Court Opinion

ID: 7170982
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 16:26:22.763674+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:15:43.548226
License: Public Domain

On Rehearing.
MONROE, C. J.
The rehearing was granted herein solely upon the question, Shall the case be remanded? and the reason for granting it was that, in his application therefor plaintiff alleges that, on February 6, 1918, he learned, by chance, that some of the archives of the state land office had been taken in charge by the United States government during the Civil War; that he at once caused a search to be made in the United States land office, with the result that there was discovered the record of receiver’s receipt No. 5499, dated December 1, 1862, showing payment by Henderson Young of $40 for the land, or part of the land, here claimed, the register of receipts being signed by William A. Gill, receiver at Greensburg, as of date January 1, 1863. He further alleges:
“That both he and his counsel naturally assumed, and, until the said 6th day of February, 1918, were not otherwise informed, that all the books relating to the land transactions of the state were to be found in the land office of the state, at Baton Rouge; that neither your petitioner nor his counsel could assume, or had the right to assume, that any part of those records were missing, or, if missing, where they could be located; and that no reasonable diligence that either your petitioner or his counsel could display could or woidd have placed them in possession of this information but for an accident.”
Counsel for defendant and appellant call the attention of the court to the following testimony, elicited from Judge Reid, then of counsel for defendant, but called as witness for plaintiff, by W. S. Rownd, Esq. (now Judge Rownd, but then sole counsel for the plaintiff), upon the trial of the case on April 27, 1914, to wit:
Judge Reid had stated, in answer to a previous question, that, according to his information, “nearly all of the receiver’s receipts that were issued in 1861 and 1862, or at least a very large portion of them, were in existence, or the records of them. He was then interrogated and answered as follows:
*839“Q. Is it any more than fair for you to state that your information is to the effect that they are in the State Land Office?
“A. It is my information that they are in the United States land office, and, in the consolidation, those papers were carried over there: that is my information; I haven’t examined them since. Let me state a little more fully. I went to the United States land office, and, in looking up some land matter, I was informed that, in the Oustom House in New Orleans, were those old records. I understand now, that they are in Baton Rouge, in the land office.”
Defendant’s counsel also call our attention to Act 104 of 1871, section 12 of which reads:
“Sec. 12. * * * That all sales and locations of public lands, made by this state, from the 1st of January, 1861, to the 14th of October, 1864, which are shown by the records of the register’s office, be and the same are hereby confirmed, and patents shall, on demand, be issued in the name of the purchaser, and be delivered to the party surrendering the proof of entry or location, or on making, to the satisfaction of the register, proof of loss.”
[2] While, therefore, it is no doubt true, as the present counsel for plaintiff state, that they knew nothing of the whereabouts of the missing Greensburg records until February 6, 1918, it does not appear that they ever made any effort to acquire any information on that subject, such information as they eventually acquired having come to them merely by chance, and it does appear that, nearly four years prior to that time the counsel who then had charge of the case elicited from opposing counsel, whom he called as a witness for plaintiff, that, according to his information, the missing records were at one time in the United States land office, and that “in ‘the consolidation’ those papers were carried over there” (meaning to the state land office). But as it appears to us, plaintiff’s counsel was put upon inquiry with respect to both offices, and with that information can hardly be said to have exercised even ordinary diligence in abandoning his search, on failing to find the missing records in one of them. He should have visited the other. That, however, is not the only instance of a lack of diligence on the part of the plaintiff and his authors. In a late brief filed by his learned counsel, we find the following:
“Henderson Young received receipt 54=99, swamp land, for $40, 320 acres of land, December 1, 1862. * * * He died July 19, 1863. He left one child, Josephine, who died June 28, 1864. Mrs. Mary S. Evans Chalmers, as widow in community, owned one-fcalf, and as sole heir of Josephine she inherited the remaining one-half. Mrs. Young was seised of right of the land. The receipt went into her trunk, where it remained until ‘last March’ (March, 1912).”'
So that, from the death of her husband (July 19, 1863) to the institution of this suit (September 29, 1913), a period of more than 50 years, the plaintiff and his authors gave no sign that they were the owners of the land in question. In the meanwhile (in 1871), the state passed a law to facilitate those who had bought its lands, during the disturbed period between January 1, 1861, and October 15, 1S64, in obtaining patents therefor, and' it would probably have been easy enough at that time to have traced the missing Greens-1 burg books, but the owner of receipt 5499 al-' lowed it to keep its place and made no request for a patent. Then there was a consol-! idation of land offices, but the book in which' receipt 5499 was recorded .was left in the United States land office, and the officers in the state land office, keeping no record of it, in 1891 issued a patent for the land here in dispute to Charles W. Harvey, who paid his money for it, and was quite as innocent in so doing as was Henderson Young in 1862. As Young went to the proper place to buy the land, and had the right to rely upon it that he would get value for his money, so, also, did Harvey, and he was no more to blame that Young’s title was not then recorded than was Young — not so much, for Young and his transferee had had 28 years in which to find out that their title was not recorded, while Harvey had no reason to suppose that the land which was sold to him had previously been sold to Young, or to any one else. Thereafter, from 1891 to the present time, *841Harvey and his successors in title have paid the taxes on, and done various acts to indicate their ownership of, the land. Young and his successors for more than 50 years have paid no taxes, and do not appear to have known that they had a shadow of interest in the land. It is the opinion of the writer that plaintiff’s claim is barred by the prescription of 30 years, liberandi causa, under articles 3528 and 3548, O. C., but, whether the court should take that view of the matter or not, it seems clear that the claim, being a stale one, is of a class which is not looked upon with favor, and that the indulgence now prayed for should not be granted.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment heretofore rendered be now reinstated and made final.
PRO VO STY, J., concurs in the decree.