Orleans Parish School Board v. City of New Orleans
This text of 90 So. 2d 683 (Orleans Parish School Board v. City of New Orleans) 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.
Opinion
ORLEANS PARISH SCHOOL BOARD
v.
CITY OF NEW ORLEANS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*684 Samuel I. Rosenberg, New Orleans, for Orleans Parish School Board, plaintiff-appellee.
Henry B. Curtis, City Atty., Grady C. Durham, William Boizelle, Asst. City Attys., New Orleans, for City of New Orleans, defendant-appellant.
JANVIER, Judge.
The Orleans Parish School Board, a political subdivision of the State of Louisiana, seeks, by mandamus, to compel the City of New Orleans to transfer to it a square of ground in the City of New Orleans described as follows:
"A certain square of ground designated on a plan drawn by M. Harrison, on 23rd March 1844, and deposited in this City, as Square T23, bounded by Hampson, Second (now Maple) and Short Streets and Carrollton Avenue, and measures two hundred and seventy five (275) feet on each of said streets and containing twenty lots, numbered from One to Twenty, inclusive."
The School Board also prays that the city be enjoined from interfering with the Board in the exercise of its rights in connection with the said property or from selling or otherwise disposing of it.
From a judgment ordering the city to transfer the property to the Board and enjoining it from otherwise disposing of the property or interfering with the use thereof by the Board, the city has appealed.
During the year 1948 there was adopted by the State Legislature a joint resolution, Act 535 of 1948, which was ratified by the people of the State and thus became an amendment to the Constitution and which reads in part as follows:
"And provided, further, that the city of New Orleans, through its mayor, is hereby authorized and directed to transfer to the Orleans Parish School Board title to any and all school property, excepting all property of the Isaac Delgado Central Trades School, now or hereafter standing in the name of the city and dedicated exclusively to school purposes." LSA-Const. art. 4, § 12.
Pursuant to this amendment the School Board sought by an earlier mandamus suit to compel the city to transfer to it 179 parcels of improved and unimproved property standing in the name of the city and devoted exclusively to school purposes. On various grounds the city resisted this effort and, from a judgment ordering the transfer, appealed to this court. We affirmed the judgment. Orleans Parish School Board v. *685 City of New Orleans, La.App., 56 So.2d 280, 285.
In that suit the Board did not include other properties devoted to school purposes, among them the square which is here involved and which property on the public records stands in the name of the "Board of Commissioners of the John McDonogh School Fund." This square of ground had come into the possession of the city as a result of the legacy left to the city by the late John McDonogh. This property, with those others devoted to school purposes and which were not contemplated in the first mandamus suit, was intentionally omitted therefrom evidently because the Board felt that there might possibly be a distinction between those properties used for school purposes which had not been obtained through the McDonogh legacy and those which had come to it through that source. It was evidently felt that there was a possibility that it might be found that those properties were held "in trust" and that therefore possibly the city could not be compelled to transfer them because of this trust status. At any rate, this and other properties were not contemplated by that suit as is conceded and as is made evident by the following statement which appears in the opinion which we then rendered:
"* * * The various properties involved herein were not acquired pursuant to or by virtue of the existence of any trust. * * *"
It is advisable that we set forththough as briefly as possiblethe history of how this property, which stands on the public records in the name of the Board of Commissioners of the John McDonogh School Fund, came into the possession of the city and was transferred by it to the said Board of Commissioners.
The property, nostalgically known as McDonogh No. 23, was acquired in 1853 by the Police Jury of the Parish of Jefferson, the City of Jefferson and the City of Carrollton. By Act 71 of 1874 the City of Carrollton was annexed to and became a part of the City of New Orleans and, as a result, all lands which were theretofore part of the City of Carrollton became part of the City of New Orleans.
By Act 91 of 1884, the City of New Orleans and the Police Jury of the Parish of Jefferson were authorized to partition the property known as "the Courthouse Buildings in the late Town of Carrollton". As a result, on December 22, 1888, title to this property was acquired by the City of New Orleans.
The McDonogh will provided for "Commissioners of the General Estate" with numerous rights, powers and obligations. This property has never stood in the name of those commissioners.
The City of New Orleans had created the Board of Commissioners of the John McDonogh School Fund which, it is conceded, was a different body from the Commissioners of the General Estate as provided for by the McDonogh will, and title to this property was, by notarial act, transferred by the City of New Orleans to this Board of Commissioners of the John McDonogh School Fund.
The question which confronts us, though rather simply stated, is not so easily answered. This is the question: Is the property, this squarewhich came into the possession of the city as a result of the McDonogh legacy, and which, by the city, was placed on the public records in the name of the Board of Commissioners of the John McDonogh School Fund within the contemplation of the constitutional amendment of 1948, and must it therefore be transferred to the Orleans Parish School Board, bearing in mind that the constitutional amendment required that the City of New Orleans transfer to the Orleans Parish School Board title "to any and all school property," etc.
*686 The City of New Orleans points to certain provisions in the McDonogh will under which the legacy left to it was to be applied solely to the education of poor children and was to be administered in accordance with certain detailed instructions which appeared in the will, and counsel say that these provisions clearly constitute the legacy as a trust and that the violation of these provisions or the alienation of the property by it would result in the forfeiture thereof in accordance with the provisions of the will.
Counsel for the School Board, on the other hand, rely on decisions of our State Supreme Court and of the Supreme Court of the United States, and relying especially on a decision rendered in 1853, State of Louisiana v. Executors of McDonogh, 8 La.Ann. 171, say that it was there held that, though there were certain provisions in the will as to the management and destination of the legacy, the legacy was not left in trust but was one for pious uses and that the title to the legacy and consequently to any property derived as a result thereof belonged to the City of New Orleans in fee simple and that this and other similar properties are therefore within the contemplation of the constitutional amendment of 1948.
In the cited case, 8 La.Ann.
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90 So. 2d 683, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orleans-parish-school-board-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1956.