Orillion v. Slack

4 Rob. 120
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Rob. 120 (Orillion v. Slack) 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
Orillion v. Slack, 4 Rob. 120 (La. 1843).

Opinion

Bullard, J.

The plaintiffs represent in their first petition (No. 1757,) that they are the owners of a plantation on the bayou Grosse Tete, composed of numbers 26, 27, and 28, about fifteen arpens front, and containing 491J acres, which lots were duly sold in 1826, and patented by the United States to Wilson and Sykes, from whom they derive title. That about the year 1830, the Surveyor General located a pretended claim of Reboul and Franchebois for fifty acres front on the bayou instead of arpens, and that, in that survey, the former official one under which the patents had been issued, was overlooked or disregarded, and the courses and distances changed. That, by said erroneous location, the said three lots were covered, so that there remained but a small strip of No. 28, and that the said location covered theWhole double concession to which the said lots were entitled. That subsequently to said location the act of congress was passed, authorizing the front proprietors to purchase their back lands, and that in virtue thereof, the petitioners were entitled to purchase 491¼ acres, in the rear of their front tract; but that they were prevented by the erroneous and improper location of the claim of Reboul and Franchebois. It is represented that Eliphalet Slack, being, at the time, the pretended owner of the claim, purchased the back lands. It is further represented that the double concession was covered by the, erroneous location of the claim, so that the petitioners could not enter the back lands to which they are entitled. They aver that, under the circumstances, the purchase so made by Slack enures to their benefit, and ought to be decreed to be for their use. It is averred that Slack well knew that he [122]*122had no just right to the back concession. They further .allege, that while the said law was in force, they attempted to enter the back lands to which they were entitled, and applied to the proper land office for that purpose, but were refused. It is further alleged that Slack soon afterwards sold the land thus acquired as a double concession, so that the plaintiffs cannot claim the land itself; and that their only relief is in damages, which they pray for. They further allege acts of trespass committed on other parts of their land, for which they also claim damages. In suit No. 1893 the plaintiffs claim title to half an arpent in possession of Slack.

The defendant Slack, denies generally the allegations in the petition, and avers that he is the owner of a tract of land of forty acres front on the bayou Grosse Tete, by the depth of forty, bounded above by the land claimed by the plaintiffs; it being the tracts confirmed to Reboul and Franchebois, for twenty-five acres front each. That the tract was afterwards, by competent authority, located, and the location approved. He describes the location and the calls of the original titles. He avers, that in 1836, he entered and purchased 1680 acres, being the quantity -he was entitled to purchase as a double concession, which he afterwards sold to A. Hodge. He denies any knowledge of the pretended claim of the plaintiffs to the double concession, either at the time he made the purchase, or at any time previously to the bringing of this suit. He denies the right of the plaintiffs to any back lands, and that the location of the claims of Reboul and Franchebois, which he purchased in good faith, is erroneous. He denies that his land conflicts with any belonging to the plaintiffs on the Grosse Tete. He concludes by praying that the claim for damages may be rejected; that the line of division between the tracts may be settled and established; and that he may be quieted in his title.

The plaintiffs put in an answer to this, regarding it in the light of a reconvention, and averred that the demand of the defendant has already been passed upon, and adjudicated, by the District and Supreme Courts in the case of Slack v. Orillion, No. 1574; and they pleaded that judgment as res judicata.

The case of Slack v. Orillion was twice before this court, (See 11 La. 587, and 13 Ib. 56 ;) and the first question which [123]*123this case presents is, whether the judgment finally pronounced in that case by the District Court, and which was affirmed on appeal, be conclusive as to the title, and forms a res judicata.

It is clear that the parties are the same, although their position in relation to each other is changed. The thing in dispute is the same: the plaintiff in that case asserting title under the confirmation in favor of Reboul and Franchebois, and the defendants under the patents for lots No. 26, 27, and 28. But it is argued that the court did not pronounce any final judgment in the case; that both parties were nonsuited, the plaintiff in relation to the principal demand, and the defendant as to his claim under the patents in reconvention.

In order to determine this point, it is necessary to examine the judgment pronounced in the District Court, and which was affirmed here, premising that the locus in quo does not appear to have been questioned. The issue was, which party had the best title to the three lots covered by the patents. The District Court, after saying that the plaintiff, not having shown title to the land claimed by him in the defendant’s possession, must fail, renders the formal judgment in these words: “It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that there be judgment against the plaintiff in regard to the claim set up in his petition against the defendants ; and that there be judgment as of nonsuit against the defendants in regard to their plea in reconvention in their answer contained.” If the judge had stopped at the end of the first clause of the sentence, it would have been, most clearly, a judgment for the defendants, and would have formed a bar to any future action by the plaintiff, founded on the same title. The subsequent part of the judgment, in which the court pronounces upon the reconventional demand, and leaves the question open as to ihe right of the defendants to recover, under the patents, any part of the land in possession of the plaintiff, does not appear to us to make the first clause any thing less than a final judgment upon the title set up by the plaintiff. The question, however, as to any conflict between the two titles, and, in the event of such conflict, which ought to prevail, under the above restriction, appears to us to have been left open. The court was not satisfied, that the plaintiff in that case was in possession of land covered by the de[124]*124fendant’s patents, because the original survey referred to in the patents was not shown. It was for this reason, that the court declined pronouncing finally, upon the right of the patentee to recover any land occupied by the plaintiffs, under the location of the claim of Reboul and Franchebois, although it said that the plaintiff could not recover.

The evidence in this case shows that Slack is in possession of half an arpent front, by the depth of forty, of lot No. 26, belonging to Orillion, and embraced in the patent.

Slack has himself asked that the boundary between the parties may be finally established.

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Related

Slack v. Orillion
11 La. 587 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1838)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Rob. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orillion-v-slack-la-1843.