This is a declaratory judgment action brought to determine the ownership of the mineral rights in certain lands located within the defendant Board’s levee district. The defendant admits that the plaintiff (“Rycade”) owns the surface of these lands, but contends that the transfer of title by it to Rycade’s author in title did not become effective until after the enactment of Article IV, Section 2, of the Constitution of 1921, LSA, which prohibits the sale of mineral rights owned by the State.1 The defendant Board has appealed to this court from a judgment recognizing plaintiff as owner of the minerals and holding that title to the property, including the minerals, passed to Rycade’s ancestor in title before the 1921 constitutional prohibition of the sale of minerals owned by the State.
The land involved in this suit was adjudicated to the state in 1883 for non-payment of taxes. By Act No. 97 of 1890 the Board of Commissioners for the Atchafala-ya Basin Levee District was created, and all lands belonging to or that may thereafter belong to the State within the district were conveyed to the Board, including those *303forfeited or sold to the State for non-payment of taxes. It was made “the duty of the Auditor and the Register of the State Land Office on behalf of and in the name of the State, to convey to the said Board of Levee Commissioners, by proper instruments of conveyance the lands hereby granted * * * whenever from time to time said Auditor and said Register of the State Land Office, or either of them, shall be requested to do so by said Board of Levee Commissioners, * *
The land herein claimed by plaintiff was not transferred by the State to the Board “by proper instruments of conveyance” until February 21, 1924 and recorded March 26, 1924. This formal conveyance from the State to the Board did not occur until after the adoption of the 1921 constitutional prohibition against alienation of State-owned minerals. The circumstance that the State was not divested of title until after 1921 forms the central basis of the appellant Board’s contention that Rycade’s ancestor in title did not acquire the minerals under the land.
Rycade traces its chain of title to certain instruments executed by the Board in 1900, 1901, and 1904, contending that 1924 acts merely confirm these earlier contracts, which became effective between the parties retroactively to 1904 at the latest — that is before the effective date of the 1921 constitutional prohibition against the sale of State-owned minerals.
On July 9, 1900 the Board executed a “deed’’ with Edward Wisner and John M. Dresser (Rycade’s ancestors in title), providing “the party of the first part [the Board] sells, transfers and delivers, without warranty and without recourse, and selling only such right title and interest as it has, but with subrogation of all rights, claims and demands of whatsoever nature against former proprietors, including the right to claim and recover damages for trespasses, unto the parties of the second part [Wisner and Dresser], * * * the following described property, to-wit: — All the lands donated, ceded and transferred by Act of the Legislature to the said party of the first part, to include all lands sold for taxes at this date but as yet not deeded to the State or to said party of the first part, * * * ” The consideration recited in this contract was $120,000; and it was further stated that “the present agreement is not to be a completed or perfected sale but to be in the nature of an agreement to sell” until the consideration was paid.
On June 1, 1901 a “deed” was executed by the Board to the South Louisiana Land Company represented by J. M. Dresser, reciting “that this deed is a quitclaim deed without recourse.” The lands involved were described as being a part of those lands contracted to be sold by the Board to Wisner and Dresser, and the deed was “intended to convey all of the tax land in the towns [hips] mentioned in this deed”. It was further stated that “in case any tracts may be omitted by definite description,” the Board agreed “to make deeds by definite description, from time to time, as said descriptions may be ascertained.” The land involved in this suit was described in this deed only as: “The following State lands: * * *, in T. 9 S. R. 8 E * * * ”.
On April 11, 1904 a “confirmation of title” was executed stating that the consideration for the contract of July 9, 1900 had been paid in full. But not until February S, 1924 did the Board, as anticipated by the contracts of 1900 and 1901, execute a contract “for the purpose of confirming the title to the lands conveyed,” for the first time specifically describing the land in dispute as Lots 4, 9 and 10 of section 12, T. 9 S., R 8 E; this same described land being conveyed by formal act from the State to the Board on February 21, 1924, several days later.
The appellant Board contends with considerable force that title to tax lands transferred from the State to the Board by the 1890 act did not, by terms of the act itself, pass from the State to the Board until after formal conveyance executed by the State *304Auditor and Register upon request of the Board; and that no such conveyance was made until 1924, or after the 1921 constitutional prohibition against sale of State minerals, when such conveyance was made for the sole purpose of conveying title to Ry-cade’s ancestor in title; so that, because of the intervening effect of the constitutional provision, the State-owned minerals could not validly be conveyed to Rycade’s ancestor in title.
As forceful and persuasive as we believe these contentions to be, nevertheless we find to be controlling the holding in Lum Chow v. Board of Commissioners for Lafourche Basin Levee Dist., 203 La. 268, 13 So.2d 857, wherein, in rejecting similar contentions, our Supreme Court stated, 13 So.2d 859 (citations omitted):
“It is the settled jurisprudence of this state that where one sells the property of another and later acquires title to the property, the title thus acquired enures to the benefit of his vendee * *
“But counsel for defendant contend this rule of after-acquired title by the vendor cannot apply to the defendant levee district because of the express provisions in the constitution making it mandatory that all mineral rights on property sold by the state be reserved. In support of this contention counsel argue that these grants of land not being grants in praesenti under the well settled jurisprudence of this state * * *, the title and possession thereof remaining in the state, subject to withdrawal by the legislature at any time up until they are certified to the levee districts, in accordance with the provisions of the acts creating them, The Lafourche Basin Levee District was powerless, after the adoption of the Constitution of 1921, to transfer the title to the minerals in question to its vendee.
“Counsel are in error in this contention, for in our recent decision in the Allison case, supra, [Standard Oil Co. of Louisiana v. Allison, 196 La. 838, 200 So. 273] where this court had for consideration the rights to the minerals in-levee grants as between the levee district and its successor in title, the property not having been certified to the levee district by the state until after the adoption of the Constitution of 1921 although it was sold previous to that time, we said: ‘The law is well settled that where one in proper form, with warranty, conveys title of real estate to another and it subsequently develops-that there some defects therein or that the seller did not have title to the property but later the imperfections are corrected in favor of the vendor or title thereto is acquired by the seller, that the subsequently-acquired rights or title enure to the benefit of the former ven-dee. * * * ’
“Moreover, counsel apparently overlook the fact that this property was not sold by the levee district subsequent to the adoption of the Constitution of 1921, but instead, in 1907, long prior thereto, after due authorization had been given in a special resolution adopted by the board, and that the author in title of the plaintiffs took immediate actual and corporeal and physical possession thereof and continued to so hold it until the date of the institution of this-suit, paying all taxes levied against the same, including those levied and collected by the levee district itself for its-maintenance and support. When the state did certify the lands to the levee district, title to the minerals passed with the grant * * * and enured at once to the benefit of the levee district’s, original vendee and his successors in title, forever estopping the levee district from asserting title thereto. * * ”
Able counsel for the appellant Board attempts to distinguish in several particulars-the present facts from those upon which the Lum Chow holding is based, principally upon the basis that the 1900-1901 transfer of the property by the Board to the plaintiff’s ancestor in title was not by a warranty *305deed, but rather by a “quitclaim deed without recourse” and “without warranty”, so that the after-acquired doctrine does not apply. See Waterman v. Tidewater Associated Oil Co., 213 La. 588, 35 So.2d 225.
As to this contention, we find no error in the trial court’s conclusion that, although indeed labelled as without warranty, nevertheless the obligations of the Board in the 1900 and 1901 deeds, when read together, imposed upon it the obligations characteristic of a warranty deed insofar as applying the after-acquired title doctrine. For, by these instruments, the appellant Board transferred “all rights, claims and demand * * * of whatsoever nature against former proprietors” and obligated itself to perfect its title or the title acquired by appellee under the deed, and such deeds further state that they were “complete sale and delivery” of lands described and was intended to transfer “all of the tax land in the towns [hips] mentioned.” Thus, for purposes of avoiding application of the after-acquired doctrine, in view of these obligations we do not find the technical labelling of these transactions as quit-claim or non-warranty deeds to be a valid basis for not applying the Lum Chow holding to the present facts. Cf. also, Gordy, Quitclaim Deeds in Louisiana, 23 Tul.L.Rev. 533 (1948).
Nor can we find of fundamental distinguishing significance, in view of the broad holding in the Lum Chow decision, other factual differences between the present case and those in the cited opinion.
In view of this conclusion, we find it unnecessary to discuss the various other contentions of the respective parties; and so, for the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.
TATE, J., appends a concurring opinion.