Nora Lee Miller Prince, Ancel James Miller v. Palermo Land Co., Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 2006
DocketCA-0005-1399
StatusUnknown

This text of Nora Lee Miller Prince, Ancel James Miller v. Palermo Land Co., Inc. (Nora Lee Miller Prince, Ancel James Miller v. Palermo Land Co., Inc.) 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
Nora Lee Miller Prince, Ancel James Miller v. Palermo Land Co., Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

05-1399

NORA LEE MILLER PRINCE AND ANCEL JAMES MILLER

VERSUS

PALERMO LAND COMPANY, INC.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 97-5297, DIVISION “G” HONORABLE G. MICHAEL CANADAY, DISTRICT JUDGE

JAMES T. GENOVESE JUDGE

Court composed of Michael G. Sullivan, Billy H. Ezell, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Oliver “Jackson” Schrumpf 3801 Maplewood Drive Sulphur, Louisiana 70663 (337) 625-9077 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Palermo Land Company, Inc.

C. A. Guilbeaux 1215 Common Street Lake Charles, Louisiana 70601 (337) 433-7858 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLEES: Nora Lee Miller Prince and Ancel James Miller (deceased) GENOVESE, Judge.

Defendant, Palermo Land Company, Inc. (Palermo), appeals the judgment of

the trial court declaring that the Plaintiffs, Nora Lee Miller Prince and her brother, the

late Ancel James Miller (the Millers), are the owners of the property at issue through

acquisitive prescription of thirty years. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS

The property at issue is located north of other property owned by the Millers

and is described in the record of these proceedings as:

The West Half (W 1/2) of the Northwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (NW 1/4 of SW 1/4) of Section 1, Township 10 South, Range 12 West, situated in the Parish of Calcasieu, State of Louisiana, containing 20 acres, more or less.

The property at issue was purchased by Palermo’s ancestors in title on June 24,

1963, at a tax sale. Palermo asserts that it interrupted the Millers’ alleged possession

and prescription by virtue of its purchase of said property at the tax sale in 1963 and

that it has maintained its ownership by paying the property taxes since 1964.

The Millers claim that their ancestors began using the property at issue

sometime in the 1940s. The Millers claim that their family has used the property for

more than thirty years, raising cattle and growing crops. The property at issue was

listed in the succession of the Millers’ father, Ancel Onelect Miller, in 1993. The

1993 judgment of possession declared that the Millers, Nora Lee Miller Prince and

the late Ancel James Miller, received ownership of their father’s interest in the

property at issue, subject to the usufruct of his surviving spouse, Rena Quebedeaux

Miller. Also in 1993, Rena Quebedeaux Miller donated her alleged ownership

interest in this property to the Millers, Nora Lee Miller Prince and the late Ancel

James Miller. The property at issue was then partitioned between the Millers.

1 Sometime around 1994, the late Ancel James Miller erected a fence on this property.

On July 18, 1997, the Millers filed a petition for declaratory judgment seeking

to have themselves declared to be the owners of the property at issue pursuant to

thirty years acquisitive prescription. The Millers contend that more than thirty years

have elapsed since Palermo purchased said property at tax sale and that they have

continued in physical possession of said property in excess of thirty years prior to

their filing of this lawsuit.

A bench trial in this matter was set for February 4, 2005. At said hearing, the

parties presented their evidence for the court’s consideration and were allowed to

submit post-trial briefs for the court’s consideration, after which the trial court took

the matter under advisement. Subsequently, the trial court issued written reasons for

judgment finding that the Millers had established possession of the property pursuant

to thirty years acquisitive prescription. The trial court wrote (citations omitted), in

pertinent part:

The variety of physical or corporeal possession necessary in a particular occurrence will be determined by the nature of the land. The nature of the land involved is the chief consideration as to what acts of possession are sufficient. Types of activities indicative of possession vary, but with rural property, the growing of crops, cattle grazing and fencing have been held as examples of possession sufficient to prove acquisitive prescription. Furthermore, adverse possessors can acquire title by prescription by engaging in activities such as maintaining fences, paying stamps on transactions, farming, carrying out drainage projects, and paying taxes. However, payment of taxes alone is not sufficient indicia of possession for attainment of property under 30 year acquisitive prescription, it is much more effective in 10 year prescription cases. Paying of taxes is not sufficient in itself to support possession of or to show title to property, but taken in consideration with other facts, tends to support [a] claim of possession as owner. In fact, paying taxes was not possession necessary for 30 year prescription. Here, in depositions by the Plaintiffs, Nora Prince and Ancel Miller, there was testimony that the property in question was used in a

2 manner fitting its[] status as rural property for the purpose of acquisitive prescription. In their depositions, the [P]laintiffs testified to treating the land as an owner in open possession by ejecting trespassers from the tract, using the tract for recreation, farming on the tract, and using the tract as pasture for cattle, or fencing the land. The [D]efendants, by their own admission, have never held corporal possession of the tract. According [to] the depositions [], he [Joseph R. Palermo, Jr.] had only been on the land once or twice. Same for the other ancestors in title, only flew over the tract in a plane, and allegedly granted an oral lease to graze cattle, that was seemingly contradicted by an affidavit by an individual . . . .

On July 26, 2005, the trial court signed a judgment granting the Millers’ petition for

declaratory judgment, declaring them to be the owners of the property at issue

through acquisitive prescription of thirty years.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Palermo appeals and asserts the following assignments of error: (1) the trial

court erred in failing to hold the 1963 tax sale constituted an admission against

interest or an interruption of the claim of possession of the property by the Millers;

(2) the trial court erred in failing to conclude that the offer by the Millers’ ancestor

to purchase the tract from Palermo’s ancestor after the tax sale constituted an

acknowledgment or admission of ownership in another person and an interruption in

the Millers’ possession; (3) the trial court erred in failing to note the discrepancy

between the affidavits of possession and the deposition testimony admitting that the

Millers did not “live on” the twenty-acre disputed tract; (4) the trial court erred in

admitting the affidavits of deceased persons over objections, including violation of

the right to cross-examine witnesses; (5) the trial court erred in failing to recognize

that the granting of oil, gas, and mineral leases by Palermo, combined with payment

of property taxes, interrupted acquisitive prescription; (6) the trial court erred in

failing to grant Palermo’s exception of failure to join a necessary party; and (7) the

3 trial court erred in failing to require the Millers to substitute parties.

Palermo basically asserts that the trial court erred in finding that the Millers

satisfied the requirements for proving ownership of the property at issue through

acquisitive prescription of thirty years.

Possession of an immovable is the detention or enjoyment of a corporeal thing.

See La.Civ.Code art.

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