Williams v. Triche

107 La. 92
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 13,879
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 107 La. 92 (Williams v. Triche) 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
Williams v. Triche, 107 La. 92 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered bj

Nicholls, C. J.

The plaintiff alleged tnat by public notarial act, passed in the Parish of St. Mary, on the 26th day of October, 1899, before Wilbur H. Kramer, a notary public in the said parish, and a duly certified copy of which he annexed, petitioner purchased from the Leon Godchaux Co., Limited, the following rights:

The right to deaden cut and remove all cypress trees now standing upon the lands situated in the Parish of Assumption in this State, which-he described.

That this right was to last only for ten years, and after that time the right was to revert to the conveyors.

That the said right was a mere personal right to cut thb trees upon the said land, and is, if anything, a mere right or credit, having its domicile or place of being at the residence of and domicile of petitioner.

That the said trees were not the property of petitioner until cut and removed, and only in that way and in so far as he does so cut them [94]*94and to that extent, will they belong to the petitioner. That the property so acquired was not in esse, but it is in future to become such under certain terms and conditions and if property at all was a mere personal right or credit taxable at the domicil of petitioner and nowhere else. That the trees upon that land were mere fruits or crops and, under the law of the State, cannot be separately assessed or taxed from the land on which they are growing, they being in reality still in the possession of the said Leon Godchaux Co., Limited, as the owners of said land, and the right to cut only will give proprietorship and possession to petitioner at some future time and under conditions that may never occur and then only au fur et au mesure to the extent each year of his taking advantage of the contract made between himself and the said Leon Godchaux Co., Limited.

That the said lands are now assessed and taxed rightfully in the name of and to the said Leon Godchaux Co., Limited, and they do not, so far as petitioner was aware, contest the assessment nor the taxation thereof.' That despite these facts Robert Martin, the assessor of the Parish of Assumption, and a resident of that parish, had assessed the said right of petitioner in the sum of or for a valuation of twenty-four thousand dollars for the taxes due the State and Parish Levee Boards thereon, and the sheriff, ex officio tax collector, threatened that in the event of the non-payment he would at once proceed to seize and sell whatever right petitioner may have, alleging that be would sell the trees themselves so that petitioner could not have the future use and enjoyment of his rights under the said contract above set out.

That the whole assessment and attempted levy of these taxes was illegal, null and void as not being on taxable property, and if on taxable property, not taxed at the proper legal domicil thereof. That should the said sheriff proceed to do as he threatens, he will work petitioncr an irreparable damage.

The premises considered, petitioner prayed that the said Charles L. Iridie, in his capacity as sheriff and tax collector of the Parish of Assumption, and the said Robert O. Martin, in his capacity as ássessor of the Parish of Assumption, be cited to answer thereto, that after due proceedings the said taxes be decreed to be illegal and null, and that the said assessment be nullified and made of no avail, and that the sheriff of the parish be ordered and enjoined to cease from troubling, petitioner, and that the said pretended assessment be erased from the rolls of assessment, and the assessor prohibited from again.placing the [95]*95same on the same rolls, and the'sheriff and tax collector prohibiting from collecting the same.

Petitioner prayed for costs and all and general relief, etc.

The act referred to in plaintiff’s petition declares that “the Leon Godehaux Company, Limited, sells and transfers to Frank B. Williams (the plaintiff) the right to deaden, cut and remove all the cypress trees then standing on the property described. The sale was made for and in consideration of the prior payment of forty thousand dollars, which the purchaser paid cash. The sale was made in further consideration of the obligations taken by Williams to construct a canal not less than thirty-five feet in width through the centre of the lands described, at his own expense. It was agreed that Williams should have the right to cut down and use all the wood needed for fuel which he might need to run his dredge-boat while digging the canal, and to run his pull-boat to pull the timber off the land; that Williams should remove one-half of the timber within five years and the balance within ten years; all the trees remaining on said lands after the expiration of ten years shall belong and revert to the Leon Godehaux Co., Limited. It was further agreed that Williams should have no right to grant, sell or convey to any party or corporation the privilege or right either to go through the described lands, to construct a wagon road or railroad, whether narrow gauge or standard gauge, nor to drain through said lands except with the written consent of the Godehaux Company, Limited, and that the latter company shall be responsible for taxes upon bare lands made subject to this contract.

The tax collector answered, pleading first the general issue. He then averred that the naked, lands described in plaintiff’s petition were legally assessable in the name of the Leon Godehaux Company, Limited, and the assessor, in the performance of his duty, had legally assessed all of the property rights of F. B. Williams on said land, in accordance with law and the contract between the parties.

The District Court rejected plaintiff’s demand and he appealed. In his opinion in the case, the District Court used the following language:

“The jurisprudence of the State, in my opinion, is settled that intangible or incorporeal rights can only be taxed at the domicile of the owner where the law fixes their situs, and that tangible movables are taxable in whatever place they may be situated. 41 Ann. 645, 49 Ann. 43, 1195.
“This being conceded, the issue herein is restricted to the question [96]*96whether under the annexed act of sale before Kramer, notary public, on October 26, 1899. Williams acquired the full ownership of the cypress trees standing on the lands described or simply a right to become the owner thereof in futuro.
“Under the common law of England similar questions have often arisen and it seems conceded that a sale of trees to be taken away immediately was not a sale of an interest in the land, but merely of so much timber, that where the trees were to be cut as soon as possible, and even assuming that they were not to be cut for a month the test would be whether the parties really looked to their deriving benefit from the land or merely intended that the land should be in the nature of a warehouse for the trees during that period. Marshall vs. Green, I. C. P., Div. 35, 40.
“In other words, the English courts hold that when the trees or crops produced on the land have already matured and can derive no further benefit from the soil but remained attached to the soil merelv for the convenience of the parties they may be sold as chattels, that such a sale does not convey an interest in the land, but is a sale of goods, wares and merchandise.
“Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
107 La. 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-triche-la-1901.