Winn v. Calhoun

94 So. 2d 545, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 1076
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1957
DocketNo. 8652
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 94 So. 2d 545 (Winn v. Calhoun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winn v. Calhoun, 94 So. 2d 545, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 1076 (La. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

GLADNEY, Judge.

This petitory action was instituted on September 10, 1954, by J. I. Winn, for the purpose of being recognized as the owner and restored to the full and undisputed possession of the NEJ4 of SEJ4 of Section 36, Township 10 North, Range 10 West, in Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana. From an adverse judgment the defendants, Willie Calhoun, the heirs of Matthew Calhoun, and R. B. Williams, have appealed, assigning error to the court a quo in failing to sustain on their behalf a plea of prescription of thirty years acquirendi causa. Other defenses urged in the trial court have been abandoned and are no longer urged.

Plaintiff tendered in support of his title documentary evidence disclosing that the subject property was acquired by D. H. Veal from Willie Calhoun and Matthew Calhoun by deed dated April 28, 1922; that J. I. Winn acquired the property from D. H. Veal by deed dated February 11, 1924; that Willie Calhoun and Matthew Calhoun acquired the property from Levy Calhoun on September 27, 1921, and that said property was severed from the United States-Government and placed in the name of Levy Calhoun through patent dated December 12, 1898. Plaintiff averred that at the time of trial the defendants were in the actual physical possession of said property without title and refused to deliver the property to the plaintiff.

The plea of 30 years prescription alleges actual corporeal possession of the-property in question since September 27, 1921, which was the date of acquisition by Willie Calhoun and Matthew Calhoun from, their father, Levy Calhoun. It is averred that such possession was adverse and consisted of “plowing the land, building and construction of homes, barns and outhouses,, using of the area for the growing of crops, cultivation, pasturing of livestock, cutting' of timber” and in general, all the things, normally showing open and notorious physical possession of the properties.

In order to establish the plea of thirty years prescription, it is essential for the proponents of the plea to show that their possession was of the nature and kind required by the statutory provisions-of the Revised Civil Code. Such ownership of immovables may be prescribed for in thirty years without any deed of title, or possession in good faith. Such possession, however, must be continuous and uninterrupted, public and unequivocal, and under the title of owner. Articles 3499 and 3500 LSA-C.C. Article 3436 states that it is essential to the possession giving rise to the thirty year prescription that there be the intention of possessing as owner, and that such possession be corporeal. LSA-Civil Code Article 3437 provides that occupancy of only a part of the land may be sufficient to support a prescription as to the whole, provided it be with the intention of possessing all that is included within the boundaries; and LSA-Civil Code Article 3438 declares it is permissive that the possession acquired by others may inure [547]*547"to the benefit of him for whom they received it.

In addition to the testimony relating to acts of physical possession,' defendants tendered evidence to show that taxes on said property for the years 1922 to 1936 were paid in the name of Willie and Matthew Calhoun; that a homestead exemption was obtained by Willie Calhoun; that a tax certificate for the extension and payment of taxes was executed by Willie and Matthew Calhoun for a ten year period commencing with the year 1930; and that said property was sold to the State of Louisiana in 1933 for the 1931 tax extension ■installment and was redeemed in the names ■of Willie and Matthew Calhoun. This evidence is supplementary to the testimony tendered for the purpose of establishing continued physical possession of the property in support of the plea of prescription of thirty years.

In order to properly understand the •origin of this controversy and the relationship which existed between the parties, we give the following narration of events. Prior to 1921 Levy Calhoun owned two adjoining forty-acre tracts of land, including the subject property which he sold in 1921 to his two sons, Willie and Matthew Calhoun. Prior to this time Levy and his two sons had cleared a portion of both forties and having fenced it in, cultivated it. In the Town of Marthaville, Louisiana, near by, D. H. Veal conducted a store out ■of which he furnished supplies to the Calhoun family and had done so for years. On April 28, 1922, Willie Calhoun and Matthew Calhoun executed a notarial act of sale wherein they conveyed the property in dispute with full warranty of title to D. H. Veal for the sum of $200. Levy Calhoun continued to farm a portion of the property for a number of years thereafter. He died in 1944 and Matthew died in 1933. Some time during 1928 or 1929, Willie Calhoun erected a home and other improvements on the subject forty acres and lived on said property until 1945, at which time he dismantled the house and moved into a house which he erected several miles away.

When Willie Calhoun married in 1923, he and his wife did not live on the property, although Willie apparently had some interest in farming with his father on the home place which included some cultivation of acreage on the forty claimed herein. The record, according to his own testimony, was that during 1924 through 1928 his actual farming was away from the property in question and it was only after 1928 that he moved back to the property. The record seems to indicate clearly that during a number of years after 1921 Levy Calhoun did most of the farming on the forty-acre tract as he had prior to the time he sold it to Willie and Matthew Calhoun. Willie testified that Levy Calhoun paid the taxes on the property for several years.

In 1937 the property was assessed to J. I. Winn and subsequent to said date, it has not been assessed otherwise. Since 1945, the fences have been allowed to deteriorate and only vestiges of former occupation and possession appear. The property, with the exception of about twenty acres, is covered mostly with mixed soft and hardwood timber. Willie Calhoun has on several occasions subsequent to 1945 attempted to remove timber and on each of these occasions was reprimanded by Winn for doing so with demand for payment of such timber as was taken by reason of the asserted trespass. Evidence was also adduced that on two occasions in 1945 Willie Calhoun promised to pay Winn for the timbei taken. In 1952 Winn discovered that Willie Calhoun was cutting timber on the property and threatened him with arrest, and did cause him to be arrested for trespass. This case was never brought to trial, but undoubtedly the continued acts of Willie Calhoun in attempting to remove the timber from the property resulted in the institution of this suit. There is no evidence which indicates in any' way that the possession of Levy Calhoun or of his two children, [548]*548Willie and Matthew, prior to 1928, was hostile to the ownerships of Veal and Winn. Willie Calhoun testified that he first told Mr. Winn of his adverse claim of ownership about the year 1937 when Winn caused the assessment to be changed.

Winn testified he did not know Willie Calhoun claimed ownership of said property until 19S2. At that time Winn had Willie Calhoun arrested for cutting timber on the property. He testified that the occupancy of the Calhoun family of the forty acres was with his permission. He explained that Levy Calhoun and his family had always been good customers at his mercantile establishment; that Levy Calhoun had a large family with his sole income derived from tilling the soil; and that Levy traded with him and paid his debts only from the products of the farm.

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Bluebook (online)
94 So. 2d 545, 1957 La. App. LEXIS 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winn-v-calhoun-lactapp-1957.