Wilson v. Marshall

10 La. Ann. 327
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 10 La. Ann. 327 (Wilson v. Marshall) 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. Marshall, 10 La. Ann. 327 (La. 1855).

Opinion

Spoitord, J.

The plaintiff, as sole surviving heir of John Wilson, deceased, claims of the defendant a tract of 301 arpents of land in the parish of Concordia, by virtue of a certificate of confirmation granted to her ancestor on the 11th May, 1811.

The defendant sets up a title to the same land through divers mesne conveyances from one Jonathan Thompson, who is said to have acquired all the interest of John Wilson in the said tract by virtue of two sales for taxes, made by the Parish Judge of Concordia, one on the 9th of January, 1813, and tho other on the 8th of May of tho same year. A plea of prescription is also interposed in bar of the plaintiff’s action.

The heirship of the plaintiff and the validity of the mesne conveyances from Jonathan Thompson to Lenin JS. Marshall appear to be undisputed, and the cause has been argued solely upon the questions whether the tax sales effected a divestiture of Wilson’s title, and whether the defendant has acquired a title by proscription.

The defendant alleges that the land claimed was soid to Thompson for taxes assessed against it in the name of John Wilson, for the years 1811 and 1812. In support of that position he has adduced in evidence from the archives of the State, duly certified copies of the tables of apportionment of taxes for the parish of Concordia for those years, which by tho 4th Section of the Act of the Legislature of tho Territory of Orleans, approved April 10 th, 1807, were required to be made out by the parish judge from the returns of three appraisers, to be appointed according to a previous section of the same act. (Sess. Acts, 1807, p. 140.)

A copy of the report of the three appraisers for the year 1812 has also boon offered in evidence.

Upon the apportionment roll of 1811 the name of John Wilson figures as the owner of 320 acres of land in the parish of Concordia, appraised at $700, against which is assessed the sum of $2 05.

On the roll of 1812 he appears as the owner of 400 acres, appraised at $800, on which the sum of $2 60 is assessed. The number of acres and the valuation correspond with the tableau of the appraisers for the same year.

On the 9th of January, 1813, James Dunlap, under his official signature as judge of the parish of Concordia, executed a deed to Jonathan Thompson, in which he recited that on the day of the date thereof he “ did expose to public [329]*329auction a certain tract or parcel of land situate in the parish aforesaid, on lake Concordia, about eight miles from the town of Yidalia, containing three hun-dí ed and twenty acres, be the same more or less, being the same tract of land returned by the appraisers for the year 1811, in the name and as the property of a certain John Wilson, for taxes due on said land for the year 1811, amounting to $4 11, as well as the further sum of $10 for the costs and charges in making the seizure and sale of said tract of land for the taxes aforesaid, agreeably to the provisions of the statute in such case made and provided, at which said auction the said Jonathan Thompson bid the sum of $14 11 for the said tract of land, and no person bidding more, the same was struck off to him the said Jonathan Thompson.”

The original deed of the land to Thompson has been produced, and appears to have been duly recorded in the Parish Judge’s office, on the 30th January, 1813.

Another deed of similar form was executed on the Sth of May, 1813, by the same person, styling himself “ late Judge of the Parish of Concordia, and tax-collector therein,” purporting to convey to the same vendor “ a tract of land on lake Concordia, about six miles from the town of Vidalia, containing 400 acres, more or less, being the same tract of land returned by the appraisers for the year 1812, in the name and as the property of John Wilson, for the taxes due on said land for the year 1812, viz : $3 90, as well as $10 costs and charges,” which land was adjudicated to Thompson, as the last bidder, for $13 90.

This deed was recorded in the office of the parish judge on the 15th January, 1824.

There is no proof of actual possession, under these deeds, by Thompson or any of his vendees until the year 1881. Ever since then the defendant or his authors have been in possession.

A formidable array of objections have been made to these deeds as evidence of title in the defendants.

The view we take of the case makes it unnecessary to notice more than one of the objections.

It is asserted, and correctly asserted, that the deeds do not give a sufficient legal description of the land they purport to convey.

When the power of the government is interposed to divest private titles to real estate, it is necessary, under pain of nullity, that the estate sought to be divested should bo described so that it may be identified. The title should show on its face, or by reference to accessible public documents, what is taken from the owner and transferred to the purchaser, especially when, as in this case, the purchaser is not put in possession. Carmichael v. Aiken, 13 L. R. 211; Lyon v. Hunt, 11 Ala. 295; Hughey v. Barrow. 4 Ann. 252; McGary v. Dunn, 1 Ann. 338; McManus v. Stephens, 10 Ann.; Alexander v. Walker, 8 Gill, 239 ; Raymond v. Longworth, 4 McLean, 481; S. C. 14 How. 76.

Now, the deeds of the parish judge to Thompson do not, either by their own terms or by reference to other titles, enable us to say that any specific parcel of land was taken from Wilson and conveyed to Thompson. One of them speaks of “ a certain tract of land situate in the parish of Concordia, on lake Concordia, about eight miles from the town of Vidalia, containg 320 acres, more or less the other deed, which it is protended, conveyed the same property to the same vendor, a few months later, describes it as “ a tract on lake Concordia, about six miles from the town of Vidalia, cóntaining 400 acres, more or less.” Both [330]*330deeds state that the land was “ the same returned by the assessors of taxes, in the name and as the property of a certain John Wilson/” but a reference to the assessment rolls and to the return of the assessors for the year 1812, does not furnish any better clue to the locality of the land, or even as good a clue, as the deeds themselves; for those documents are silent as to its proximity to Lake Concordia and its distance from the town of Vidalia.

There is nothing of record to fix the latitude, longitude and dimensions of the tract conveyed to Thompson; no reference to surveys or surveyor’s marks, to primitive or recorded titles, to natural limits, or to circumjacent properties; nothing to indicate where the new title begins and where it ends; nothing to enable Thompson to put his foot on a particular spot of ground and say, by virtue of the parish judge’s deeds, “this was Wilson’s, and now is mine.”

And there is no statute of repose, for such a title as this, unaccompanied by possession; not being translative of property in any individual thing, it labors under a defect which time cannot cure.

As the defendants, by claiming under and through John Wilson,

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Bluebook (online)
10 La. Ann. 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-marshall-la-1855.