MADELEINE M. LANDRIEU, Judge.
In August of 2011, three plaintiffs: Belle Chasse Plantation, L.L.C. ("Belle Chasse"), the Plaquemines Parish Government ("PPG"), and the Board of Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund ("Tulane"), filed individual possessory actions in the Plaquemines Parish district court against the heirs of Felix Villere ("the Villere heirs") alleging disturbance of the plaintiffs'? property rights.
The facts regarding the chains of title of each party reflected in the record are not in dispute.
There is no dispute that neither Felix Villere nor anyone on his behalf ever applied for or obtained a U.S. land patent confirming his ownership of the Property until the Villere heirs did so in 2010. It is also undisputed that the Property was included in Felix Villere's succession when he died in 1877 and was sold at auction in 1878 to satisfy a debt of the succession. Thereafter, the Property was bought and sold several times until 1942, when the United States expropriated the Property and compensated the record owners at the time. Approximately twenty years later, the United States transferred the expropriated parcels to various owners by means of quitclaim deeds. The plaintiffs each acquired their respective parcels of the Property either by quitclaim deed at that time or through subsequent good faith purchases. Belle Chasse, Tulane, and PPG each possessed as owner their respective parcels in 2010 when the Villere heirs applied for and obtained the land patents.
Appellate courts review summary judgments de novo, using the same criteria that govern the trial court's consideration of whether summary judgment is appropriate. Age v. DLJ Mortgage Capital, Inc., 2013-1654, p. 3 (La.App. 4 Cir. 8/13/14), 147 So.3d 1186, 1188. Thus, the reviewing court generally must determine whether there is any genuine issue of material fact and whether the mover is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. La. C.C.P. art. 966.
In the case before us, the facts are not in dispute. The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment seeking the trial court's determination of the issue of ownership. Where, as here, there is no dispute regarding material facts, but only the determination of a legal issue, we apply the de novo standard of review, affording no deference to the trial court's legal conclusions. Kevin Associates, L.L.C. v. Crawford, 2003-0211, p. 15 (La. 1/30/04), 865 So.2d 34, 43.
The Villere heirs contend that the United States remained the owner of the Property from the time of the Louisiana Purchase until 2010, when the land patents were issued upon their application. They contend that any purported transfers of the Property prior to the issuance of the patents, including the transfers to the plaintiffs, were null and void. For this reason, the Villere heirs argue that the trial court erred by denying their cross motion for summary judgment and granting the plaintiffs' motions.
Conversely, the plaintiffs assert that the United States acquired only publically-owned land (land owned by the French sovereign) in the Louisiana Purchase, which did not include the Property at issue here because it was privately owned at that time. They further assert that the 1897 Act was a means of officially recognizing the titles of such private landowners, and that the Act itself confirms those titles without the necessity of formal patents being issued as proof of ownership. They also argue that the patents actually issued in 2010 were issued to "Felix Villere, and to his heirs and assigns, forever," meaning that the patents themselves confirm the titles of the plaintiffs, who are the "assigns" of Felix Villere. Alternatively, plaintiffs PPG and Tulane argue that they acquired title to their respective parcels of the property by acquisitive prescription, having possessed the property since the early 1960's.
The trial court rejected the argument of the Villere heirs, finding that the 1897 Act itself had the effect of confirming title in the assigns of Felix Villere, which owned the Property at the time the Act was passed. Because the plaintiffs' respective chains of title proceeded from those assigns, the trial court found the plaintiffs to be the legal owners of their respective parcels of the Property.
The interpretation and effect of the 1897 Act is at the heart of the issues presented in this appeal. To determine the correctness of the trial court's decision, we first consider the language of the Act. The 1897 Act in its entirety was quoted by the United States Supreme Court in 1905:
Corkran Oil & Dev. Co. v. Arnaudet, 199 U.S. 182, 183-84, 26 S.Ct. 41, 41-42, 50 L.Ed. 143 (1905) (Emphasis supplied).
We conclude that the language of the Act supports the trial court's interpretation. Section 1 of the Act directs that the properties listed in the Surveyor General's report be released to their respective owners, their heirs and assigns, "as fully and completely ... as could be done by patents issued therefor according to law." The phrase "as could be done by patents" indicates that, although the issuance of patents is authorized in Section 3, their issuance is not necessary to confirm ownership because the express purpose of the Act is for the United States government to formally acknowledge the titles of the private landowners. This purpose is reiterated in Section 2, which states that the "true intent" of the Act is to relinquish and concede "any and all right ... which the United States is or is supposed to be entitled to in said lands, in favor of ... the true and lawful owners."
The entire tenor of the 1897 Act indicates that the United States is not giving up properties that it owns, but rather is confirming that it has no claim to said properties, which are truly and legally owned by others. Nothing in the 1897 Act suggests that the issuance of a land patent pursuant to the Act is a prerequisite to ownership. Because ownership of the properties was already vested in the private landowners, we interpret Section 3, directing the Department of the Interior to issue patents, as merely providing a mechanism by which the private landowners could obtain written proof of their titles. Therefore, the sale of the Property in 1877 to satisfy the debts of Felix Villere's succession was valid, as were the subsequent transfers that form the plaintiffs' chains of title. The plaintiffs qualify as "assigns" of Felix Villere. The 2010 patents, although applied for by the Villere heirs, do not prove the heirs' ownership relative to the plaintiffs because the patents are issued to the heirs and assigns of Felix Villere.
The trial court's interpretation of the 1897 Act is also consistent with the actions of all parties concerned both prior and subsequent to the Act's passage. The 1877 transfer presumed Felix Villere then owned the Property, not the United States. Moreover, the United States
More importantly, the trial court's decision in this matter is supported by the law and jurisprudence, as well as the evidence in the record. The plaintiffs submitted into evidence French documents showing the Property was privately owned from the 1700s. It is well-established that the Louisiana Purchase treaty recognized as valid the property rights of inhabitants whose land had been granted to them by either the Spanish or French colonial governments. 1 La. Pract. Real Est. § 2:2- § 2:3. When Louisiana was admitted to the Union in 1812, most of the land located in the state was public rather than private, and "[t]hus, title to all property that was public at [that] time ... emanated from the United States government." Id. § 2:3. The plaintiffs also introduced a letter written March 8, 1880 from the Surveyor General to the United States Senate, which explains that the United States had always intended to honor the claims of private landowners that preceded the Louisiana Purchase, but language barriers and economic hardships had made it difficult for the private landowners to come forward and assert their claims. A list of privately-owned properties, including the Property in question, accompanied the letter, in which the Surveyor General recommended that Congress pass an act to recognize and confirm the titles of the private landowners. The evidence demonstrates that the 1897 Act was passed to effectuate the Surveyor General's recommendation.
The trial court's decision in this case is unequivocally supported by the relevant jurisprudence. The plaintiffs have cited numerous cases holding that a purchaser by bona fide conveyance prevails over an heir claiming title by virtue of a patent issued to his ancestors. These cases uniformly hold that a federal patent inures to the benefit of the transferees of the patent holder. For example, in Cherami v. Cantrelle, 174 La. 995, 142 So. 150 (1932), the Louisiana Supreme Court held that a patent issued in 1897 to Mr. Cherami for land he had possessed since the early 1800s confirmed title in the assignees of interests originally traceable back to Mr. Cherami, rather than in his heirs. Similarly, in Sorapuru v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 529 So.2d 1372 (La.App. 5th Cir.1988), Mr. Sorapuru purchased land from the United States in 1841, but did not obtain a federal patent at that time. Mr. Sorapuru subsequently mortgaged the land, and in 1850, the land was sold to satisfy the mortgage debt. As in the case before us, the heirs of Mr. Sorapuru obtained a federal patent more than one hundred years later, in 1953. In 1982, the succession of Mr. Sorapuru claimed legal title to the land based upon the patent. The possessors of the land, whose title traced back to the purchaser at the 1850 foreclosure sale, filed an exception of no right of action. The succession representative argued that the title had remained with the United States until the issuance of the patent in 1953, and that, therefore, the mortgage and all the transfers following Mr. Sorapuru's purchase of the land were invalid. The trial court disagreed, maintaining the exception. The appellate court affirmed, holding that the patent inured to the benefit of Mr. Sorapuru's assignees/transferees rather than to his heirs. Id. at 1373. See also, Landes v. Brant, 51 U.S. 348, 373-75, 10 How. 348, 13 L.Ed. 449 (1850).
Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's rulings granting summary judgment confirming title in favor of the plaintiffs, denying the cross motion for summary judgment filed by the Villere heirs, and dismissing with prejudice all claims of the Villere heirs.