Alcus v. Elliser

310 So. 2d 663, 1975 La. App. LEXIS 3730
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1975
DocketNo. 10202
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 310 So. 2d 663 (Alcus v. Elliser) 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
Alcus v. Elliser, 310 So. 2d 663, 1975 La. App. LEXIS 3730 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

BARNETTE, Judge.

This litigation involves a boundary dispute between owners of contiguous estates. They acquired titles respectively which had derived from the same prior owner. The plaintiffs’ title is to all the “swampland” in a certain described portion of a section being 35 acres more or less and the defendant’s deed conveys to him all the “highland” in the same described portion of section, being 15 acres more or less.

This suit was filed by plaintiffs as a boundary action to have the line separating the two estates judicially determined and for an accounting of revenues received by defendant from that portion of the disputed land upon which they allege defendant has wrongfully erected certain improvements.

A judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiffs recognizing the two foot elevation contour line as the boundary. The judgment further ordered the court appointed surveyor to physically mark that line across the property and make due return thereof. The defendant was allowed 30 days after homologation of the surveyor’s proces verbal to account for all revenues received from that portion of the land below the determined two foot contour line. The judgment made no reference to the exceptions of no right of action and of prescription which defendant had pleaded.

The defendant has appealed.

The original plaintiffs were Henry Al-cus, Jr. and twelve other named co-owners. Later the Alcus Lands Partnership Trust was created and the interests of plaintiffs in this and other property were transferred to the Trust. By motion and order the Al-cus Lands Partnership Trust was substituted as party plaintiff. Throughout this opinion the plaintiffs will be referred to simply as “Alcus”.

There is no dispute between Alcus and Elliser relative to their respective deeds of acquisition of the. properties claimed but there is issue between them as to the location of the boundary separating the two properties described.

The plaintiff, Alcus, owns:

Thirty-five (35) acres of swampland situated in the East Half of the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (E/2 of SW 54 of SW 54) °f Section Fourteen, Township Nine South, Range Four East. (Emphasis added.) -

The defendant, Elliser, owns, by virtue of a deed executed June 10, 1941, the following described property:

Fifteen (15) acres, more or less of highland, situated in the East Half of Southwest Quarter of Southwest Quarter (E/2 of SW '54 of SW '54) of Section 14, Township 9 South, Range 4 East, containing all the highland in said East Half of Southwest Quarter of Southwest Quarter (E/2 of SW 54 °f SW 54) of Section 14, Township 9 South, Range 4 East.
A strip of land 15 feet wide on West side of Northeast Quarter of Southwest Quarter (NE 54 °f SW 54) of Section 14, Township 9 South, Range 4 East, running North to gravel highway. (Emphasis added.)

The above descriptions are confusing and partially incorrect in that they aggregate 50 acrés more or less, “situated in” the East half of the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (E/2 of SW 54 of SW 54)- This described fractional section contains at most only 20 acres. All of the 15 acres, more or less, of highland described in the Elliser deed lies wholly within this 20 acres. Most of the Alcus land lies to the west of this 20 acres and only 5 acres at most lies in the area described. It is within this approximate five acres that the disputed boundary lies. The maps filed in evidence indicate this to be in the extreme southern portion of the above described 20 acres. The Amite River Diversion Canal constructed in 1959 cuts off the southwest corner of the 20 acres described [666]*666thus reducing the disputed area to something less than five acres.

This action was brought properly under almost identical articles of the Civil Code and the Code of Civil Procedure. The pertinent articles are as follows:

LSA-C.C. Art. 823
“When two estates or lands contiguous, in cities or in the country, have never been separated, or have never had their boundaries determined, or if the hounds, which have been formerly fixed, are no longer to be seen, each of the owners of the contiguous estates has a right to compel the other to fix the limits of their respective properties.”
LSA-C.C.P. Art. 3691
“If two contiguous lands have never been separated, or have never had their boundaries determined, or if the bounds which have been formerly fixed are no longer to be seen, or were wrongly placed, the owner of one of the contiguous lands may bring an action against the other to compel the fixing of the boundary.”

Alcus employed Alex Theriot, Jr., a Civil Engineer, in 1967 to make a survey of the land in question to locate and determine the property line between the Alcus property and that owned by Elliser within the twenty acres above described. The result of his survey, which fixed the boundary along the two foot contour line, is. shown by Exhibit P-2 filed in evidence. It is dated December 20, 1967. This suit was filed August 19, 1971. On August 23, 1971, an order was signed appointing Mr. Theriot to “ * * * inspect the property described in the foregoing petition, to survey the same and report thereon, in writing, to the Court, according to law.”

Pursuant to that order, Mr. Theriot: “Revised [his December 20, 1967 survey made for Alcus] to show gravel lane, sheds, frame camps and trailers existing as of August 10, 1973.”

It is significant, we think, that the survey which actually fixed the boundary along the two foot contour was made in 1967, not pursuant to the court order, but for a private client, now the plaintiff in this case. No boundary survey was made after the Court appointment. Mr. Theriot merely updated the survey made for Alcus by indicating improvements which had been made on the property after December 1967.

During the course of the trial below (January 14, 1974) more than two years after the appointment of Mr. Theriot as the Court surveyor, counsel for defendant, Elliser, objected to Theriot’s appointment on the basis that the survey which he had made fixing the boundary was not done pursuant to the Court’s appointment, but on behalf of the plaintiff and that he could not therefore be an impartial surveyor. The following exchange recorded in the transcript of testimony is pertinent:

“BY THE COURT:
Did you make any objection to this appointment at the time he was appointed?
BY MR. MATHENY:
Yes sir. There was a hearing and he was asked to bring this up to date. I have never accepted him as the court appointed surveyor, I’m perfectly willing to accept him as the plaintiff’s surveyor. I am not trying to cast any aspersions on his ability and his integrity or anything like that, or the accuracy of his survey. I just do not think under the circumstances he qualifies as court appointed surveyor. That maybe a technical objection, but I feel constrained to make it.
BY MR. CAVANAUGH:
Well Mr. Matheny forgive me but I don’t recall there ever being any objection made to Mr. Theriot being designated as the court’s expert.
[667]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
310 So. 2d 663, 1975 La. App. LEXIS 3730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alcus-v-elliser-lactapp-1975.