White v. Hodges

9 So. 2d 433, 201 La. 1, 1942 La. LEXIS 1262
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 29, 1942
DocketNo. 36624.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 9 So. 2d 433 (White v. Hodges) 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
White v. Hodges, 9 So. 2d 433, 201 La. 1, 1942 La. LEXIS 1262 (La. 1942).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The plaintiffs, as owners of one hundred ninety-nine acres of land located in Claiborne Parish, Louisiana, which they acquired by inheritance from their father and mother (E. C. White and Mrs. Addie White) and by subsequent partition among themselves, instituted six slander of title suits against the defendants, alleging that they were slandering the plaintiffs’ title by claiming to own a large part of the minerals under this tract of land, by virtue of six mineral deeds and subsequent transfers by the grantees, the last of the mineral servitudes having been granted by the deceased, E. C. White,'on April 8, 1925, to the defendant O’Brien Bros., Inc. They prayed that the defendants be ordered and directed to cease slandering their title and that the mineral servitudes be decreed to have been prescribed by ten years liberative prescription, and that they be ordered cancelled from the public records.

The defendants answered, denying the slander and setting up titles to 82.5% of the minerals in themselves, respectively, by the various deeds, thus converting the action into a petitory one. The defendants pleaded that the ten years prescription of nonuse of the mineral servitudes had been interrupted by a joint lease executed on January 15, 1931; and, in the alternative, if this -lease did not interrupt prescription, it, by its terms, extended prescription until January 15, 1936, before which date the defendants claimed that another joint lease became effective, extending the prescriptive period until January 15, 1941, on which date the drilling of a well was commenced. The defendants also pleaded that the acceptance of rentals by the plaintiffs under each lease constituted an acknowledgment of the defendants’ rights, thereby interrupting prescription. The defendants also interposed, in the alternative, a plea of estoppel, based on the ground that on account of the plaintiffs’ acts in executing the lease dated December 18, 1935, they were induced to execute the joint lease which they would not have done otherwise, and that the plaintiffs cannot now change their position by contending that the defendants have lost their mineral rights by prescription and are not entitled to receive the royalties that the plaintiffs agreed should be paid them under the terms of the lease. The defendant O’Brien Bros., Inc., specially pleaded, in the’ alternative, that when it purchased its interest from plaintiffs’ ancestor, E. C. White, he had already sold all the minerals he owned in the particular 40 acre tract in question and that, therefore, prescription did not run against it until the other minerals previously sold had reverted to the plaintiffs, his heirs, and then, in turn, passed to it by operation of law.

After a trial on the merits, the district judge rendered a separate judgment in each case, as prayed for, in favor of the plaintiffs, but did not expressly order the *9 cancellation of the subsequent transfers of mineral rights. The defendants appealed separately, and the plaintiffs have answered the appeals in the cases bearing the Nos. 16,600, 16,601, 16,602 and 16,603 of the docket of the Second Judicial District Court, asking that the judgments be amended so as to also order the cancellation and erasure of the subsequent mineral deeds from the public records.

The record of the six cases, which were consolidated for trial, shows that the plaintiffs are the sole and only heirs of the late Mr. and Mrs. E. C. White, who owned a 199 acre farm in Claiborne Parish. Prior to the death of E. C. White, in separate transfers, he created six mineral servitudes covering 82.5% of the mineral rights in the land in favor of some of the defendants, the first instrument being dated October 13, 1924, and the last, April 8, 1925. After the death of their father, the plaintiffs and their widowed mother, on January 15, 1931, entered into a mineral lease with the Triangle Drilling Co., Inc., for a primary term of five years, expiring on January 15, 1936, unless the land was drilled by that time. The recited cash consideration was the sum of' $2,000. The lease did not contain any clause stating that the landowners intended to interrupt prescription then running against the mineral servitude owners who had also signed the lease. At the time of the execution of this lease there was a pre-existing recorded mortgage in favor of the Federal Land Bank, which primed the rights of all of the mineral servitude owners. There were also nine judgments against some of the landowners, but they were subordinate in rank to the rights of some of the mineral owners, but superior to others. All of the mineral owners, as parties to the lease,, agreed that the $2,000 lease or bonus money would be paid by the lessee to liquidate the judgments or judicial mortgages against some of the landowners. They also agreed that the delayed annual Rentals of $200 were to be used to pay the yearly installments due the mortgage creditor. This was done.

The defendants contend that, as the plaintiffs accepted the $2,000 bonus or lease money, which went to liquidate obligations that they were not personally liable for, the lease in question, notwithstanding it does not contain any express provision that it was the intention of the landowners to interrupt prescription, had that effect because the only consideration that the mineral owners received for surrendering their 82.5% of the lease money and delayed rental money to the plaintiffs was the extension of their servitudes, and therefore there was more than a mere acknowledgment by the surface owners of the existence of the rights of the mineral owners and definite evidence of intention on the part of the landowners to interrupt the running of prescription.

The plaintiffs argue that as the defendants converted the suit into a petitory potion, they became the plaintiffs therein, with the burden of establishing their title to these mineral servitudes, and that they failed to do so, citing McConnell v. Ory et al., 46 La.Ann. 564, 15 So. 424; Cambais et ux. v. Douglas, 167 La. 791, 120 *11 So. 369; Robinson v. Horton et al., 197 La. 919, 2 So.2d 647; Spears v. Nesbitt, 197 La. 931, 2 So.2d 650.

In the case of Achee v. Caillouet, 197 La. 313, 1 So.2d 530, 536, the Court, in its opinion on rehearing, said:

“ * * * It is utterly inconsistent and irreconcilable with the firmly established rule that a bare acknowledgment by the landowner.of the existence of the mineral rights of another in his land does not interrupt the running of prescription in the sense that the prescription begins to run anew from the date of acknowledgment. To have that effect, the acknowledgment must be coupled with the purpose and intention that it shall have that effect, and such purpose and intention must be expressed in unmistakable terms. * * *
“To hold that Achee’s signing the lease contract evidenced a purpose and intention on his part so to interrupt prescription as to cause it to run anew for a full period of 10 years from the date of the lease would be contrary to reason. It was clearly against his interest to prolong the life of the servitude for that length of time. But it was to his interest to extend the remaining period of prescription so as to malee the lease effective.”

See also Brown et al. v. Sugar Creek Syndicate et al., 195 La. 865, 197 So. 583; Kennedy v. Pelican Well Tool & Supply Co., 188 La. 811, 178 So. 359; and Bremer v. North Central Texas Oil Co., 185 La. 917, 171 So. 75.

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9 So. 2d 433, 201 La. 1, 1942 La. LEXIS 1262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-hodges-la-1942.