(original opinion changed to dissent by result on rehearing). This is a suit by five of the (six) children and heirs' of Calvin S. Croom and Margaret A. Croom, his wife, to confirm a tax title, as inherited from their parents, to the N. W. % of section 14, N. E. y, of section 15, and E. y2 of S. E. % of section 10, in township 19 northwest, range 16 W., parish of Caddo.
The district court gave judgment for plaintiffs, confirming their title to an undivided five-sixths, of one-half of the tracts so described, and defendants have appealed.
The original petition, filed December 8, 1916, alleges that the land in question was sold on September 19, 1881, for unpaid taxes due thereon for the years 1S73, 1874, 1S75, 1876, 1877, and 1878, and was acquired by petitioner’s father, Calvin S. Croom, “as shown by deed, •* » * a certified copy of Which is attached to and made part hereof”; that petitioners and M. H. B. Croom, deceased, inherited an undivided one-half interest in said property from Calvin S! Croom, their-father, and the remaining half- interest from Margaret A. Croom, their mother, it belonging to the community of acquets and gains existing between their ancestors; that Joseph Thompson and James F. Utz, were the owners of record at that time, but that the land was assessed and the sale made in the name of Samuel Thompson; that Joseph Thompson and James F. Utz had acquired their titles from Joseph B. Thompson, who had acquired from the United States government ; that Joseph Thompson being a nonresident, a curator ad hoc should be appointed to represent him. The certified copy of the tax deed, made part of the petition, contains the recitals that the sale is made to “C. B. Croom”; that the property was advertised, from May 18 to June 18, 1881, to be sold for the taxes, due thereon by Samuel Thompson, for the years 1873, 1874, 1875, 1876, 1877, and 1878; that the collector proceeded to offer the property for said taxes, penalties, and costs; that, failing to receive a bid to the amount thereof, he readvertised said property from August 15 to September 14, to be sold on September 17, for cash, to the highest bidder; and that, said Croom (C. B. Croom) being the highest bidder, it was awarded to him, for $7; and that the transfer of title was made by virtue of Act 77 of 1880.
*773The curator ad hoc, having been appointed to represent Joseph Thompson, filed an exception of no cause of action. By supplemental petition (January 27, 1917) plaintiffs allege that Joseph Thompson “departed this life many years ago, leaving Josephine Thompson (now Mrs. Hardin) and Samuel M. Thompson issue of his marriage as his sole heirs”; that Samuel M. Thompson has also departed this life, leaving a widow, children, and minor grandchildren in other states, and for whom the appointments of a curator ad hoe and tutor ad hoc were asked and made.
An answer was then filed (February 14, 1917) on behalf of all the defendants, appearing by curator ad hoc and attorney, except the minors, who appeared by the tutor ad hoe so appointed, which answer was followed by an exception of no cause or right of action (filed February 17, 1917), on behalf of Mrs. Hardin, and a similar exception (on March 21, 1917) specifying, as the ground thereof, that the tax deed, made part of the petition, contains the recital that it was made under the authority of Act 77 of 1880; that said act, being a revenue statute, conveys no such authority, and that the deed is therefore void on its face; and thereafter, on March 26, 1917, plaintiff! pleaded the prescription of 10 days and 3 and 5 years. On June 2,1917, Mrs; Hardin filed another answer and a claim in reconvention, which was followed on June 27, 1917, by a similar answer and claim on behalf of the other defendants; and on July 27, 1918, plaintiffs filed another supplemental petition, in which they allege that the property in question was “forfeited” to the state for the unpaid taxes of 1873, 1874,1875, 1876, 1877, and 1878, and on September 19, 1881, was sold for said unpaid taxes “in accordance with the laws of Louisiana then in force and effect, and authorizing such sale”; that Calvin S. Croom, father of petitioners, acquired the same at said sale; that petitioners and W. H. B. Croom, deceased, inherited an undivided one-half interest in said property from Calvin S. Croom, their father, and the remaining half interest from Margaret A. Croom, their mother.
The facts admitted, or as they' otherwise appear to us from the record, are as follows:
In 1839, Joseph B. Thompson bought a body of land aggregating 1,400 acres, more or less, upon which he established his residence, and which thereafter constituted a unit known as the “Thompson Place,” upon which he continued to live, and eventually died, in his residence thereon, in 1883. In 1848 he sold an undivided half interest in the tracts here in dispute (which formed part of the Thompson place, but not that part upon which the residence stood), to his son, Joseph Thompson, who died in 1849; and in 1873 he sold the remaining half interest in said tracts (with some other land) to his son-in-law, James F. Utz, who died, probably in 1895, and whose succession was opened in that year by his widow in community as such, and as natural tutrix of their minor children, and his interest in said tracts was inventoried as the property of the succession. It is not shown or pretended that either Joseph Thompson or James F. Utz, or their heirs, have ever voluntarily alienated the interest so acquired by them in the tracts here in question; nor, on the other hand, has it been alleged or shown that they ever, during the life of Joseph B. Thompson, demanded delivery, or took actual possession or disturbed their vendor’s possession, of said tracts.
There is testimony to the effect that after the death of Joseph B. Thompson the Thompson place, including the tracts in dispute, was considered to be under the administration of Utz, and after his death (say, in 1895) under the administration of his widow as such and *775as tutrix; and there is some vague testimony about negro tenants, supposed to be holding under “Captain” or Mrs. Utz, and quite positive testimony by J. S. Noel to the effect that he collected and paid over to Mrs. Utz moneys derived from sales of crosS-tie timber cuts on the land. C. B. Croom (plaintiff herein) testifies that he lived in the neighborhood until he was about 25 years old, and left there in 1883; that when he left no one was living on the land, though whether he means the Thompson place or the 400 acres in dispute, as distinguished therefrom, we are unable to say. Certain it is that Joseph B. Thompson died in his residence on the Thompson place in 1883. The witness further testifies that after his return to that section, in, say, 1909, he gave Dr. Tillinghast, who lived on adjoining land, but who has since died, permission to cultivate as much as he pleased of the land claimed to be the Samuel Thompson land, and that Tillinghast cultivated 10 or 15 acres. Wilder, son-in-law of Captain and Mrs. Utz, testifies that Tillinghast was already cultivating the land by permission of Mrs. Utz, and that such permission was renewed by the witness to Tilling-hast’s son.
' The land is, however, so poor as to be hardly worth cultivating, and would not excite the interest here displayed but for the possibility of its bearing oil or gas. In November, 1917 (during one of the intervals between the filing of plaintiff’s supplemental petitions), defendants, though denying that the land in dispute had been forfeited to the state, paid the taxes, with interest, penalties, etc., assessed for the years 1873 to 1878, Inclusive, and received certificates of redemption from the state auditor. As we read the testimony, the whole of the tracts herein claimed were assessed for those y'ears to “Samuel Thompson, R. T. Noel, Agt.,” and for some, and, perhaps all, of .those years, some, and perhaps all, of the tracts were also assessed to James F. Utz and the taxes were paid by him.
Opinion.
1. As will be seen from the foregoing statement, plaintiffs claim title by inheritance from Calvin S. Croom and wife, their parents, alleging that Calvin S. Croom acquired the land, as shown by the tax deed, annexed to and made part of their petition, and that it fell into the community. The deed, however, shows that the tax sale was made to C. B. Croom, and, as no other evidence connects plaintiffs with the tax sale, it follows that their allegation1 of title is not only not sustained, but is shown to have been made in error. Nor is the situation improved by the facts that one of the plaintiffs is named C. B. Croom, and that it is admitted that they are all children and heirs of Calvin S. Croom and wife, since C. B. Croom, plaintiff, is not identified as the C. B. Croom to whom the land was sold.
2. As will be seen, also the first petition alleges that the sale on which plaintiffs rely was made by authority of Act 77 of 1880, whereas that act purports to provide a revenue for the state for the year 1880 and succeeding years, and the means for enforcing its collection, and furnishes no authority for the sale of property forfeited to, or otherwise acquired by, the state by reason of the nonpayment of taxes previously levied. It is then alleged, by supplemental petition (filed more than a year later), that the property in question had been forfeited to the state for unpaid taxes, assessed for certain years prior to 1879, and had been “sold” * * * for the unpaid taxes thereon for said years in accordance with the laws of Louisiana then in force and effect and authorizing such sale; that “Calvin S. Croom, father of your petitioners, acquired the same at said sale, as shown by deed,” etc.; and, though defendants had come into court upon the issue of *777the validity of the sale as made by authority of act 77 of 1880, they were invited to come in again upon the question, of the validity of the- sale as tested by any law then in force; and at some time thereafter (in the argument, presumably) plaintiffs invoked Act 107 of 1880. But that statute required that the property to be sold under its authority should be first offered on the first Saturday in March of each year, and, on failure to bring the required amount, should then be offered and sold for what it might bring on the first Saturday in April, whereas the property here in question appears to have been first offered on the 18th of June, and then offered and sold on the 17th of September, so that the sale cannot be said to have been made in accordance with, or under the authority of Act 107 of 1880, and we are referred to no other statute as conferring such authority.
The ordinance immediately following article 268 of the Constitution of 1879 required that, in the event the principal of the taxes due on property forfeited to or acquired by the state prior to January 1, 1879, should not be paid, with interest, penalties, etc., prior to January 1, 1881, it should “then be sold, in the manner to be provided by law,” and Act 107 of 1880 was no doubt intended to make the provision thus referred to; but the sale here in question was not made in accordance with that provision.
Beyond what has been thus said, tlie case presents the questions, arising from the facts, that Joseph B. Thompson was living on the Thompson place, which had originally included the tracts here in question, at the date of the alleg'ed tax sale, and continued so to live until his death 2 years later, and from the law, which declares, in effect, that in the event of the nondelivery of the thing sold the seller holds possession for the buyer (C. C. arts. 2468, 2469), and that at his death his rights and obligations are transmitted to his heirs, and the further .question that, during the years for the taxes of which said tracts are said to have been forfeited to the state, they were assessed, in toto, to “Thompson, Samuel, K. T. Noel, Agt.,” and were also assessed in whole or in part to James F. Utz, by whom the taxes so assessed were paid.
But we do not fee ^ called upon to decide those questions, or others which are discussed in the briefs, since, however broad may be the application of article 233 of the Constitution and of the enabling statutes relating thereto, we can find no basis upon which to rest a judgment holding that either the Constitution or the statutes can be successfully invoked in support of an unauthorized tax sale, set up as a muniment of title, by persons who disclose no connection with such title or legal interest therein.
In giving judgment for plaintiff with respect to five-sixths of one-half of the land in question, the judge a quo rejected their claim to the undivided half which had been sold to James F. Utz, whose legal representatives were not sued and made no appearance. As to the other half, since plaintiffs claim title, as inherited from Calvin S. Croom and wife, their parents, and support their claim by the unauthorized tax deed to C. B. Groom, who is not identified as the Croom who participates in this suit, that claim should also have been rejected.
It is therefore ordered and decreed that the judgment appealed from be annulled; that plaintiffs’ demands be rejected; and this suit dismissed at their cost in both courts, with reservation of whatever rights they may have to the reimbursement of taxes paid upon the land which is the subject of this controversy.
PBOVOSTY, J., concurs in the decree only. O’NIELL, J., dissents.