St. Maxent's Syndics v. Puche

2 Mart. 193
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1816
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mart. 193 (St. Maxent's Syndics v. Puche) 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
St. Maxent's Syndics v. Puche, 2 Mart. 193 (La. 1816).

Opinion

Martin, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. The plaintiffs claim a lot of ground between the original limits of the city of New-Orleans and the line called Gayoso’s line.

To establish their title, the first document introduced is the process verbal of the adjudication of a plantation, binding on the limits of city, as part of the estate of M. Dubreuil, pursuance of a decree of the superior council of the province of Louisiana, of the 4th of November, 1758. By this document it appears on the 17th of that month, the commissary of the council, and the king’s attorney-general, caused a proclamation to be made, at the bar of the council, that they were about to proceed, the sale and adjudication, to the last and bidder, of the aforesaid plantation, "binding on one side on the limits of the city of New-Orleans, and on the other on the plantation of M. Amelot, having seven arpens and eighteen toises in front, with all the depth, as far as the limits of the bayou (St. John) and Gentilly, together with the main dwelling-house other buildings, the saw-mill with four [194]*194saws, a rice-mill adjoining, a sugar-mill, and brick-yard with two kilns, containing each 90,000 bricks, five large sheds, a negro camp and generally all the edifices and appurtenances, in the state in which they are.” It is afterwards mentioned that, "whereas the most of these buildings are on ground which belongs to the king, which he has reserved to himself and is not comprised in the seven arpens and one half, we, the commissary and attorney-general, have caused it to be proclaimed that it shall be lawful tor the king to take the said parcel of ground, belonging to him, whenever he may see fit, the purchaser carrying away the buildings thereon, and that the whole being several times well and truly explained came M. Villars, who bid 50,000 livres.” The process verbal next states, that on the 1st of December of the same year, the premises were cried for the second time and Henry Dupaty bid 100,000 livres: and on the 11th of the same month, the premises were cried for the third time, and the plantation was described in the same manner, and notice was given of the king’s right to the ground, on which part of the buildings stood, as on the first day, and M. D’Erneville bid 103,000. But, this not being esteemed the just value of the premises, they were cried up [195]*195for the fourth time, on the 18th of December of the same year, and the land was described again as formerly, and as the bids began to he received, M. Villars appeared and produced an order from M. De Rochemore, the intendant, requiring that a declaration of Villars, which had been presented to the commissary of the council, at the preceding meeting, and refused to be received, should be extrajudicially received, and mention of the former refusal made, where upon the declaration was entered on the process verbal. It purports that "in order to avert any reproach or contestation from the last bidder, he declares to us, so that we may notify it to present bidders and those who may hereafter attend, that the house which is now selling is situated, as well as all the buildings between it and the city, on the king’s ground, that it was only in consideration of the late M. Dubreuil, his father, that the king consented that the said Dubreuil should occupy the two arpens and twelve toises on which the house and buildings stand, which two arpens and twelve toises remain, while they pass into other hands, liable to be resumed by the king, at the will of his administrators in Louisiana, allowing the purchaser the faculty of removing the buildings. 2. That the declarant reserves to himself sixty days from the acceptance of [196]*196adjudication to evacuate the premises. 3. Considering himself bound to attend to the interests of the minors, his nephews, whose subrogate tutor he is, the creditors and his own, he understands that the surety, to be given by the purchaser, &c. which conditions” says the process verbal, having been read and explained with an audible voice by the crier, proclamation was made that the plantation was sold, as it was described, payable one half in six months, &c. and M. Delachaise, being the last and highest bidder for the sum of 130,000 livres, the property was finally adjudicated to him : he binding himself to the payment of said sum, to remove all the buildings which stand on the king’s, land, &c.”

About, the year 1774, Delachaise died, and the premises were seized and sold, at the suit of the king of France’s agent in Louisiana, and purchased by Mad. Gauvray de Mauleon: but the deed which she received is admitted to be lost.

On the 4th of October 1776, this lady sold the premises to Gilbert de St. Maxent, describing them as containing seven arpens and one half in front, bounded on one side by the stakes which served as a wall to the city, on the other by Amelot’s land, the whole as she had bought [197]*197it, at the auction of Delachaise’s property on the 22d of March, 1774.

On the 12th of August 1789, St. Maxent sold the premises to Laurent Sigur, mentioning the limits of the city, as the upper ones of the plantation.

In the year 1792, the Baron de Carondelet caused new fortifications to be thrown around the city, and for this purpose a part of the premises was taken, and Sigur instituted for the rescission of the sale a suit, which was in 1795 converted into a suit to cause himself to he maintained in his possession by the heirs of St. Maxent, who was now deceased, or to obtain damages for the part of the premises taken for the fortifications.

In the year 1797, Sigur instituted a suit to obtain from the Spanish government, an indemnification for the lands occupied by the Spanish fortifications, beyond the French, but the decree denied him any relief, saving, however, his remedy against the estate of St. Maxent.

In 1798, Sigur sold the premises to Marigny, describing them as the plantation, which he had bought from St. Maxent, with an exception of the land which had been taken from him, for the Spanish fortifications, and instituted a suit against the estate of St. Maxent, in which [198]*198$25,557 were allowed him for the land, beyond that which had been sold to him by Mad. de Mauleon "which St. Maxent had no right to sell”.

In 1811, Sigur instituted another suit, praying an additional indemnification for some land taken for the Spanish fortification, beyond the French, and recovered $3194. In consequence of these two recoveries, the plaintiffs contend they have reacquired their title to the premises thus taken illegally, as they allege, by the Spanish government.

The defendants claim under the corporation of the city of New-Orleans.

It is admitted that in the year 1760, the first fortifications were thrown around the city, commonly known under the name of the French fortifications.

Several witnesses deposed that, at the time of the first adjudication of the plantation to Delachaise, the mansion house stood between the city and the canal, on the ground afterwards resumed by government.

After the demolition of the French fortifications in 1780, St. Maxent took possession of the land as far as the city, with the knowledge of the Spanish governor, and erected thereon some buildings, which he rented out.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Mart. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-maxents-syndics-v-puche-la-1816.