Parish of Jefferson v. Texas Co.

189 So. 580, 192 La. 934, 1939 La. LEXIS 1148
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 1, 1939
DocketNo. 35218.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 189 So. 580 (Parish of Jefferson v. Texas Co.) 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
Parish of Jefferson v. Texas Co., 189 So. 580, 192 La. 934, 1939 La. LEXIS 1148 (La. 1939).

Opinions

ROGERS, Justice.

This is a suit which was instituted on October 4, 1937, in the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court by the Parish of Jefferson against certain landowners, their mineral lessee, The Texas Company, and certain persons holding interests from the Texas Company, to remove clouds from plaintiff’s title to a strip of land 400 feet in width as described in the petition. From a judgment in favor of plaintiff, the defendants have appealed.

Shortly after the filing of this suit, the defendants joined in an application to re7 move the case to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, on the ground that the suit arose under the Constitution and laws of the United States and that separable controversies are involved. The judge of the United States District Court declined to entertain jurisdiction of the suit, and it was ordered remanded to the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court, Parish of Jefferson, for further proceedings. (

The plaintiff, Parish of Jefferson, alleges in its petition its acquisition in full ownership of the strip of land in dispute from the heirs of Samuel Davis by virtue of a judgment of expropriation, dated December 12, 1921, and registered in the conveyance records of the parish on June 23, 1923. The plaintiff further alleges that by act before McCune, notary public, it “granted the United States of America a servitude on and along said 400 foot strip of land for perpetual use as a right of way for the Barataría Bay Waterway.” This transaction took place on January 19, 1922.

As the Honorable L. Robert Rivarde, presently Judge of the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court, Parish of Jefferson, *941 was appointed and acted as curator ad hoc for the absent heirs of Samuel Davis in the expropriation suit, he recused himself and designated the Honorable Joseph A. McCaleb, a well known lawyer residing in the Parish of Jefferson, possessing all the qualifications of a judge of a district court, to act in his place and stead for the trial of this case.

After this suit was remanded to the state court by the judge of the United States District Court, The Texas Company and the eleven other defendants filed the following exceptions in the order stated, viz.: (1) Exception of nonjoinder of the United States as a party defendant; (2) exception of misjoinder of causes of action and motion to elect; (3) exception of vagueness; and (4) plea to the jurisdiction, ratione mátense.

All these exceptions and pleas, which jvere extensively argued both orally and by brief in the district court, were taken under advisement by the trial judge, and later overruled. The defendants also filed exceptions of no right or cause of action, which were referred to the merits. Reserving the benefit of their exceptions and pleas, each defendant, answering separately, pleaded that the judgment of expropriation was null for want of jurisdiction in the district court and for want of registration in the conveyance records of the Parish of Jefferson; that the judgment of expropriation had the effect of vesting in the parish a servitude only, which servitude it had transferred to the United States government, and that, consequently, the parish was wjthout interest to prosecute this suit; that if the judgment of expropriation awarded the fee, the judgment was null to that extent as being beyond the pleadings; that if the judgment should be construed as awarding the fee, the judgment was violative of the due process and equal protection clauses of both Federal and State Constitutions ; that as the United States was in possession of the property and was treated by plaintiff as the owner thereof, plaintiff was estopped to make the claims herein asserted; and, finally, that even though by the judgment of expropriation, the plaintiff had acquired the fee of the property and even though the plaintiff had transferred to the United States only a servitude, the judgment of the court should restrict the use of the property by the plaintiff to navigation canal purposes.

A short statement of the essential facts,' as revealed by the record, will assist in understanding the legal questions presented on this appeal. These facts are as follows: In 1921, the heirs of Samuel Davis were the owners of 2414 acres of marsh land in the Parish of Jefferson, which they had inherited from their father. Samuel Davis himself had inherited the lands from his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Davis, who had acquired the property from the State of Louisiana. At that time these marsh lands were wholly inaccessible, of no practical use for any purpose.

Under the River and Harbor Act of March 4, 1915 (38 Stat. at Large 1049, 1055, 63d Congress, Session III, Chapter 142, Section 15), Congress authorized the Secretary of War to cause preliminary examinations and surveys to be *943 made at Barataría Bay, Louisiana, and connecting waters. On June 21, 1917, a report from the Chief of Engineers was filed with the House of Representatives, recommending that a canal be cut from Bayou Dupont to Bayou Cutler, on condition that no expense should be incurred by the United States for acquiring any lands and easements necessary for the purpose of the improvement. In 1919 (River and Harbor Act of March 2, 1919, 40 Stat. at Large 1275, 65th Congress, Session III, Chapter 95), Congress authorized the construction of the canal, afterwards known as the “Dupre Cut,” making the necessary appropriation to cover the cost of the canal, but not for the cost of acquiring any lands or easements.

The heirs of Samuel Davis having declined to donate any interest in their lands to the United States government, the Parish of Jefferson, in 1921, obtained a judgment against them, through substituted service, expropriating out of their lands a strip of land 400 feet wide, running through portions of Sections 18, 19, and 20 of Township 17 South, Range 24 East. The judgment awarded the defendants, heirs of Davis, $2 per acre for the 80 acres expropriated. Thereafter, in accordance with the terms of the judgment and as provided by Article 2635 of the Civil Code, the Parish of Jefferson deposited with the State Treasurer, to the credit of the heirs of Samuel Davis, the sum of $160. The judgment of expropriation was registered in June 1923, in the conveyance records of the Parish of Jefferson. In July 1923, the heirs of Samuel Davis, who were the defendants in the expropriation suit, acting through their duly accredited agent, Riley Strickland, who was -also an attorney'at law, collected the amount which the Parish of Jefferson had deposited with the State Treasurer in payment of the expropriated lands. The Dupre Cut Canal was completed in 1925 by the United States government which thereafter, and up to the present time, has maintained and operated the waterway.

On February 27, 1926, the heirs of Samuel Davis sold to the Delaware Louisiana Fur Trapping Company, Inc., an undivided half' interest in the property inherited by them from their father. This sale necessarily embraced the 400 foot strip expropriated by the Parish of Jefferson and also, presumably, the canal. constructed, owned and operated by the United States government, since neither the strip of land nor the .canal was excluded from this deed. The sale was made subject to an undivided half interest previously granted to one A. Delavigne. On January 12, 1926, the Delavigne interest in the, property was acquired by Edwin P. Brady.

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Bluebook (online)
189 So. 580, 192 La. 934, 1939 La. LEXIS 1148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parish-of-jefferson-v-texas-co-la-1939.