State ex rel. Texarkana, Shreveport & Natchez Railway Co. v. Smith

104 La. 370
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
DocketNo. 13,426
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 104 La. 370 (State ex rel. Texarkana, Shreveport & Natchez Railway Co. v. Smith) 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
State ex rel. Texarkana, Shreveport & Natchez Railway Co. v. Smith, 104 La. 370 (La. 1900).

Opinion

Statement op the' Case.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This is a proceeding by mandamus to compel the respondent, in his capacity of president of the Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District of Louisiana, to obey the resolution of said hoard, and to sign, as such president, a deed to the relator for the lands described in accordance with and embodying the terms and provisions of same.

The respondent resisted the allowance to relator of the relief sought, and filed an extended return,

Upon the issues thus joined, the judge a quo made the writ of mandamus peremptory; and thereupon the respondent prosecuted this appeal.

Relator’s petition avers that in October, 1898, through its president, [371]*371a proposition was submitted in writing to the Board of Commissioners of the Caddo Levee District, a corporation created by and existing under the laws of this State, to purchase all the lands of said levee board lying above Shreveport, and contiguous thereto, aggregating in quantity about twenty thousand acres — as particularly described in a list of same annexed to and made a part of the petition — for the price of three cents an acre; binding said corporation to pay taxes on said land for the period of not less than five years from the date of sale, and to have its railroad ^from Shreveport completed within that period, or, otherwise, the lands were to revert to said board.

That thereupon the said board received and considered said proposition, and appointed a committee from among its members to investigate and report upon said proposition; and that said committee had, by a majority, reported favorably on said proposition, and recommended its acceptance.

That at a regular meeting of said board, said majority report was received and adopted, and by a resolution of said board, said proposition was accepted, and said property was sold, transferred and delivered to relator, for the price stated — the respondent being instructed to make and sign without delay a deed to said lands upon the payment of the purchase price.

The following is a pertinent paragraph extracted from the relator’s petition, to-wit:

“It being provided by said resolution that the consideration of said sale is not only the three cents per acre, but the advantages to the levee district of the building of the Texarkana, Shreveport and Natchez Railway by said railway company, between Shreveport and Texarkana, through the alluvial section of Caddo parish, and the speedy listing of said lands for taxation; it being stipulated in said resolution, that on the failure of said railway company to build its road to the corporate limits of Shreveport within two years from date of resolution, the said vendee is to retransfer the lands to the levee board and receive back the price; and further, that on failure to pay taxes on said lands, same shall ipso facto revert to the board. A copy of said resolution is hereto annexed and made a part hereof, &c.”

Relator’s petition further represents that the defendant accepted the aforesaid resolution, and filed with said board its acceptance thereof in writing.

The petition further represents that, subsequently, relator caused to [372]*372be prepared a deed to said lands, in accordance with said resolution, and embodying therein the provisions thereof, and presented same to the respondent in the presence of a notary and two witnesses, and tendered the full amount of the purchase price, and requested him to sign said deed as he was instructed to do by said resolution; and that the respondent refused so to do.

Thereupon, “relator represents, that it was the official duty of said president to obey the instructions given him by the board by the resolution aforesaid. That such instructions the said board had the power and right to give him 'as its officer. That the duty imposed upon him was purely ministerial; that the said president had and has no discretion in the premises, and is bound to sign such deed as instructed by said board.”

After tendering certain exceptions, the respondent makes return in substance, that it is his plain duty to refuse to sign the deed as demanded by the relator, and that he has refused to sign the same, because the resolution of a majority of the members of the board of commissioners of the Caddo Levee District, instructing him to sign same, is illegal and null, for the following reasons, viz:

“1. Because said board is the representative of a public corporation, known as the Oaddo Levee District, created by an act of the legislature of the State of Louisiana, for the purpose and object of reclaiming all the alluvial lands in said district from overflow, and in aid of said public enterprise the State of Louisiana donated the lands set forth in (relator’s) petition 'to said levee district for said object and purpose; and said lands or their proceeds are necessary to the carrying out of the objects and purposes for which said district was created; and it is the duty of said board to obtain therefor the highest market value.”

2. Because said pretended sale of said lands embraces all of the lands in said district above Shreveport, now owned by said levee district, and is a disguised donation by said'levee district to said (relator) of said lands; and said levee district has no power or authority in law to donate its lands or property to said railroad.

3. It further returns that said lands are now worth, and were well worth to the levee district, when the resolution of the board of commissioners was passed by a majority thereof, at least thirty (30) cents per acre; and that a tona fide offer for said lands was made at that price [373]*373to the board by a responsible party, which was refused by the majority of said board, and that of the relator accepted.

There are additional grounds of defense that are set up in the return which need no present mention; and it is concluded with the statement that respondent, in refusing to sign said act, acted in good faith, in the exercise of the discretion vested in him by law, and in the interest of the Caddo Levee District.

For the foregoing' reasons, he prays that the relator’s demand be rejected, and that he be discharged from the mandamus.

The judge a quo, in the course of his reasons for making the mandamus peremptory, amongst other things, said:

“The resolution of the board accepting the offer of (relator) to purchase the- land in question, and directing the president to execute the instrument of conveyance, is, on its face, within the express powers of the board.
“The defenses set up are based on alleged facts de hors the record, and are in effect a demand that the sale be decreed null and void; and urged not by the board or any party in interest, but by an officer of the corporation, who, as such, has no interest in the question.
“Such a decree would be ex parie and not binding on the board, which is not a party to this proceeding.”

He quotes from State ex rel. Banking Co. vs. Auditor, 47th Ann. 1679, the following extract as bearing out the proposition he announced, viz:

“In mandamus

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Bluebook (online)
104 La. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-texarkana-shreveport-natchez-railway-co-v-smith-la-1900.