Succession of Zebriska

44 So. 893, 119 La. 1076, 1907 La. LEXIS 596
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1907
DocketNo. 16,489
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 44 So. 893 (Succession of Zebriska) 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
Succession of Zebriska, 44 So. 893, 119 La. 1076, 1907 La. LEXIS 596 (La. 1907).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

An adjudication was made, at judicial sale in the succession of Odelie Zebriska, of squares 117 and 124 and of 24 lots of square 116, in the town of Harlem, parish of Jefferson, at the upper boundary of the city of New Orleans; and, the adjudicatee having refused to accept title, the present proceeding was brought to compel him to do so. His ground of refusal is that, so far as appears from the public records, the property belongs to the city of New Orleans; there being of record an act of sale of it to the city by Wm. Zebriska, the former owner of record, of date March 25,1862, and nothing to show that the title thus conveyed has ever been divested. The city filed an intervention, claiming title by virtue of said sale. Against the city the succession of Odelie Zebriska pleads the prescriptions of 1 and 30 years.

For supporting the 30 years’ prescription counsel for plaintiff in rule was proceeding to offer proof of the 30 years’, possession as owner when counsel for the city interrupted him, saying that there was no dispute as to the facts; that the city admitted that Ode-lie Zebriska had had uninterrupted physical possession of the property since 1866; that there was only a question of law in the ease.

Counsel did not say what that question of law was, but a question of law had been stated in the petition of intervention to the following effect, namely: That Odelie Zebriska, by reason of her warranty as heir of her father, Wm. Zebriska, the city’s vendor, was estopped from pretending to possession as against the city, and that therefore her possession, no matter how much it may have been as a matter of fact for herself, had to be held to have been as a matter of law for the city, and hence that the city, and not she, had been in possession of the property during her occupancy of it. [1079]*1079That contention derives some color from the declaration of article 2476, Civ. Code, that “the object of warranty is the buyer’s peaceable possession” of the thing sold. The obligation of maintaining the vendee in peaceable possession would seem to be inconsistent with any attempt on the part of the vendor to dispossess the vendee and keep him out of possession during the prescriptive period. But this article 2476 must be read in conjunction with article 2502:

“That warranty should have existence it is necessary that the right of the person evicting should have existed before the sale.”

In other words, so long as no one gainsays the perfect validity of the title conveyed, there can be no question of warranty. From this the conclusion is unavoidable that where the vendor, without disputing the perfect validity of the title which he has conveyed, and without in any way pretending to title, seeks to reacquire by prescription the property he has sold, and to that end takes possession of it, as any other trespasser might do, there • can be no question of warranty. Doubtless such a proceeding would be morally wrong, just as it is morally wrong for the trespasser to oust the true owner by violence and hold possession by force; but the prescription of 10 years for movables and 30 years for immovables dispenses with good faith — extends the shield of its protection as readily over the trespasser and the thief as over the honest possessor. And, besides, the moral wrong is not greater for the vendor, while keeping the price, to seek to reacquire the property by prescription, than it is for the purchaser, while keeping the property, to use the same means for avoiding payment of the notes he has given for the price.

In the case of Roe v. Bundy’s Heirs, 45 La. Ann. 398, 12 South. 759, this court said that the vendor is not precluded from reacquiring by prescription the property he has sold.

Realizing, doubtless, the weakness of this-ground of warranty, the learned counsel for the city have said not a word about it in. their brief, but have argued as follows: That. Wm. Zebriska never delivered possession to the city, but continued in possession until his death, when the possession passed by inheritance to his daughter, Odelie Zebriska,. who continued it unchanged to the present day, and that a vendor who continues in possession of the property he has sold must be held as a matter of law to do so in the-name of and for the account of his vendee;, that is to say, to hold by a precarious possession, such as cannot serve for prescription.

In this contention there are involved two-propositions of fact, namely: That Wm. Zebriska continued in possession after his sale-to the city; and, second, that Odelie Zebriska derived possession from her father.

It goes without saying that both of these propositions are contested. And the first thing that strikes us, in passing to the consideration of them, is that it would seem to be-rather late for the city to be raising, in the brief, issues of fact in connection with Odelie-Zebriska’s possession, when on the trial her counsel stopped counsel' for plaintiff in rule-from offering evidence on that point, saying that there was no dispute as to facts, but; only a question of law in the case.

Passing, however, over this inconsistency and apparent change of front, let us proceed to examine, in the light of the evidence in. the record, this issue of whether or not Zebriska delivered possession to the city. At_ the very first step of .the inquiry, in the act-itself which evidences the transaction between Zebriska and the city, we encounter this declaration:

“Accepting and purchasing for the city of New Orleans, and acknowledging due delivery and possession thereof.”

This notarial acknowledgment of the delivery of possession the city undertakes now [1081]*1081to controvert after 45 years, after parties and witnesses are dead and the memory of a man runneth not. True, the door is not shut upon her for doing so, but she need adduce strong evidence; and all the more so, we may add, because, considering that, in the policy of the law, 30 years suffices for title, an admittedly quiet and uninterrupted physical possession of half again as long should not lightly be disturbed or robbed of- its legal fruits.

We have said that the city need adduce strong and satisfactory evidence, and we find that she has produced absolutely none, but that, as already stated, she occupied on the trial the attitude of admitting the facts to be as contended for by plaintiff in rule, and of relying upon some question of law — presumably the one as to warranty, which has already been discussed and disposed of— which had been raised in her petition. We find that for supporting her contention she is relying, in the absence of all evidence of her own offering, upon two letters that were offered in evidence by plaintiff in rule in another connection, and were so offered after the announcement had been made that the city raised no issue upon the facts. The letters may be said to be accidentally in the record, and we cannot help saying that for the city to be now pitching her case upon anything contained in these letters has very much the appearance of an afterthought.

They were written by Wm. Zebriska in June and July, 1866, and were addressed to the local federal authorities.

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Bluebook (online)
44 So. 893, 119 La. 1076, 1907 La. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-zebriska-la-1907.