Pomeroy v. McFarlain

34 So. 467, 110 La. 338, 1903 La. LEXIS 632
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 1903
DocketNo. 14,675
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 So. 467 (Pomeroy v. McFarlain) 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
Pomeroy v. McFarlain, 34 So. 467, 110 La. 338, 1903 La. LEXIS 632 (La. 1903).

Opinion

NICHOLLS, C. J.

The defendants McFarlain and Harris presented on the 24th of January, 1902, to the district court for Calcasieu parish a petition in which they alleged that in the year 1896 the northeast quarter (N. E. %) of section thirty-four (34) and lot No. 4 (four) of section thirty-five (35) in township eleven (11) south, of range four (4) west, legally assessed to Aladin Trahan, was seized and advertised for sale at tax sale for taxes due for said year after all legal requirements, the sum due hy said Trahan being $5.94, and said property was bid in for and adjudicated to the state; that on the 17th of August, 1901, they purchased the said property for the price of $200 at a sale made by the tax collector of the parish of Calcasieu of property in that parish which had been bid in for and adjudicated to the state at tax sales for the years 1888 to 1898, inclusive, which had not been disposed of by the state, and not redeemed; that a tax deed was executed in their favor on the 12th of October, 1901; that said sale vested an absolute title in them to the property, and they desired to be placed in possession; that Timothy, Charles, and Henry Pomeroy were residing upon said property, and Aládin Trahan, the former owner, was dead, and his heirs were unknown to them. They prayed the court for an order to the sheriff directing him to seize and take said property into his possession, and give notice of the seizure, and that after due proceedings they be placed in possession. An order of court was granted as prayed for.

Upon the petition of Timothy, Charles, and Henry Pomeroy an injunction issued enjoining the sheriff and McFarlain and Harris from disturbing them in their possession of the property described and enjoining the sheriff from placing the last-named parties in possession of said land. In their petition for injunction they averred that by an act olr February 15, 1898, duly recorded, they acquired the property referred to from Charles D. Bonin and Arthur A. Hebert; that they owned the property by a chain of title from the United States government, and had been in possession of same since the date they purchased the same — more than a year before the filing of their petition; that the alleged adjudication of the property to the state of Louisiana and the sale to McFarlain and Harris were null and void for the following-reasons:

First. Because the taxes on said property were paid; secondly, and in the alternative, the said sale was null because of dual assessment; thirdly, and in the alternative, the said sale was not conducted in accordance with law. Plaintiffs, nor the owners of said property at the time of the alleged adjudication, were notified in accordance with article 210 of the Constitution of 1879 of the state of Louisiana and the laws of said state providing the manner of giving notice of delinquent taxes. That the failure of the sheriff and tax collector to give notice aforesaid and to adjudicate the property notwithstanding said failure was depriving the owner of his property without due process of law, and in direct conflict with article or amendment 14 of the Constitution of the United States.

That the said property had never been sold for taxes in accordance with law, and whatever attempts to adjudicate same had been made were absolutely null and void for the following causes in addition to those alleged: Want of proper assessment, as to name of owner, description of property, time of filing rolls, notice of filing of rolls, advertisement of sales, failure to say for what taxes the property was sold, failure to specify time and place of sale. That article 233 of the Constitution of the state of Louisiana, prohibiting tax sales being set aside for any causes but those enumerated therein, was ini conflict with article 1 of the Constitution of the United States, and was an ex post facto and retroactive law. That the property seized aforesaid was well and truly worth $9,-640, and' to dispossess them and deprive them of the use and benefit of it would cause irreparable loss to them. That they should not be disturbed in their possession and own[342]*342ership of the said property. That they purchased said property in good faith, and had improved and possessed same in good faith, having no knowledge whatever of any defects in their title.

Making the usual allegations, they called for their vendors in warranty, and contingently asked for judgment against them.

In the event the title of McFarlain and Harris should he sustained, they contingently prayed for judgment against them for improvements. Plaintiffs’ injunction demand was numbered 4,198 on the docket of the district court of Calcasieu, while that of Mc-Farlain and Harris was No. 4,092 on that docket. The two demands were consolidated. The plaintiffs in injunction answered in suit No. 4,092. For answer they reiterated the allegations of their petition for injunction, averring further: That the state of Louisiana and its pretended vendees, McFarlain and Harris, were estopped from claiming title to said property by virtue of a tax sale, because defendants and their warrantors had been in uninterrupted and actual possession of said land for more than 10 years by chain of title to the government. Though they might not be able to prove payment of the said taxes for the year it was alleged to have been sold, they had and could establish that the said land had been regularly assessed to defendants and their warrantors. That, if the above plea of estoppel was overruled, Harris, to whom the sheriff attempted to adjudicate the said property, had for many years been a deputy assessor, and had regularly assessed the property to defendants and their warrantors, and he therefore was estopped from setting up any title adverse to defendants by virtue of a tax sale to the state of date previous to the date of assessments made by him.

In amplification of the plea of estoppel as to Harris, defendants urged that it applied also to A. D. McFarlain for the same cause and reason, and, in addition, because, as would be shown on the trial, Harris did the bidding on the property at the time it was alleged to have been sold, and, though the deed recited that it was sold to Judson Harris and A. D. McFarlain, it was error, as Harris acted as a purchaser, and the whole tract was attempted to be bid in by him. That MeFarlain’s title that he claimed was acquired from Harris subsequent to the actual attempted adjudication to Harris. That, as Harris was a deputy sheriff connected with the court, he did not and could not acquire title to the property sued for, it being, if any right, a litigious right. That Harris was an officer as aforesaid at the time that he attempted to purchase the said litigious right and that this was well known in law and in fact to A. D. McFarlain, who sought to acquire title to part of said land through Harris. That the attempted adjudication of the land sued for by Harris and McFarlain was an absolute nullity, Harris being a deputy sheriff, as aforesaid, at the time that he bid for the property, and A. D. McFarlain having sought subsequently to acquire an interest through Harris, whom he knew as an officer connected with the court as aforesaid.

Defendants averred that they acquired their title to the said land from Charles D. Bonin and Arthur Hebert, residents of Calcasieu parish, by act of sale dated February 15, 1898, duly recorded in Book 20 of the Conveyances Records of Calcasieu parish.

That they acquired said property mure than three years before the filing of their answer, and had had actual possession of same for that full time.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 467, 110 La. 338, 1903 La. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomeroy-v-mcfarlain-la-1903.