Miller v. Albert Hanson Lumber Co.

63 So. 883, 134 La. 225, 1913 La. LEXIS 2202
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1913
DocketNo. 19,650
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 63 So. 883 (Miller v. Albert Hanson Lumber Co.) 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
Miller v. Albert Hanson Lumber Co., 63 So. 883, 134 La. 225, 1913 La. LEXIS 2202 (La. 1913).

Opinion

LAND, J.

This is the second appeal in this cause. See 130 La. 662, 58 South. 502. In that case we held in effect that the plaintiff had been in actual possession as owner of lots 1 and 2, section 36, township 14 S., range 10 E., in the parish of St. Mary, for a year or more prior to the institution of her jactitation suit. The trial judge had sustained the defendants’ exception of want of possession and had dismissed the suit without passing on the question of title pleaded and submitted in the alternative by the defendant.

The decree rendered by us reads as follows:

“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment appealed from is avoided, annulled, and reversed, and exception is overruled. The case is remanded to be proceeded with according to law.”

It appears from the record that both parties had adduced evidence not only on the issue of possession but also on the alternative issue of title. The trial judge, having decided the first issue against. the plaintiff, very properly dismissed the suit without passing on the issue of title.

[227]*227The case was remanded for the purpose of enabling the judge to decide the questions of title, raised by the defendant in his answer, and the plea of prescription of ten years’ acquirendi causa urged by the plaintiff.

On the remand the case was decided in favor of the plaintiff; and the defendant has appealed.

[1 ] The first contention of the appellant is that the judge erred in refusing to reopen the case for further evidence.

In his opinion, the judge below makes the following statement:

“After the case had thus been remanded, counsel for the plaintiff moved to fix the case for argument on the merits. To this the defendant's counsel objected, contending that the case should be set down for trial on the merits, especially urging that it had the right to cause a survey to be made of the property and the land correctly located. The question as to whether the case should be submitted on the record as made up or should be set down for trial with the right to introduce further evidence was argued and submitted under an agreement that, if the court should refuse to reopen the case for further evidence, he should proceed to decide the case on the merits.
“ Counsel for the defendant admits that its sole purpose in wanting to take evidence and have the land surveyed was to prove want of possession in the plaintiffs of the land they claim to own, and that a survey of the land would show that Yellow bayou was not located as the map relied upon by the plaintiffs had located it. Then, too, that the Supreme Court in the decree (?) had suggested that no survey had been made under order of this court * * * contradictorily with the parties to this suit.
“I am of the opinion that the question of possession herein is settled and now is res adjudicata. * * * I readily bow to and accept as correct the judgment of the Supreme Court, which holds in unmistakable terms that the plaintiff was and is in possession of the land described in her petition.
“The Court'said: ‘From the weight of the testimony We are led to the conclusion that the plaintiff had sufficient possession to maintain her action.’ ”

The only question before this court on the former appeal' and the only question decided, was that the plaintiffs had sufficient possession of the property described in their petition to maintain their jactitation suit.

The judge a quo correctly ruled that this question of possession vel non was res adjudicata and could not be reopened. The remanding of the case for further proceedings according to law left all questions on the merits, including that of the prescription of ten years, open for adjudication.

The case had been fully tried, but no judgment had been rendered on -the merits. In similar cases this court has remanded the cause for further proceedings according to law; that is, for judgment on the record as made up. In such a case a new trial is properly refused. See Saint v. Martel, 127 La. 73, 53 South. 432; La Barre v. Burton-Swartz Cypress Co., 130 La. 134, 57 South. 655. In the latter case we said:

“The case was properly taken under advisement by the trial judge, because it was remanded, not because it had not been heard on the merits, but because it had not been decided on the merits.”

On the Merits.

[2] The defendant, having set up title to lands in the possession of the plaintiffs, occupies the position of a plaintiff in a petitory action.

The judge a quo held that the plaintiffs had acquired title to the land in controversy by the prescription of ten years.

Bernard Miller purchased the land from the state of Louisana in 1879 and went into actual possession. After his death his widow and heirs were sent into possession by a decree of court and in September, 1908, filed the present suit to protect their possession.

Defendant claims title through the heirs of one Leo Tarlton, but the record does not show that they ever exercised any acts of ownership over the property or paid any taxes thereon. The judge a quo was of opinion that the legal title to the land in dispute was in Tarlton’s heirs, who sold to defendant in the year 1903, but held that Miller had acquired the title by the prescription of ten years. In his opinion the judge a quo says:

“That Miller took possession of the land and has since been in the open, peaceable, and pub-[229]*229lie possession of the land to the exclusion of all others has been decided by the Supreme Court. His good' faith, which the law presumes in his favor, has not been questioned. Therefore all the elements that go to make up a prescriptive title apply in this case.”

The judge a quo was mistaken in the statement that this court on the former appeal had decided the question of prescriptive possession. It is true, however, that the facts stated in the opinion of this court on the former appeal lead to the conclusion that Miller was in actual possession of the premises from 1882 to 1908 and paid taxes thereon. But the decree of the court was limited to the fact of possession for more than a year preceding the institution of the jactitation suit. No other issue was before the court, and the decree cannot be enlarged by expressions or statements in the opinion relative to issues not then before the court.

[3] This suit was filed on September 16,1908, and our former decree is conclusive that the plaintiffs had been in possession of the premises for more than one year previous to that date. Code of Practice, art. 49. The action of slander of title is “founded exclusively on possession” and “is a form of the possessory action.” See Williams’ Heirs v. Zengel, 117 La. 607, 608, 42 South. 153.

“The right to sue for slander of title is conferred on the one in possession. If he is not in possession he must fail.” South La. Land Co. v. Riggs’ Cypress Co., 119 La. 198, 43 South. 1003.

In the leading case of Dalton v. Wickliffe, 35 La. Ann. 355, the court, said:

“ ‘The object of the action,’ said Judge Porter, ‘is to protect possession and to give it the same advantages when disturbed by slander as by actual intrusion.

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 883, 134 La. 225, 1913 La. LEXIS 2202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-albert-hanson-lumber-co-la-1913.