Pardee Co. v. Bodcaw Lumber Co.

3 La. App. 169, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 575
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1925
DocketNo. 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 La. App. 169 (Pardee Co. v. Bodcaw Lumber Co.) 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
Pardee Co. v. Bodcaw Lumber Co., 3 La. App. 169, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 575 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

ODOM, J.

This is a suit to test title to real estate under Act No. 38 of 1908.

[170]*170Plaintiff, the Pardee Company, alleges that it is the owner of southwest quarter of northeast quarter and southeast quarter of northwest quarter of Section 24, Township 16 North, Range 9 West, situated in the parish of Bienville.

Plaintiff sets forth that it acquired the property on December 6, 1907, from Calvin Pardee, and that Calvin Pardee acquired it on June 16, 1890, by patent from the state of Louisiana, and that the land was granted to the state of Louisiana by the United States under the swamp land act of Congress of 1849, the selection having been made by the state of Louisiana on November 4, 1850, and approved May 6, 1852.

Plaintiff sets out that said property is being claimed by the Bodcaw Lumber Company of Louisiana and that nobody has been in actual possession thereof.

It asks that it have judgment in its favor and against the defendant, decreeing it to be the owner of the land and entitled to possession thereof.

The defendant answered, admitting its. claims to the land and setting up title in itself by a chain of title from Roland L. Horne, who is alleged to have entered the land from the United States by cash entry on January 26, 1851.

Defendant admitted plaintiff’s allegation to the effect that nobody has been in actual physical possession of the land.

Defendant alleged that it purchased said land from Thomas J. Lawhorn, a resident of Bienville parish, and called said Lawhorn in warranty.

The warrantor came into court under defendant’s call and adopted the defendant’s allegations insofar as its ownership was concerned, but denied the allegation with reference to possession of the land and set up that he and his vendors have been in actual physical possession of the land described in plaintiff’s petition from the time it was entered from the United States government by Horne down to the present time, and asked that plaintiff’s demands be rejected and that defendant be decreed the owner of the land and entitled to possession thereof.

It is alleged by defendant and not denied by plaintiff that a certain amount of timber had been cut and removed from the land by authority of the plaintiff company.

There was judgment in the District Court in favor of defendant, decreeing it to be the owner of the land in dispute and entitled to the possession thereof and for $1443.79, value of the timber admitted to have been cut and removed from the land.

From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

In this court the plaintiff has filed an exception of no cause of action to the answer of the warrantor, based, as we understand it, on the proposition that in an action brought to test title under the provision of Act No. 38 of 1908 no one has the right to be heard except those who are actual claimants of the land in dispute.

A considerable portion of plaintiff’s brief is devoted to the question as to whether an exception of no cause of action may be filed in an appellate court. We do not think it necessary to discuss that point for the reason that we think it settled that an exception of that kind may be filed at any time, even in this court. In fact, this point, as we understand it is practically conceded by counsel for both the defendant and warrantor.

The main contention of counsel for plaintiff with reference to the appearance of the warrantor in this suit is that under the provisions of Act No. 38 of 1908 no party except the actual claimant of the land at the time the suit is filed has a right to file any pleadings in the case or [171]*171make any appearance whatsoever therein.

Counsel for plaintiff devote the greater portion of their argument and their brief to a discussion of this question. In support of their contention on this point they cite the case of Fortner’s Heirs vs. Good Pine Lumber Co., (Mrs. Ezell, Intervenor), 146 La. 11, 83 South. 319.

We shall not enter into a full discussion of this point for the reason that in the case of Bodcaw Lumber Co. vs. The Pardee Company, 3 La. App. 162, 169, on the docket of this court, which is a companion case to this one, we have already discussed the question fully. We will state, however, in this connection that we do not consider counsel’s point well founded. The court in the Fortner case held that Mrs. Ezell, the intervenor therein, had no standing in court; but the facts in that case were quite different from those in this case.

In that case Mrs. Ezell intervened in the suit, setting up title in herself, claimed to be the owner of the property, and asked for judgment decreeing her to be such owner, and opposed both the plaintiff and defendant. By doing so she changed the issues in the case entirely, and the court held that inasmuch as Act No. 38 of 1908, under which the suit was brought, provided for the testing of title as betw'een the claimants of the land, the intervenor had no standing in the case.

In the case at bar the warrantor has not intervened in the suit, setting up title in himself, but has done what the law provides he shall do in all cases where a vendor and warrantor is called in warranty in a suit.

Article 384 of the Code of Practice provides that:

“The warrantor thus cited is bound to appear before the court in which the principal demand has been instituted even when he resides out of its jurisdiction in order to defend the suit for the defendant; he may plead every exception in defending the case which the defendant might have pleaded, even such as are personal to the defendant.”

And it has been held that he may make any defense which he has tending to defeat the plaintiff’s action.

We are therefore of the opinion that plaintiff’s exception of no cause of action is not good.

For a discussion of this question, see our opinion in the case of Bodcaw Lumber Company vs. The Pardee Company, 3 La. App. 162, 169, supra.

Another point which is specially pressed by counsel for plaintiff is that the warrantor, even when admitted in the suit, is not permitted to urge any defenses not urged by the defendant himself; and that inasmuch as it was admitted in the answer of defendant that nobody has been in actual possession of the land in question, the warrantor cannot prove possession in order to make out his title.

That contention is answered by the article of the Code of Practice quoted above which provides that the warrantor may plead exery exception in defending the case which the defendant himself might have pleaded, even such as are personal to the defendant.

With reference to the allegation of the plaintiff that the property involved' is “wild land, that nobody has been in actual physical possession thereof”, which allegation is admitted by the defendant, we think counsel for plaintiff are in error in their construction or interpretation of the meaning of that allegation.

Plaintiff argues that the above quoted allegation means that no one has ever been in possession of said land. We do not Interpret the allegation to mean that. We think that clause should be construed in connection with the act under which the suit was brought. Under that act it is not necessary to allege that no [172]*172one has ever been in possession .of the land but only that no one is in actual possession thereof at the time of the suit.

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Bluebook (online)
3 La. App. 169, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pardee-co-v-bodcaw-lumber-co-lactapp-1925.