Vance v. Sentell

152 So. 513, 178 La. 749, 1933 La. LEXIS 1899
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 7, 1933
DocketNo. 32219.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 152 So. 513 (Vance v. Sentell) 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
Vance v. Sentell, 152 So. 513, 178 La. 749, 1933 La. LEXIS 1899 (La. 1933).

Opinions

ODOM, Justice.

Plaintiffs allege that they own an undivided one-half interest in 240 acres of land in Bossier parish in common with the defendant, John M. Sentell. It is alleged that defendant, Sentell, is now and has for many years been in possession of said property and has obtained certain revenues from the whole of it and has made no accounting to them therefor. They pray for a partition of the lands and for an accounting.

Defendant excepted to the petition on the ground that it set out no cause of action. He also filed pleas of prescription of ten and thirty years acquirendi causa to the demand for partition, setting up that he had been in open, peaceable, continuous, and notorious possession of the land since 1893, believing all the while that he was the owner of the entire interest. He also pleaded prescription of one, three, and five years liberandi causa as a bar to the action for an accounting.

There was judgment recognizing plaintiffs and defendant as owners in common, one-half to each, of the property and ordering the same partitioned in kind. There was also judgment against defendant for $1,050, representing amounts which he had admittedly received for mineral leases and from the sale of timber from the land. It was further ordered that defendant file an account showing what further revenues, if any, he had received from the property.

From this judgment, the defendant appealed.

(1) The conveyance records of Bossier parish show that the land in controversy was originally owned by W. C. Vance, Sr., and N. W. Sentell, Sr., each owning an undivided one-half interest therein. Santell died prior to 1893, leaving three children as his heirs, one of whom is the present defendant. The Sentell heirs partitioned in kind the property left them by their deceased father, among themselves, and the undivided one-half interest in the lands here involved was set apart to defendant. So that defendant, *753 on June 8, 1893, owned the land in common with W. C. Vance, Sr.

Vance died later and his one-half interest is now claimed by these plaintiffs by inheritance.

Defendant does not claim to have acquired the Vance interest in the land by any act of transfer, but says that shortly after he acquired the one-half interest through his father’s succession, Mr. Vance, who was his maternal uncle, told him that he considered the land practically worthless and cared nothing about it, and that if he, Sentell, would pay the taxes on it he might have it. Sentell says that he accepted the proposition, immediately went into possession and from that date, sometime in 1893 or 1894, down to the present time he has been in continuous, uninterrupted, public, and unequivocal possession of the entire interest in the land under the title of owner (O. G. art. 3500), and that he has paid all taxes due on the land during all those years. He pleads thirty years’ prescription.

At the time Mr. Sentell says that Vance, Sr., turned over to him the one-half interest in the land, about 50 or 60 acres of the 240-acre tract were fenced and in cultivation. There was a- house upon it, a well, and possibly some outbuildings. A colored man named Martin Williams lived in the house and cultivated the land for some five or six years after Sentell took charge, and Sentell received the rents. The house burned and the property was abandoned for agricultural purposes. The fences and other improvements either burned or fell into decay, so that now there remains no vestige of any works erected on the property by Sentell or any one else (C. O. art. 3502), nor are there now, nor have there been for many years, any external and public signs “announcing the possessor’s intention to preserve the possession of the thing.” (O. C. art. 3501.)

The date on which the house on the property burned is not made certain by the testimony, but we understand it was prior to the year 1900. At any rate, the exact location of the house and the field cannot now be determined. Even the fence rows cannot be located, although there are signs of an old fence on the line between this land and the adjoining properties. But the location of the interior fences cannot be determined. There is an old well on the land about 75 feet from the line which is now being used by tenants on adjoining property, but whether this well was used by the colored man who formerly cultivated it is not known. It cannot now be determined on what part of the 240-acre tract the clearing and house were located and no evidence whatever that the entire tract was ever inclosed. Presumably, the 50 or 60 acres was inclosed, but beyond this presumption, there is no indication that any of it was ever inclosed.

Erom the time the house on the property burned, which seems to have been about 1900, the entire tract has been vacant. If Mr. Sen-tell or any one for him ever went upon the land after that date until the timber was sold and removed in 1924, the record fails to disclose the fact Mr. Sentell leased the land, or portions of it, for minerals in 1920, but there is no evidence that the lessee developed it

Mr. Sentell alleged that he paid taxes on the land during all the years from 1893 down *755 to the present time. As a witness, he was not quite sure of that. His attention was called to the fact that according to the records in the assessor’s office, he was assessed for only a one-half interest in the land from 1898 to 1903, and that from 1903 to 1913, none of the land was assessed to him under correct description. From 1913 to 1924, the entire interest in the land was assessed to him, but from 1924 to date, the tract was assessed to J. M. Sentell and the Vance estate. He said he paid all the taxes assessed to him and did not examine the records to see the description of the land.

But conceding that he paid all the taxes on the entire interest in the land for all those years, that would not give him title. He claims title through thirty years prescription under article 3499 of the Civil Code. To acquire title by prescription under this article, one must hold corporeal possession under the title of owner for thirty years. Such possession need not be in good faith, but it must be open, continuous, public, and uninterrupted during all that time. The payment of taxes is not possession. It is at most only evidence of intent to possess.

“The ownership of immovables is prescribed for by thirty years.” C. C. art 3499. But in order to maintain the plea of prescription of thirty years acquirendi causa, the burden is upon him who makes the plea to show that he had corporeal or physical possession in the beginning and that such possession was continued during the entire time, or that such possession was preserved for the entire period by external and public signs announcing such possession and the intention to possess. C. C. art. 3500 et seq,; Ramos Lbr. & Mfg. Co. v. Sanders et al., 117 La. 615, 42 So. 158; Loeb v. Fetzer, 155 La. 659, 99 So. 520; Croom et al. v. Noel et al., 143 La. 189, 78 So. 442.

Defendant has failed to establish title by prescription 4of thirty years.

(2) The remaining question is whether he must account to plaintiffs for one-half of the revenues received from the property.

It is alleged that defendant acted all along in perfect good faith. He says he believed that he owned the entire interest in the land and we have no doubt that he did so believe.

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 513, 178 La. 749, 1933 La. LEXIS 1899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vance-v-sentell-la-1933.