold the mineral rights to Laux and to Schuh, but had remained the owner of the land until the time when the mineral rights which had been retained by the Morley Cypress Company lapsed by effect of the liberative prescription of 10 years, Laux and Schuh and their transferees would have acquired thereby the mineral rights which the Morley Cypress Company lost by prescription. Sample v. Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, 162 La. 941, 111 So. 336; White v. Hodges, *163 201 La. 1, 9 So.2d 433. But there is no theory on which Laux and Schuh or their transferees, who are the defendants in this suit, can claim successfully that they acquired from Dr. Richard mineral rights which he never owned — either at the time when or after he made what'purported to he sales of mineral rights to Laux and Schuh.

The appellants rely upon article 749 of the Civil Code, which declares:

“He whose estate is incumbered with a servitude, may impose on it other servitudes of any kind, provided they do not affect the rights of him who has acquired ’the first [servitude].”

The appellants point out that this article of the Code is not an exact translation of the French text of the corresponding article — 745—of the Code of 1825. The translation is not a literal translation but the slight departures from the text do not change the purport of the article. The word “affect” is used as a translation of the French word préjudicient, which might be better translated as “prejudice”, so that the proviso would read: “provided they [the' subsequently imposed servitudes] do not prejudice the rights of him who has acquired the first [servitude].” From this the appellants argue that Dr.

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13 So. 2d 712, 203 La. 155, 1943 La. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-richard-la-1943.