Morand's Heirs v. Mayor of New-Orleans

5 La. 239
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 La. 239 (Morand's Heirs v. Mayor of New-Orleans) 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
Morand's Heirs v. Mayor of New-Orleans, 5 La. 239 (La. 1833).

Opinion

Mathews, J.

delivered tbe opinion of the court.

The principal questions in this case have already been settled by a judgment of the appellate court, rendered in June term, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two. That judgment was in affirmance of the one rendered by the District Court, which adjudged to the defendants all the land which they held and possessed, under a title from Claud Tremé and his wife, their immediate vendors. The act of sale under which Tremé and wife acquired title, describes the property sold (which was a tract of land) by limits, and is consequently a sale per aversionem. The tract thus purchased, was composed of several distinct tracts, or parts of them, which originally belonged to the ancestor of the plaintiffs, Charles Morand, sen., and was adjudicated to his son Charles, at the sale of his succession, by quantity, not by fixed limits. The dispute between the present parties, relates solely to one of those original tracts, that is known by the name of the Brick Yard, which is situated on the left hand side of the road leading from the city to the bayou St. John, and which was described in the adjudication to Charles Morand, the son, as having about seven arpents in depth, running from the city, on, or parallel with the bayou road. He afterwards sold it to Paul Moreau, under the following description: “ Una tierra de como diez arpones de frente a la ciudad solve el fundo de siete que corren sobre el camino del bayou de San Juan, &c.; lindada de un lado a la tiérra de dos arpanes pertenentes a Un» Louis Docmini, y del otro a la ciudad &c. The limits thus given embrace considerably more than seven arpents in depth, extending to the tract of land which formerly belonged to Doquemenil Morand, now the property of Griffon. As Charles Morand, the seller to Moreau, had acquired no title to any land beyond seven arpents in depth, running from the city, by the adjudication of his father’s succession, it is clear that he could not legally convey any to .his vendee. The land beyond these seven arpents, and [240]*240extending to die limit of Griffon’s plantation, is now the . . ... f only remaining subject oí dispute between the parties to this action, and it offers a single question for solution; that is, whether Moreau, and those claiming under him, have acquired title by prescription. Two kinds of prescription are relied on by the defendants, longe and longissime temporis. The facts of the case would perhaps not fully support the latter, notwithstanding a possession, or occupancy and use of part of the premises, since the year one thousand seven hundred and seventy-five, until the commencement of the present suit in one thousand eight hundred and thirty. We are however of opinion, that the defendants have a right to the benefit of the former.

tíontofPten°S’á timremust nlfidtprasSon’ of property deed under which LposscSob. put

T° giye effect to the prescription of ten and twenty years, three things are required by our laws. A just title, possession an(l g00d faith. The leading principles of the Spanish laws, which govern the present case, do not differ materially from the French. The systems of jurisprudence of both countries, it is believed, are mainly founded on the Roman Civil Law. In relation to the three requisites above stated, as necessary to give title by prescription, we do therefore refer principally to the definitions and doctrines found in Pothier’s treatises on possession and prescription, these subjects being therein treated in a perspicuous manner, with copious references to the laws on which the doctrines of the author are based.

A just title of possession, is one translative of property or a contract or deed, in consequence of which any person is put in possession of a thing. Pothier Prescription, no. 57. Titles of this nature are of various kinds as pro emptore, pro herede, &c. In the present case, the defendants claim the benefit of a title pro emtore, and the main basis of their claim is the act of sale from Charles Morand, the son, to Paul Moreau, passed on the 25th April, 1775. We have already transcribed from this deed, the clauses relating to the description of the property sold. By these extracts from the act of sale, the description of the land gives the depth of seven arpents, running on a parallel with the road of the [241]*241bayou St. Jobn. But it also gives as a limit in the rear; the land of Doquemenil Morand, now the plantation of Griffon. Under this description, and with a knowledge of the locus in quo, as it was situated in relation to the adjoining planta-h J ° 1 tions, which the vendor and vendee may be presumed to have possessed, the latter may well have considered that he was buying a tract of land according to limits, and not agreeable to quantity; the price paid being a total and fixed sum for the whole tract, and not so much per arpent; and that the seller intended to sell the whole tract, back to' the land of Doquemenil Morand, cannot be doubted.' The entire tract having been sold by limits, for a whole'and definite price; these circumstances must control the problematical descrip- . . „ tion as to quantity, ana give to the sale the character of one 0 4 M. S. 428. per cwcrsionem,

enyrhee St’actf of awhoiieand'dís-p'er VmcrX>nm, and the circumstances control a problematical description of quantity.

This title was clearly translative of property to the whole extent of the limits given in the act of sale, and the evidence shows that the vendee'took possession under the sale,.and altho'igh the record affords no proof of a formal delivery to him of the thing sold, yet neither is there'any ’evidence that the possession assumed was contrary to the will'of the vendor. It must, therefore, be considered as á civil possession pro emptore, extending over the whole of the tract of land, as sold by limits. In order, however, that title by prescription might grow out of this possession, it is necessary that it should be bona fide, and uninterrupted during the time required to prescribe.

Against the good faith of the possessors in the present instance, the plaintiffs rely on that part of the act of sale, which states the manner in which the vendor had acquired title to the property sold, wherein it is declared that he acquired it by adjudication of the property which belonged to his father, and which was sold at public sale, &c. By that adjudication, it is contended that the purchaser acquired title to only seven arpents in depth, and consequently if his vendee had used ordinary precaution and diligence, he would have discovered that the person from whom he bought had no title beyond these seven arpents. Except this reference in the act of sale, from Charles Morand to Paul Moreau, [242]*242there is no proof showing that the latter knew the defect of * ° the title of the former; and this is a simple statement, that the tract of land sold, had been acquired by adjudication at sale of the succession of Charles Morand, the elder, without indicating any place where the notarial proceedings might be found. In this respect the pretensions of the plaintiffs rest on a foundation weaker than that relied on by Fletcher’s heirs, in their suit, vs. Cavalier, et. al.

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5 La. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morands-heirs-v-mayor-of-new-orleans-la-1833.