Wilson v. Hoffman

40 So. 328, 115 La. 904, 1905 La. LEXIS 752
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 4, 1905
DocketNo. 15,627
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 So. 328 (Wilson v. Hoffman) 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
Wilson v. Hoffman, 40 So. 328, 115 La. 904, 1905 La. LEXIS 752 (La. 1905).

Opinion

Statement of Case.

MONROE, J.

This is a petitory action for the recovery of a tract of land in the parish of Rapides, described as the N. % of the S. E. % of section 20, township 2 N., range 2 E., which the plaintiffs allege they acquired, as part of “Sunny Home Plantation,” by inheritance from their ancestors, George L. and Jennie B. Wilson. Plaintiffs also claimed the S. W. % of the S. E. % of section 20; but this claim we understand to have been abandoned. The defendants set up title by purchase through mesne conveyances from the same George L. Wilson. One or two questions of practice were presented during the course of the trial; but, from the view which we take of the case on the merits, it is unnecessary to consider them.

It appears from the evidence that Wilson owned, in the parish of Rapides, “Sunny Home” and “Once More” plantations, and some thousands of acres of pine lands, and that on July 11, 1876, he sold a great part of the property to Mrs. Elize (or Alice) Schmalinski, by notarial act reading in part as follows, to wit:

“ * * George L. Wilson * * * does by these presents sell * * * all the entire quantity of land owned by him, situated in the parish of Rapides, * * * with the exception of the following tracts, which are reserved, * * * to wit: All the lands lying and situated in township 2 N., range 2 E., north of Red river, and containing 1,000 acres. Also all the lands heretofore sold by this vendor, as follows: 400 acres sold to David Wilson, 80 acres sold to Gustave Lamothe, and 100 acres sold to Solon Shingles. Also a tract situated on the south side of Red river, * * * known as * * * ‘Sunny Home Place,’ containing 450 acres. Also another tract situated on the south side of Red river, * * * containing 600 acres, the same being known as ‘Once More Plantation.’ A plat, drawn by William Osburn, is hereto annexed and made a part hereof, and the reservations, as above stated, are marked in red ink. The property herein transferred amounting in the aggregate to 26,000 acres, more or less, situated on the north and south sides of Red river, and is as follows, to> wit.”

Then follow particular déscriptions, according to government subdivisions, of a large number of tracts of land, and, among them, one described as:

“5078, W. % of N. E. %, and S. E. and N. W. % of section 20, and W. % of S. W. % of section 27, township 2 N. range 2 E., 480.89 acres.”

This description includes the N. % of the S. E. % of section 20, here in controversy, which in February, 1898, was sold by Mrs. Schmalinski to Miller, and by Miller to [466]*466O’Shee, and by two acts, of date October 13, 1901, and November 18, '1903, respectively, by O’Shee to Gunn, who in December, 1903, sold it to Hoffman and Bowie, the defendants now before the court. The plaintiffs’ contention is that this tract (in dispute), notwithstanding that it was thus specifically and perfectly described as property included in the sale, was in point of fact included among the tracts which were reserved, because, as they allege, (1) it constituted part of “Sunny Home Place,” and (2) .it was marked in red ink on the plat referred to in the act of sale.

Opinion.

Considering the first of these grounds, and speaking with reference to the subjoined “Sketch A,” the inhabited and cultivated land of Sunny Home Place consisted of the greater part of the N. E. *4 of section 21, together with the lot 22, as indicated by the letters A, B, C, D, E. The N. W. % of the section, to the westward, and the S. E. %, to the southward, belonged to Wilson, and were includedin the sale. Whether he owned the S. W. % .of section 21 we have not discovered, but the quarter sections just above mentioned, lying immediately adjacent to the inhabited and cultivated land of Sunny Home, were pine lands, just as were the 80 acres in controversy, which latter, as may be seen, lie half a mile or more away from said inhabited and cultivated land; and we can conceive of no reason why, in making a sale of more than 26,000 acres of land of the same character, the owner should have reserved that tract as woodland appurtenant to the plantation, and at the same time have sold the two quarter sections, nearer at hand and more available for the purposes for which such land is used.

Beyond this, about five months after he had made the sale to Mrs. Schmalinski, Wilson made a dation en paiement of Sunny Home Place to his wife, in which he described it as—

“Lying on the south side of Bed river, * * * containing 450 acres, more or less, bounded on the south and west by lands of Mrs. Schmalinski, on the east by Bed river, and north by land formerly belonging to S. L. Compton.”

It is shown that the land lying immediately to the north of the N. E. % of section 21 belonged or had belonged to Compton, and that the lands given as the southern and western boundaries of Sunny Home are the N. W. % and the S. E. % of section 21, which the vendor, by the act of July 11, 1876, had sold to Mrs. Schmalinski, and which, in the dation en paiement, are referred to as belonging to her. The description, therefore, leaves no room within the limits of Sunny Home for the 80 acres in controversy.

Beyond this, again, there are several witnesses who have lived in the neighborhood for many years and who testify that Sunny [467]*467Home Place, as known to them, consisted of the land within the limits of the N. E. % of section 21 and the lot 22 (as indicated on the sketch). Thus Mr. Dupuy, who lives near • by, testifies that in 1882 Wilson “was going to sell him” the Sunny Home Place, and with that view showed him the corners and boundaries, as indicated by the letters, A, B, O, D, E, on Sketch A. There is other testimony practically to the same effect, and, whilst it is no doubt true that, where a person owns a number of tracts of land contiguous to each other, the name which he gives to the inhabited and planted portion may also be applied to the woodland used or needed implantation purposes, it is equally true that tracts of wild land which are remote from those which are inhabited or planted, and which are not so needed, are in no real sense parts of the plantation; and where, as in this case, a man sells all the land that he owns, save certain tracts specifically reserved, and evinces a disposition to get rid of all his wild land, it would be rather a strained construction to hold that a particular remote tract of that character, specially described in the act of sale as sold, should be considered as reserved, because of the reservation by name of the plantation, and such construction would be particularly strained in this case, since it is not pretended that other wild land, lying nearer to the inhabited land, and therefore more available for the purposes for which wild woodland is used, should be so considered. It is said that the tracts N. E. % and lot 22 (as indicated on the sketch) do not contain 450 acres, and that is true; and it is not altogether easy to understand why Sunny Home is described, in the dation en paiement, as containing that quantity of land. Prom the plat upon which plaintiffs rely, however, it seems not impossible that at some time in the past the S. E. % of section 21 and lot 15, as well as lot 22, were considered included within that place and title; but, whether that be so or not, we ( find no reason for holding that the outlying 80 acres in question were reserved as part of Sunny Home, when they were sold by specific description, following the general description by which that plantation was reserved.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 328, 115 La. 904, 1905 La. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-hoffman-la-1905.