DocketNumber: Nos. 26965, 27050, 27510.
Citation Numbers: 110 So. 630, 162 La. 403, 1926 La. LEXIS 2262
Judges: Paul, O'Niell
Filed Date: 10/5/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
One phase of these cases has already been before this court as No. 26989 of its docket (Rosenthal-Brown Fur Co. v. Jones-Frere Fur Co. et al.,
Transcript No. 27050 is merely a supplementary transcript in the same appeal.
The injunction was sought on the one hand, and resisted on the other, because each party claims the exclusive right to trap fur-bearing animals on said lands.
On May 23, 1923, one F.J. Pavell owned the exclusive right to trap fur-bearing animals off some 100,000 acres of marsh lands in Cameron Parish, including the aforesaid Joyce tract of 30,000 acres, and on that day he ceded his said right to plaintiff for a period of two years for a certain consideration (royalties on the catch). On December 27, 1923, he extended plaintiff's rights for three years longer.
Meanwhile Pavell, who was himself only a lessee of the Joyce tract, sought to buy that tract from the owner thereof, the North American Land Company, of Lake Charles. Accordingly, on December 11, 1923, a deed thereof to himself was prepared in notarialform, which recited that the company sold and Pavell purchased the land for $90,000; of which $30,000 was declared to have been paid in cash and Pavell's notes furnished for the balance. The deed, as prepared, contains also a recital that whereas $25,000 of the cash portion was furnished by one H.J.L. *Page 407 Stark, therefore the latter was to be protected, in case of foreclosure or other "repossession" of the land by the vendor, to the extent that, in that event, Stark was to get from the vendor a deed to a certain 7,000 acres thereof.
Apparently, however, Stark failed to put up the $25,000 at that time, for the notarial act was not completed. It was duly signed and acknowledged by the vendor only (and some part of the cash portion of the price may have been paid), but instead of the act being retained and duly deposited and registered by the notary, as it should have been if a notarial act (Act
On that day the cash portion of the purchase price (or balance thereof) was paid to the bank and the deed then taken out of escrow and thereupon signed and acknowledged by the purchaser (at Orange, Tex.).
The cash portion of $30,000 was furnished as follows: Pavell $10,000; Stark $10,000 (only); one D.D. Blue $5,000; and five others $1,000 each, including the cashier of the bank at Orange, who caused said deed to be duly recorded and at the same time recorded a so-called counter letter as hereinafter mentioned.
The so-called counter letter recited that, whereas said lands had been sold to Pavell (as aforesaid), and whereas Pavell was then engaged in forming a corporation (name, domicile, and capital not stated), and whereas the above-mentioned parties had become subscribers for the stock of said corporation to the amount above stated, therefore he (Pavell) acknowledges that he held said lands together with the trapping leases thereon in trust for the above-mentioned subscribers and such others asmight be secured, in the proportions set out opposite their names, for the purpose of forming a corporation, and *Page 408 would upon completion of said corporation assign and convey to it all his right, title, and interest in said lands upon said corporation assuming the indebtedness thereon.
And on the other hand it was not an acknowledgment that the property belonged to the corporation which had not yet come into being, and possibly never would. A property right cannot for the time being exist in some one who has not, and may never have, any existence; and, moreover, non constat, that the corporation, if it should ever come into being, would consent to assume and become liable for the indebtedness on the land.
Our appreciation of this so-called counter letter is that it was nothing more than an undertaking on the part of Pavell to convey the lands to the proposed corporation "if, when, and as" formed (to borrow an expression from the language of the stock exchanges). In other words it was a mere offer to convey the lands to such a corporation if formed, and if willing to take the lands and assume the indebtedness thereon. All of which then lay in the lap of the gods.
Hence our conclusion is that the lands belonged to Pavell until he conveyed them *Page 409 later on, in the summer of 1924, to the corporation which had then just been formed (Orange-Cameron Land Company), and that this corporation then acquired the lands subject to the extended lease which Pavell had granted to plaintiff. The district judge (Kaufman) so concluded also.
Hence the only question remaining is how much in damages plaintiff is entitled to recover of defendants.
But this is very far from saying that one may not establish exclusive game preserves on his own land, or that another may come upon his premises and kill or capture at his pleasure the wild animals thereon, and that the owner has no redress except vi et armis or through a belated (and hence ineffective) injunction.
The true rule is this, that the wild animals upon the land do not belong to the owner thereof ratione soli; hence one who has not been forbidden to go upon the land of another may lawfully exercise the right (which otherwise belongs to the owner alone) to hunt *Page 410 and trap thereon and may therefore keep for himself the fruits ofa right lawfully exercised, the owner of the land presumably consenting because not objecting.
But one who unlawfully, and against the will of the owner of the land, exercises thereon rights belonging exclusively to the owner, must account to such owner for all the fruits of his unlawful exercise of that right (Gulf Refining Co. v. Hayne,
And neither that rule, nor its application here, is peculiar to this state or even to the civil law whence it is derived.
In Garcia v. Gunn et al.,
*Page 411"It is claimed by defendants that plaintiff had no right * * * to any specific goats; that, while he had the right to utilize and kill some of them, and in moderation, he did not have the right to all of them, or to any particular ones, and that, even though defendants were wrongdoers, the action of replevin would not lie, * * *; that the remedy, if there be any, is for trespass. [But] plaintiff was given dominionover all the goats, with the right of selection for thepurpose of killing or other utilization. This was aright to the immediate possession of all the goats. Itwas not necessary that he should have the absoluteownership of all of them. * * * It certainly cannot be claimed that defendants could go upon that island, and kill 8,000 goats, and carry away their skins (as it appears was done), without materially disturbing plaintiff's right of possession and selection. While trespass would lie, we do not think plaintiff is confined to that remedy. * * * Where plaintiff had a right to the use of the property at will, he had the right to replevy it from a wrongdoer." (Italics ours.)
The case of Sherwood v. Stephens,
Our conclusion is that defendants must account to plaintiff for the profits they derived from the unlawful exercise of a right which belonged exclusively to plaintiff. These profits were the ill-gotten gains of their unlawful act, done to the manifest prejudice of plaintiff's right, and the least they should be called upon to do is to restore them.
And as the trapping operations were carried on for the joint benefit of both defendants (25 per cent. of the gross to the one and 75 per cent., less expenses, to the other), they were clearly joint trespassers and therefore liable in solido; and the trial judge properly so condemned them.
O'NIELL, C.J., is of the opinion that the measure of damages is the plaintiff's loss, not necessarily the defendants' gain. *Page 413
Ring v. Schilkoffsky , 158 La. 361 ( 1925 )
Rosenthal-Brown Fur Co. v. Jones-Frere Fur Co. , 157 La. 887 ( 1925 )