Peters v. Crawford

185 So. 716
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 5801.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 185 So. 716 (Peters v. Crawford) 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
Peters v. Crawford, 185 So. 716 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

This is a petitory action wherein the plaintiff alleges himself to be the owner and entitled to the possession, admitted to be in defendant, of the following described land in Morehouse Parish:

Sys of NE14 of SW% and SYs of the NWi/4 of SE14 of Section 21, Township 22 North, Range 8 East, containing 16 acres, more or less.

He alleges that he purchased this land with other tracts adjacent from Mrs. Eliza Humphrey et.al on December IQ, 1935, according to deed registered in Conveyance Book 82, folio 446, of the records of More-house Parish.

Defendant admits he has no deed to the lands, but avers that in September, 1903, he went into the actual and physical possession of the said S% of NE% of SW^, Section 21, containing eight acres, more or less, under the belief that he had purchased same from W. P. Humphrey; that by the 1st of December, 1905, he had the entire tract fenced, partly cleared of timber and partly in cultivation; had erected thereon a residence in which he lived, and the usual farm outhouses; that such possession and occupancy has continued without disturbance or interruption since its incipiency. He avers that by virtue of his alleged thirty years’ possession of this 8-acre tract, he has acquired ownership thereof, and specially pleads the prescription of thirty years’ acquirendi causa in bar of the claim thereto set'up by plaintiff.

Defendant further alleges that he purchased the SW^ of SE14, Section 21, Township 22 North, Range 8 East, in 1916 from J. B. McKoin and, thinking and believing that the eight acres described as S% of NWy4 of SE^ of that section was covered by that 40-acre tract, went into possession thereof, cleared it of timber, fenced and otherwise improved it. He does not assert title or ownership to this tract through possession or prescription or otherwise.

In the alternative, defendant avers himself to be a possessor in good faith and, in the event of eviction from any or all of said two 8-acre tracts, prays for judgment against plaintiff for the value of the improvements placed by him thereon, etc.

The plea of prescription was sustained as to 5.16 acres of the S% of NEI4 of SWy^, Section 21, but otherwise denied. The judgment is wholly silent as to defendant’s reconventional demand for the value of the improvements on the other acreage and the cost of clearing the land.

*718 Defendant appealed. In answer to the appeal, plaintiff prays that the plea of prescription be wholly denied.

Plaintiff deraigned his title, consisting of more than a dozen patents, deeds, etc., beginning with the transfer to the State by the United States and ending in himself. All of these documents are specifically described in the petition but were not made a part thereof by reference or by physical annexation. In obedience to a prayer for oyer and the court’s order thereon, certified copies of these documents were produced, and the rule was declared discharged. These certified copies were not. formally offered or introduced fn evidence by plaintiff during the trial of the case. In oral argument, counsel for defendant makes the point that since these documents were not introduced in evidence, they are not now before the court and as a result plaintiff, as is required in a petitory action, has not established his asserted ownership of the land in controversy. We do not think the point well taken.

Plaintiff’s demand is founded upon these documents. They are all specifically named in his petition as forming his chain of title. They were produced in limine at the instance of defendant, and thereby became a part of the pleadings. In a case of this character, the pleadings need not be introduced in evidence as a condition precedent lo the court’s consideration of them in determining the issues therein raised.

In Noble v. Plouf, 154 La. 429, 97 So. 599, it is held: “In response to a prayer for oyer, plaintiff filed in court copies of ail. the documents upon which his action is' founded. These documents, forming part of plaintiff’s demand, are controlling wherever they are at variance with the allegations of the petition.”

This court, in Rawleigh Co. v. Thrasher, 153 So. 719, 720, wherein, under a prayer for oyer, an itemized account was produced, said [page 721]: “Defendants prayed for oyer of an itemized account, and when it was filed, it became a part of the pleadings and controlled the allegations of the petition, * * *.”

In support of this rule, see, also, Baldwin Lumber Company v. Todd, 124 La. 543, 545, 50 So. 526; Mower v. Barrow et al., 16 La.App. 227, 133 So. 782.

The point is not well taken for the additional reason that in his answer defendant admits that plaintiff’s deed from the heirs of W. P. Humphrey et al, declared upon in his petition, does include the land herein sued for; and where, as in this case, defendant admits he is without any record title whatsoever, plaintiff is not required to establish title good as against the world.

Defendant failed to introduce in evidence the deeds whereby he acquired the two forties adjacent to and immediately south of said two 8-acre- tracts. But as to these deeds, as is also true of some of the deeds in plaintiff’s chain of title, a copious amount of parol testimony was given, without objection, which establishes their dates, purport and registration.

In April, 1904, defendant purchased from W. P. Humphrey the SE]4 of SW}4 of Section 21 in Township 22 North, Range 8 East. The tract was then wholly undeveloped and carried a growth of hardwood timber. At that time defendant was a tenant of Humphrey. He had been married only two or three years and desired to procure a piece of fertile land on which to establish for himself and wife a humble home. The tract was inspected by the parties and Humphrey suggested the site on which to erect a residence. He was quite certain this site was embraced within the forty acres he thereafter deeded to defendant. Over thirty years elapsed before the contrary was discovered. The north line of the forty acres is 265 feet farther south than they thought and believed. Defendant’s first clearing and improvements, which began early in 1904, bordered the line then erroneously believed to be the north limit of the forty.' During the long period of his possession of these lands, both tracts were actually owned by W. P. Humphrey and his heirs, following his death, until the sale to plaintiff. The Humphreys^ owned other improved land adjacent and cultivated same until sold to plaintiff. Defendant was not disturbed in his possession until the filing of the present suit on April 9, 1936. Over a period of years he cleared and fenced the entire 8-acre tract on the north side of the SE]4 of SW^j Section 21, and, after acquiring the SW^ of SE]4 of Section 21 from McKoin in 1916, he extended his clearing operations and improvements on to the S% of NW]4 of *719 SE}4 adjacent, adopting as the north line thereof a projection of the north line of the other 8-acre tract. However, when this suit was filed, only the west half of the tract had been cleared of timber and enclosed.

There can exist no semblance of doubt of defendant’s utter good faith in his possession of these small tracts of land. Every fact and circumstance unmistakably support such a conclusion.

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185 So. 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-crawford-lactapp-1939.