A. J. Hodges Industries, Inc. v. Law

106 So. 2d 802, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 767
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1958
DocketNo. 8870
StatusPublished

This text of 106 So. 2d 802 (A. J. Hodges Industries, Inc. v. Law) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. J. Hodges Industries, Inc. v. Law, 106 So. 2d 802, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 767 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

This action was instituted by plaintiff for the purpose of procuring the judicial determination and establishment of a boundary between its estate and the contiguous [804]*804property of the defendants, Thomas Leon Law and the absent heirs of H. F. Wagley. In accordance with the prayer of plaintiff’s petition the court appointed a surveyor who proceeded to survey the property and fix the common boundary. Proces verbal and plats of the survey being duly returned to the court, trial was had on the issues tendered by the pleadings and, following trial, judgment was rendered approving and homologating the proces verbal and survey plats and ordering the boundary line fixed in accordance therewith. From the judgment the defendant, Thomas Leon Law, has suspensively appealed'. No appearance nor answer was made by or on behalf of the absentee Wagley heirs against whom default judgment in favor of plaintiff was confirmed, and, who, accordingly, are not parties to this appeal. However, it must be noted, as a-practical proposition, that the issues tendered by the defendant-ap-pellee, Thomas Leon Law, will determine the rights of all parties inasmuch as we can conceive of no method of separating the rights of owners in indivisión with respect to the establishment of a line of boundary.

Plaintiff has answered the appeal, praying for an amendment of that part of the judgment equally apportioning the expenses of the judicial survey between the parties plaintiff and defendant to the extent of assessing the entire costs thereof against defendant-appellant.

The petition of plaintiff, A. J. Hodges Industries, Inc., represented that it was the owner by record title of certain property described as the South Half of Northeast Quarter of Section 1, Township 8 North, Range 11 West in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, which property was adjoined on the south by the Southeast Quarter of the same section allegedly owned by the defendant, Thomas Leon Law, and the absent heirs of one H. F. Wagley in proportions of an undivided one-half interest each; that a dispute had arisen between the respective owners as to the location of the boundary line between the described tracts of land; that the defendant, Law, has refused to agree to an amicable determination and extra-judicial fixing of a boundary line, and that the said defendant had further refused to recognize the boundary line run and established by proper survey made since plaintiff’s acquisition of title to the tract of land described.

To plaintiff’s petition the defendant, Law, filed answer which, after first denying the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, affirmatively averred that defendant had procured the re-establishment of “ * * * the ancient boundary line known as Vandegaer Survey,” which plaintiff had refused to acknowledge; that the boundary line, which had been in existence for more than fifty years, had been recognized by the adjoining property owners; had been re-established by one R. B. Leone, surveyor, and, as a consequence, no judicial survey was necessary. Alternatively, defendant averred that he and his ancestors in title had continuously and without interruption possessed the property to the extent set forth for a period of more than thirty years, and upon this representation asserted a plea of prescription of thirty years ac-quirendi causa.

Upon the date of trial defendant filed exceptions of no cause and no right of action, which were referred to the merits. Following conclusion of trial defendant filed a plea of prescription of ten and twenty years. The exceptions and pleas of prescription were specifically overruled in the judgment appealed from.

Before proceeding to a consideration of the several defenses above noted, it should be observed that no attack has been made upon the survey made in this case by the court-appointed surveyor, Mr. E. H. Barentine, a licensed and registered surveyor of DeRidder, Louisiana, and it follows that such survey, as approved and homologated, must be accepted as having properly established the ideal boundary between the contiguous estates of the parties litigant.

At this point we wish to take occasion to observe with emphatic approval that the [805]*805proces verbal and accompanying plats of survey as returned by Mr. Barentine in this case are, without question, the most meticulously prepared documents of such a nature which have ever come under the observation of this court and are quite possibly the only ones we have ever had occasion to examine which comply in even the most minute detail not only with the provisions of law with regard thereto but with the necessity for a clearly detailed and fully understandable reflection of every detail of the work performed by such an official.

Before this court counsel for defendant first argues his exception of no right of action, which is based upon the contention that plaintiff’s petition has failed to make proper allegations in support of his action for the fixing of a boundary under the provisions of Article 823 of the LSA-Civil Code, citing Opdenwyer v. Brown, 155 La. 617, 99 So. 482.

We think this point is highly technical inasmuch as we are completely unable to distinguish between what we regard as the clear and unambiguous allegations of plaintiff’s petition and the equally clear meaning and purpose of the codal article. This exact point was ably and concisely disposed in the opinion of Judge (now Mr. Justice) McCaleb, in New Orleans & N. E. R. Co. v. Redmann, La.App., 28 So.2d 303, 306 (certiorari denied) in the following words:

“Under their exception of no cause or right of action, defendants contend that plaintiff has failed to allege a case justifying a fixing of the bounds because it has not alleged either that the tracts have never been separated or never have had their boundary determined or that the previous fixed bounds are no longer to be seen, in conformity with the requirements of Article 823 of the Civil Code which specifies that any one of the above instances will support an action in boundary.
“The point is without merit for the reason that it is obvious, from a reading of plaintiff’s petition, that the contiguous tracts have never been separated, judicially or otherwise. Plaintiff, after alleging that one of the contiguous tracts of land is owned by it and that Mrs. Redmann is the owner of the other, sets forth that the defendants have refused to agree to the fixing, extra-judicially, of the boundary line between its property and the property of Mrs. Redmann despite its endeavor to obtain their consent to settle the matter amicably. It is self-evident, in view of these allegations, that the contiguous tracts have never been separated and an averment by plaintiff to that effect would not have made its case more certain. While it is true that Article 823 of the Code provides that an action in boundary will lie only in the three instances specified therein, it is not imperative for a plaintiff to track the exact language contained in the article in order to state a cause of action thereunder, if it appears, from a reasonable interpretation of the allegations, that the redress sought falls squarely within the purview of the statute. See Franz v. Mohr, La.App., 186 So. 114.”

It is the substance of a plaintiff’s demand and not the purely technical failure to follow exact details of pleading to which a court should address its consideration in determining whether a cause of action has been adequately set forth; Boze-man v. McDonald, La.App., 40 So.2d 517 (certiorari denied).

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Related

Bozeman v. McDonald
40 So. 2d 517 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1949)
Meshell v. Bauer
35 So. 2d 772 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1948)
New Orleans N.E. R. Co. v. Redmann
28 So. 2d 303 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1946)
Meshell v. Bauer
41 So. 2d 237 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1949)
Franz v. Mohr
186 So. 114 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1939)
Opdenwyer v. Brown
99 So. 482 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 2d 802, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-j-hodges-industries-inc-v-law-lactapp-1958.