Staring v. Grace

Decision Date04 October 1957
Docket NumberNo. 4438,4438
Citation97 So.2d 669
PartiesMrs. Margaret Lill STARING et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. William L. GRACE, Jr., Defendant-Appellat.
CourtCourt of Appeal of Louisiana — District of US

Obier & Middleton, Plaquemine, for appellant.

Borron, Owen, Borron & Delahaye, Plaquemine, for appellee.

TATE, Judge.

The widow and children of Dr. Houston Staring brought this jacitory action to establish their right to possession of a certain 61-acre tract in Iberville Parish and to annul a 1939 tax sale thereof to defendant Grace.1 By defendant's answer claiming title, this suit was converted by defendant into a petitory action, with defendant having the burden of proving his title to the land.

Defendant appeals from adverse judgment recognizing plaintiffs' ownership of the property in question and annulling the tax deed upon which defendant relies as the basis of his title.

This tract originally belonged to Dr. Staring's father, Joseph Staring, who died in 1920. (Dr. Staring himself passed away in 1928.) The property was assessed on the tax rolls of Iberville Parish to the 'estate of Joseph Starring' from 1920 right on up at least through 1951, immediately prior to the present suit; and it was under this assessment that the land was sold on July 1, 1939, for the unpaid taxes of 1938 by tax sale deed recorded on July 6, 1939.

Plaintiffs urge the invalidity of the tax sale due to lack of notice to the true owners, relying upon such cases as Di Giovanni v. Cortinas, 216 La. 687, 44 So.2d 818; Gottlieb v. Babin, 197 La. 802, 2 So.2d 218; see also Scheller v. Goode, La.App. 1 Cir., 69 So.2d 96. The record indicates this contention as to the original invalidity of the tax sale to be correct.

The serious question before us, however, is whether despite this original invalidity, plaintiffs are barred from attacking the tax sale by the constitutional peremption of five years, Article 10, Section 11, La. Constitution, of 1921, LSA-Const., which applies even when no notice of the tax sale is given.

Only two grounds are recognized to evade application of this peremptive bar to annulment of tax sales despite any original invalidities thereof: (1) proof of prior payment of taxes for which the property was sold; (2) continued corporeal, physical possession of the property after the tax sale, by the tax debtor previously owning the property, sufficient to prevent the accrual of the five years' peremption in favor of the tax purchaser at the tax sale--such open and active possession being said to constitute a constant protest against the tax title preventing the accrual of prescription. Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Marks, 225 La. 805, 74 So.2d 36; Thurmon v. Hogg, 225 La. 263, 72 So.2d 500; Cortinas v. Murray, 224 La. 686, 70 So.2d 589; King v. Moresi, 223 La. 54, 64 So.2d 841; Allen v. Morgan, La.App. 2 Cir., 80 So.2d 202; Scheller v. Goode, La.App. 1 Cir., 69 So.2d 96.

There is and was no habitation upon the tract in question, which was (except for the cultivateable front 5--15 acres) mostly wood and marsh land. Tenants of the plaintiffs were proved to have exercised upon, corporeal, and physical possession by agricultural cultivation of the property up to 1933, and from 1946 up to the date of the trial. During the period between 1933 and 1946, there was no agricultural cultivation, occupancy by tenants, or timber cutting exercising possession by or for plaintiffs; and although on three sides the neighboring landowners (not the tax debtors) maintained the fences, the barbed wire strands were down along the tract's front, or road side, and the land was an open pasture for the neighborhood cattle. During this interval (1933--1946) that the tract was unrented, the property was periodically inspected for timber trespassing by plaintiffs, their relatives, or Harry Reece, a friend who lived near the property.

Based upon the burden of proving his title placed upon defendant Grace, as plaintiff in the petitory action, the learned trial court held that Grace, as tax sale purchaser, had the burden of proving that possession of the tax debtors had Not suspended the peremptive five years. The trial court then held that in view of the admitted non-possession of the tax purchaser following the tax sale, the sole possession over the tract in question had continued to be exercised by the tax debtors through their general supervision of the tract and through their continued payment of the subsequent taxes thereupon.

It is with some regret that we must disagree with the conclusions of our learned brother below, recognizing as we must that our contrary resolution of this legal question forces us to reach a result which does not strike us as being as fair as that which he reached. (For by the simple payment of $10.98 back in 1939, without taking the slightest step to take possession of the land or to notify the widow of her lapse in the tax payment, the tax purchaser obtains by the result we have reached title to this valuable tract of land, upon which he never paid the taxes and upon which the widow has paid the taxes for herself and the other owners--her children--every year from 1920 up to the present, except for those of the year 1938.)

But the party relying upon possession as an avoidance of the prescription in favor of the tax purchaser appears to have the burden of proving same, Board of Com'rs, etc. v. Sperling, 205 La. 494, 17 So.2d 720. Further, such prescription does accrue in favor of the tax sale purchaser if the possession by the tax debtor is merely civil or constructive, such as by payment of taxes or that following an initial corporeal possession; for the only type of possession permitted by its nature of continuous protest to serve to prevent the perfection of the peremptive bar to annulment of the tax sale is an actual, physcal, active, open, and continuing exercise of the right of possession by the tax debtor, Meshell v. Bauer, 215 La. 619, 41 So.2d 237; Stone v. Kimball's Heirs, 199 La. 240, 5 So.2d 758; Pill v. Morgan, 186 La. 329, 172 So. 409 Levenberg v. Shanks, 165 La. 419, 115 So. 641; Allen v. Morgan, La.App. 2 Cir., 80 So.2d 202, 203.

For instance, in Board of Com'rs v. Sperling, 205 La. 494, 17 So.2d 720, at pages 722--723, it is stated that the burden of the tax debtors seeking to avoid the peremptive bar to annulment of the tax sale is 'to show actual corporeal possession by which they exercised Some claim of exclusive dominion over the property, a claim operating as a continuing protest against the tax title.' (Italics ours.)

That the nominal supervision over the land exercised by plaintiffs' friend during the years 1933 and 1946 (and specifically from July 6, 1939, when the tax sale was recorded, through July 6, 1944, when the peremptive five years expired) does not constitute five apparent corporeal detention of the tract as to satisfy this jurisprudential test of the possession required, can we think best be shown by the actual testimony of plaintiff Mrs. Staring and Harry Reece as to the nature of his supervision over the property.

Mrs. Staring's testimony is as follows:

'A. Well, that was beginning on the termination (in 1933) of the lease with Barnes; then is when I asked Harry Reece, or he asked me if he might run his cattle in there, and I said he might, with the consideration of looking after the property for me, and he did so until the time that I leased to the Thomases. (Tr...

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