Vincent v. Bullock

187 So. 35, 192 La. 1, 1939 La. LEXIS 1055
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
DocketNo. 35088.
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 187 So. 35 (Vincent v. Bullock) 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
Vincent v. Bullock, 187 So. 35, 192 La. 1, 1939 La. LEXIS 1055 (La. 1939).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice.

This is an action in jactitation or slander of title. The object of the suit is to annul and cancel from the conveyance records of Iberia Parish a certain instrument dated March 1, 1937, whereby the defendants F. N. Bullock and Laura Jacobs Bullock sold and assigned to the other defendant, W. W. Smith, a certain portion of a mineral royalty interest which had been reserved by plaintiffs in their deed to C. W. Wolke, an interposed party, for F. N. Bullock, dated February 22, 1927.

Joseph Gajan, James Kappas, and Arthur E. Schott, each having acquired an interest in the royalty reserved by plaintiffs, intervened and joined plaintiffs in this action.

The defendants admitted the execution of the instrument in controversy but denied all the other allegations of plaintiffs and intervenors, and pleaded the prescription of ten years liberandi causa.

There was judgment in the lower court maintaining defendants’ plea of prescription, and dismissing plaintiffs’ and intervenors’ suit at their cost and they have appealed.

On February 22, 1927 plaintiffs executed a deed in favor of C. W. Wolke, transferring three contiguous tracts of land *7 of ten acres each in Iberia Parish for a cash consideration of $1,800, in which was contained the following stipulation:

“It is however, understood and agreed that the vendors herein reserve unto themselves and their heirs and assigns, in perpetuity, a one-sixteenth (Jieth) royalty of all the oil, gas and other minerals produced and saved from said premises; said royalty to be delivered to the vendors or assigns, free 'of cost of production and a royalty of twenty-five cents per ton for all salt and sulphur mined and marketed off said premises. This royalty reservation forms part of the purchase price.”

It is conceded that C. W. Wolke, in acquiring the property from plaintiffs, was an interposéd party for the defendant F. N. 'Bullock and, accordingly, on September 15, 1928, he (C. W. Wolke) transferred the property to the defendant F. N. Bullock, subject to the reservation made by plaintiffs and without warranty of title. On June 17, 1935 he (F. N. Bullock) transferred the same property (with other properties) to his wife and co-defendant, Laura Jacobs Bullock. On March 1, 1937, Laura Jacobs Bullock and F. N. Bullock, by act executed before a notary public in Houston, Texas, sold and assigned to defendant W. W. Smith a “* ■ * * lsAoth of the %th royalty, or in other words a 1%20 interest in all oil and gas and other minerals produced * * In this deed is contained the declaration by Laura Jacobs Bullock “* * * that there has never been any development or drilling for oil, gas or other minerals on said properties from the date of said sales and royalty reservations * * *.” The recited consideration in the act is $500 in cash and also contains the following covenant:

“This assignment is delivered by Vendor Bullock and' accepted by Vendee Smith with the understanding and agreement that the royalty herein assigned is intended to be exclusively a part of the royalty reserved by the Vendors of the several tracts hereinabove referred to; and without in any manner, expressly or impliedly, recognizing the present validity of said reservations, Vendee herein, Smith, assumes the obligation of defending with the interest herein assigned, the interest retained by Vendor herein, Bullock, out of the royalty reservations now claimed by her, reserved by the said vendors of the Several tracts hereinabove referred to, with the stipulation that the said Smith shall not be liable for any ■ claim for any refund or accounting which the said Vendor may be required to make.”

The record further shows that of the Jioth royalty reserved by plaintiffs in their deed to Wolke dated February 22, 1927, they, on the said date, sold and assigned % thereof to F. E. Delahoussaye and Joseph Gajan. F. E. Delahoussaye, on September 17, 1928, sold, from the interest acquired by him, to Arthur E. Schott, a one per cent mineral interest, and on April 7, 1938, sold the remainder of his interest to Joseph Gajan. Joseph Gajan sol'd and assigned one-half of the interest acquired by him from the plaintiffs on February 22, 1927, to James Kappas on December 31, 1936.

*9 It is plaintiffs’ contention that the reservation made by them in their deed to Wolke dated February 22, 1927, does not fall in the legal category of a. servitude, subject to the prescription of ten years for non-use, but characterize it (1) as being in the nature of a rent charge to become operative should oil or other minerals be produced, (2) as being in the nature of a servitude' contingent upon a future happening, i. e., the production of oil, gas, or other minerals, and (3) or as “* * * being in the nature of a purchase of real rights to come and not in esse, or real right based on an uncertain happening * * ‡.” Intermingled with this contention, plaintiffs invoke the plea of custom with reference to the generally accepted construction of such a reservation as was made in the act in controversy, and the language therein used. In the final alternative it is contended by plaintiffs that should the court decree that the reservation made by them is subject to the prescription liberandi causa of ten years,' that same was interrupted by the acts, stipulations, and acknowledgments of the defendants.

The issues involved in this case have never been squarely presented to this court for consideration and their solution, due to the development of oil, gas, and other mineral industries in this state, is of great importance to the bench and bar, as well as to all others who may be affected thereby. Because of this importance, the case has received wide publicity in the legal fraternity. In addition to the exhaustive briefs of counsel for plaintiffs and defendants, we were favored with several briefs amici curiae, presenting the different views entertained by the members of the bar of this state on the subject matter. Appreciating the importance of the issues herein involved, we did not confine our efforts to the briefs in answering the many questions raised, but devoted much time and effort in an independent research before reaching any conclusion. We also reviewed the treatises and works on the subject furnished us by the members of the faculty of the three law schools in this state, all of which have been of material assistance in clarifying these issues which were otherwise much confused in the minds of both the profession and the laity.

Our learned brother" below was of the opinion, in which we concur, that plaintiffs’ reservation in the deed of February 22, 1927, could not be classified as a rent charge, regulated by the provisions of Chapter 1 of Title 10 of the Revised Civil Code, under the articles beginning with Article 2779.

The Revised Civil Code provides that “The contract of rent of lands is a contract by which .one of the parties conveys and cedes to the other a tract of land, or any other immovable property, and stipulates that the latter shall hold it as owner, but reserving to the former an cmmuil rent of a certain swm of money, or of a certain quantity of fruits,

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 35, 192 La. 1, 1939 La. LEXIS 1055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-v-bullock-la-1939.