Sanders v. Ohio Oil Co.

99 So. 583, 155 La. 740, 1924 La. LEXIS 1866
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 4, 1924
DocketNo. 25902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 99 So. 583 (Sanders v. Ohio Oil 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
Sanders v. Ohio Oil Co., 99 So. 583, 155 La. 740, 1924 La. LEXIS 1866 (La. 1924).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The defendants in five petitory actions have appealed from the judgments rendered against them. The suits have been tried as one case, because the issues and the pertinent facts in each case are the same.

The suits are brought on behalf of two children, Margaret and Mary Sanders, issue of plaintiff’s marriage with Lillie Mae Garrett, who is dead. As a matter of convenience, we will refer to the Misses Sanders as the plaintiffs or appellees.

One of the suits is to recover a thirty-sixth interest in the E. % of N. W. Vi of Sec. 13, in Tp. 23 N., R. 8 W. The four other suits are to recover a thirty-sixth interest in certain parts of the S. E. Vi of Sec. 22, in the same township.

Three of the appellants, namely, the Ohio Oil Company, the Gulf Refining Company and J. E. Smitherman, are defendants in all of the five cases, because they hold oil leases from the parties in possession as owners of the lands. The codefendants in the suit affecting the E. V> of N. W. Vi of Sec. 13 is F. M. Taylor, the lessor in possession as owner of the land. The codefendants in the four suits affecting the S. E. Vi of Sec. 22 are, respectively, A. P Milner, G. A. Hilburn, S.R. Parker and J. H. Hearn, each being the lessor in possession as owner of a part of the land.

Oil was being produced from the land claimed in section 22 when these suits were filed. The plaintiffs therefore obtained a rule to show cause why the oil should not be judicially sequestered; but it was afterwards agreed that the oil companies should retain the proceeds of the oil subject to a final decision of the question of title to the lands.

The plaintiffs claim title by inheritance from their mother, Mrs. Lillie Mae Garrett Sanders, who died on the 26th of October, 1918. She was one of the four children of Mrs. Margaret Bond Garrett, who died in October, 1911. Mrs. Garrett was one of the nine children of the marriage of R. P. Bond and Mrs. Jane C. Bond. Mrs. Bond died some time previous to the year 1888, and Mr. Bond died on the 20th of May, that year. [744]*744The two tracts of land, of which the plaintiffs here claim a thirty-sixth interest, belonged to the jnarital community' between Mr. and Mrs. R. Pi Bond, and Mrs. Margaret Bond Garrett, grandmother of the plaintiffs, inherited a ninth interest in the lands. That .fact is not disputed.

The defendants contend that Mrs. Margarét Bond Garrett, who was ’ the wife of A. J. Garrett, disposed of her ninth interest in the lands, in a settlement of the succession of her father and mother. Having no deed from Mrs. Margaret Bond Garrett, the defendants plead the prescription of ten years, basing the plea upon their possession of the lands, under title'deeds apparently valid.

In the suit affecting the E. Yz of N. W. Yt of Sec. 13, the defendants, trace their title through mesne conveyances commencing with a deed from W. A. Harris to H. W. Garrett, dated the 2d of January, 1902. Garrett sold the land to S. C. Waller on the 14th of September, 1917, and he sold it to the defendant F. M. Taylor on the 22d of October, 1917. The defendants did not, in their answer to the suit, say how W. A. Harris acquired title. As a matter of fact, his title was founded upon -a deed from A. J. Garrett to him, dáted the 26th of August, 1889, and a deed given by the heirs of Mrs. Jane O. Bond to A. J. Garrett, dated the 4th of Jánu.ary, 1888. That deed, however, .was not signed by Mrs. Margaret Bond Garrett, the wife of A. J. Garrett and grandmother of the plaintiffs. The deed for her ninth interest in the land would not have been valid if she had signed it, for the very reason that the sale was made to her husband. Rev. Giv. Code, art. 2446.

In the four suits affecting the S. E. Yi of Sec. 22, the-defendants trace their titles bach through mesne conveyances comme'ncmg with a deed from W. M. Lowe to J. D. Short, dated the 1st of October, 1900. The defendants did not, jn their answers to the suits, say how W. M. Lowe acquired title. As a matter of fact, he and O. D. Lowe bought the land from-T. T. Lowe on the 4th of January, 1898; and O. D. Lowe sold his half interest to W. M. Lowe on the'20th of February, 1899. T. T. Lowe had bought the land from the heirs of the deceased R. P. Bond and wife, on the 28th of December, 1888. The deed was not signed by Mrs. Margaret Bond Garrett, but was signed by her husband, A. J. Garrett, ’under an express obligation to warrant and defend the title, as if he was one of the nine heirs owning the land.

In support. of the allegation that Mrs. Margaret Bond Garrett had disposed of her ninth interest in the succession of her father and mother, the defendants introduced in evidence three documents, viz.: (1) A power of attorney given by the heirs of R. P. Bond and wife to T. T. Lowe, dated the 5th of June, 1888; (2) a receipt given to T. T. Lowe by several of the heirs of R. P. Bond and wife, for the shares received from the succession’ of R. P. J5ond, the receipt being also dated the 5th of June, 1888; (3) an agreement on the part of several of the heirs of R. P. Bond to settle the succession out of court, the agreement being dated the 6th of June, 1888.

The receipt given by some of the Bond heirs to T. T. Lowe, dated the 5th of June, 1888, and the agreement on the part of some of the heirs, dated the 6th of June, 1888, to settle the succession out of court, have no importance in these suits, because the documents were not signed by Mrs. Margaret Bond Garrett. We say that these documents are not important; but they are somewhat important in this, that the absence of Mrs. Garrett’s signature from the documents which are signed by the other heirs of R. P. Bond and wife is a circumstance in favor of the plaintiffs’ claim that Mrs. Garrett did not dispose of her ninth interest in the succession of her parents.

[746]*746The power of attorney given by the Bond heirs to T. T. Lowe, dated the 5th of June, 1888, did not authorize a sale of real estate. It merely authorized Lowe, in a general way, to manage the succession, viz.:

“To carry out contracts already entered into by the said R. P. Bond for the year 1888, to make such purchases and sales as may be necessary, to receive and pay out such'moneys as may be due to or from the said succession, valued at nine thousand three hundred and fifty-three dollars ($9,353), giving and granting unto our said agent full pojver and authority generally to do and perform all and everything whatsoever required or proper to effect all or any of the premises, with the same validity as if we personally present might or could do.”

A power of attorney given in such general-terms confers only the power of administration. Rev. Civ. Code, art. 2996. A power of attorney to sell or otherwise dispose of real estate, or of an interest in a succession, must be given expressly. Rev. Civ. Code, art. 2997.

Even if the power of attorney given by the Bond heirs to T. T. Lowe could be construed as having given him authority to sell the real estate belonging to the heirs, it is a matter of no importance here, because there is no evidence that T. T. Lowe ever undertook to exercise such authority. Even for the purpose of administering the succession, the mandate was not completed by an acceptance of it by Lowe, either expressly or by an exercise of the authority conferred. A contract of mandate is completed only by its acceptance by the mandatory, either expressly or tacitly. Rev. Civ. Code, arts. 2988 and 2989.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 So. 583, 155 La. 740, 1924 La. LEXIS 1866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-ohio-oil-co-la-1924.