Smith v. Tyson

192 So. 61, 193 La. 571, 1939 La. LEXIS 1212
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 30, 1939
DocketNo. 35288.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 192 So. 61 (Smith v. Tyson) 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
Smith v. Tyson, 192 So. 61, 193 La. 571, 1939 La. LEXIS 1212 (La. 1939).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

This is a petitory action to recover %i2ths interest in 240 acres of land in the Rodessa oil field of Caddo Parish, described as follows: South half of Southeast quarter (S % of SE %,), Section 11; West half of Northwest quarter (W % of NW %), Section 13; North half of Northeast quarter (N % of NE J4), Section 14, in Township 22 North, Range 16 West.

The suit is a companion case to Tillery v. Fuller et al., and five other .cases consolidated, and reported in 190 La. at page 586, 182 So. 683, and would have been consolidated with those cases had issue been joined at the time.

Belle Matthews Smith, plaintiff herein, is in the same position as was Mrs. Pearl Smith Tillery in the consolidated cases, and the defendants are the same in both cases.

In the consolidated cases this Court rendered judgment in favor of defendants, except as to a small interest to Velma Aliene Lowery, against whom prescription had been suspended by reason of her minority.

The plea of prescription of thirty years liberandi causa under Article 1030 of the Revised Civil Code, filed by defendants, was sustained, and it was held by the Court that the rights of plaintiffs to accept a succession as against the co-heir who had accepted were barred by the prescription of thirty years, unless in a particular instance prescription may have been suspended long enough by the minority of an heir.

Plaintiffs concede that the decision in the consolidated cases is controlling here, unless prescription under Article 1030 of the Revised Civil Code has been suspended in favor of Belle Matthews Smith, under the doctrine “contra non valentem agere non currit prescriptio,” based upon the following facts *673 contained in the stipulation of the parties (Tr. 64):

“1. Elizabeth Reed Spearman (Lizzie Spearman) was born October 21, 1861, and died November 29, 1886, intestate. The said Elizabeth Reed Spearman married J. D. Matthews September 29, 1881, and the only issue of said marriage was Belle Matthews Smith, one of the plaintiffs, who was born July 27, 1882;
“2. Belle Matthews Smith married at the age of 16 years; thereafter she was a widow about four years, and is now the wife of Alex Smith, to whom she was married in 1916;
“3. Belle Matthews Smith has been a non-resident of the State since she was four years old, having resided in the State of Texas from 1886 to 1898, in the State of Oklahoma from 1898 to 1916, and in the Republic of Mexico continuously since 1916;
“4. Belle Matthews Smith had no knowledge of the Spearman family of Caddo Parish, Louisiana, her mother’s people, until the year 1935, when she was sought and found in the Republic of Mexico, and was informed of the interests which she seeks to recover by this suit, also of the family history set out in her petition herein for that purpose. Prior to the year 1935, she never knew or heard of Lucy Spearman Wilson, her aunt, nor did she know, or had she ever heard, of any interests which she might have in property located in Caddo Parish, or elsewhere in the State of Louisiana;
“5. Charles F. York and C. E. McClelland acquired from Belle Matthews Smith on August 28, 1935, one-half of her interest in the property described in her petition, as per deed recorded in the Clerk’s Office of Caddo Parish, Louisiana; and C. E. McClelland conveyed to Charles F. York on September 12, 1935, his rights, title and interest in said property, as per deed filed and recorded in the Clerk’s Office of Caddo Parish, Louisiana.”

The present suit was filed March 25, 1939. Belle Matthews Smith arrived at the age of 21 years in 1903. This suit was filed 36 years after plaintiff arrived at the age of majority. The judgment of the District Court sustained defendants’ plea of prescription of 30 years liberandi causa under Article 1030 of the Revised Civil Code, and rejected plaintiffs’ demands. Plaintiffs have appealed.

Defendants contend that the lapse of more than 30 years without any action on the part of plaintiff, Belle Matthews Smith, or those through whom she claims, to recover the property herein, or to accept the successions as herein set forth, bars any claims which plaintiffs may have had.

Belle Matthews Smith inherited from Lucy Spearman Wilson, her aunt, an undivided %i2ths interest in and to property described in her petition. Charles F. York, the other plaintiff, purchased from Mrs. Smith one-half of her interest, and they brought this petitory action to recover said interest. Defendants tendered the plea of prescription of 30 years under Article 1030 of the Civil Code, which reads: “The faculty of accepting or renouncing a succession becomes barred by the lapse of time required for the longest prescription of the. rights to immovables.”

*675 Plaintiffs met the plea with the facts stated in the stipulations of counsel to show a suspension of prescription. The sole grounds urged by Belle Matthews Smith for the suspension of prescription are her non-residence and ignorance of her property rights, as stated in the stipulation of facts, upon which judgment was rendered in the lower court rejecting plaintiffs’ demands.

Article 3521 of Revised Civil Code provides that: “Prescription runs against all persons, unless they are included in some exception established by law.”

Plaintiffs are not relieved from the bar of prescription under this article by any statute of this State.

In Reynolds v. Batson, 11 La.Ann. 729, 730, relied upon by plaintiffs, the Court held that the maxim “contra non valentem ager'e non currit prescriptio” had been applied to prescription liberandi causa in three classes of cases, namely:

“1st. Where there was some cause which prevented the courts or their officers from acting or taking cognizance of the plaintiff’s action; a class of cases recognized by the Roman law as proper for the allowance of the utile tempus. See Digest, lex. 1, lib. 44, t. 3; Ibid, [§§] 7, 8 and 9, lex. 1, lib. 49, t. 4.
“The cases of Quierry’s Ex. v. Faussier’s Ex., 4 Mart. [O.S.],.609; Ayraud v. Babin’s Heirs, 7 [Mart.] N.S., [471] 481, and Smith v. Taylor, 10 Rob. 133, are of this kind.
“2d. The second class of cases are those where there was some condition or matter coupled with the contract or connected with the proceeding which prevented the creditor from suing or acting. See cases of Landry v. L’Eglise, 3 La.R. 219; Flint v. Cuny, 6 La.R. [67] 69.
“3d. The third class of cases is where the debtor himself has done some act effectually to prevent the creditor from availing himself of his cause of action. The following are cases of this class: Boyle v. Mann, 4 [La.] Ann. 170, and Martin v. Jennings, 10 [La.] Ann. 553.”

In Reynolds v. Batson, supra, the Court said further 11 La.Ann. at pages 730 and 731: "Cases may arise to which it may be proper to apply the maxim, but we do not think the present a case of this kind. Certain it is, it is not embraced within the principles governing the classes of cases enumerated.

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Bluebook (online)
192 So. 61, 193 La. 571, 1939 La. LEXIS 1212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-tyson-la-1939.