Succession of Thibeau v. Hebert

289 So. 2d 551, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4346
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1974
DocketNo. 4270
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 289 So. 2d 551 (Succession of Thibeau v. Hebert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Thibeau v. Hebert, 289 So. 2d 551, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4346 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge.

This is a petitory action instituted by Eve Abshire Richard, Administratrix of the Successions of Telesphore Thibeau, Sr., and Amelie Hebert Thibeau, in which plaintiff seeks to be recognized as the owner of an undivided one-third interest in a tract of land in Vermilion Parish. The suit was instituted against four groups of defendants, each of which claims to be the owner of a part of the subject property.

All of the defendants have filed exceptions of prescription claiming ownership of, the subject property by acquisitive prescription of ten, twenty and thirty years. Two groups of defendants filed a third party action against First National Bank of Abbeville, calling said third party defendant in warranty and -demanding damages in the event judgment should be rendered in favor of plaintiff on the principal demand.

The exceptions were tried, and judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of defendants sustaining the exceptions of 10 and 30 years filed by them, and dismissing [552]*552plaintiff’s suit. Plaintiff appealed, and defendants answered praying that plaintiff be condemned to pay damages for taking a frivolous appeal.

Plaintiff concedes that defendants have been in open, physical and undisturbed possession, as owners, of the subject property for more than 30 years. She contends, however, that prescription acquirendi causa did not run in favor of defendants sufficient to entitle them to the ownership of any of the subject property because the property was owned by the State from 1896 until 1968, and prescription did not run in favor of defendants during that time. She argues that LSA-R.S. 9:5803 does not have the effect of avoiding this suspension of prescription, because none of the defendants was a “purchaser in good faith” of the property claimed by him, and none of the defendants personally redeemed the property from the State.

The pertinent facts are that on July 28, 1896, the land was adjudicated to the State of Louisiana for unpaid taxes due for the year 1895, under an assessment in the name of Hebrard Decuir. On May 3, 1897, the same property was again adjudicated to the State for unpaid taxes due for the year 1896, under an assessment in the name of Hebrard Decuir. On April 23, 1898, the property was offered for sale for unpaid taxes due for the year 1897, under an assessment to Decuir, but at that tax sale the property was purchased by Alfred Baudoin. All of these tax sales or adjudications were recorded promptly in the records of Vermilion Parish.

Hebrard Decuir sold the property affected by the above mentioned tax sales to Te-lesphore Thibeau, Sr., on February 16, 1899, A few months later, on May 19, 1899, the property was redeemed from the State. A certificate was issued by the State Auditor on May 19, 1899, certifying that Hebrard Decuir had paid the taxes, interest, costs and penalties on the land for the years 1895 and 1896, and that the property thus was redeemed to Decuir. This certificate was not recorded in the Conveyance Records of Vermilion Parish until October 29, 1968. Although the Certificate of Redemption was not recorded until more than 69 years after it had been issued, there appears on the face of the recorded 1896 adjudication to the State, written in red ink, the following inscription :

“State of Louisiana

Parish of Vermilion

“By virtue of an order dated May 19/99 this adjudication of the land of Hebrard Decuir to the State is hereby cancelled This 6th day of June A.D. 1899.

[signed] Joseph G. LeBlanc

Dy. Clerk & Recorder”

On the face of the 1897 adjudication to the State, as recorded that year in Vermilion Parish, there appears written in red ink the following inscription :

“State of Louisiana Parish of Vermilion

“By virtue of an order from the Verm. Auditor dated May 19/99, I hereby cancell and annuli this adjudication this 6th day of June, 1899.

Plaintiff claims that she, in her capacity as Administratrix of the Succession of Te-lesphore Thibeau, Sr., is the record owner of an undivided one-third interest in the property in dispute here by virtue of the sale from Hebrard Decuir to Thibeau, dated February 16, 1899. She argues that the tax sale to Baudoin in 1898 was an absolute nullity because of the prior adjudication to the State, and she points out that the property has been redeemed from the State. She contends, therefore, that record [553]*553title to the property is now vested in the Succession of Thibeau.

Plaintiff, although conceding that defendants have had possession of the land for many years, contends that the State of Louisiana owned the property from 1896 (the date of the first adjudication to the State) until October 29, 1968, when the Certificate of Redemption was recorded in Vermilion Parish, and she argues that the running of prescription in favor of defendants was suspended during that period of time. She takes the position that defendants thus have not possessed the property long enough to acquire any prescriptive rights. She bases her argument on the provisions of Article 19, Section 16, of the Louisiana Constitution, Articles 2264-2266 of our Civil Code, and on McDuffie v. Walker, 125 La. 152, 51 So. 100 (1910).

La.Const. Art. 19, Sec. 16, provides that prescription shall not run against the State in any civil matter unless otherwise provided in the constitution or expressly by law. The cited articles of the Civil Code and McDuffie v. Walker, supra, are authority for the established rule that written contracts affecting immovable property will not affect third persons until the date on which they are recorded. Plaintiff contends that the redemption certificate did not affect third persons, and particularly that it did not affect defendants, until October 29, 1968, when it was recorded in the Conveyance Records of Vermilion Parish. She argues that the property thus remained vested in the State from 1896 until 1968, during which time acquisitive prescription relating to that land could not run against the State.

We do not agree with that argument. When the property was redeemed from the State in 1899, the redemption certificate was issued pursuant to the provisions of Act 170 of 1898. There was no requirement in that act that the certificate b£ recorded in order to be effective. The statute merely provided that the certificate “shall be held and taken as evidence of the redemption . . . , and the amount paid shall be entered on his (the auditor’s) records of the lands across the entry of the samé.”

The present statutory provisions relating to the redemption of property from the State provides that the Redemption Certificate will be taken as evidence of the redemption “if duly recorded in the office of the recorder of mortgages of the parish wherein said lands are situated.” LSA-R. S. 47:2224. Although the present law, unlike Act 170 of 1898, makes specific reference to the recordation of the Certificate of Redemption, our Supreme Court nevertheless has held that the Stafe is divested of ownership of the property after the issuance of a certificate of redemption, even though the certificate is not recorded. In Cortinas v. Murray, 224 La. 686, 70 So.2d 589 (1954), where an issue similar to that before us here was presented, the court said:

“The point is not tenable. LSA-R. S.

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Related

Succession of Thibeau v. Hebert
293 So. 2d 183 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)

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289 So. 2d 551, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 4346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-thibeau-v-hebert-lactapp-1974.