Bailey v. Descendants of Fowler

746 So. 2d 130, 1999 WL 826089
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 13, 1999
DocketNo. 99-418
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 746 So. 2d 130 (Bailey v. Descendants of Fowler) 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
Bailey v. Descendants of Fowler, 746 So. 2d 130, 1999 WL 826089 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

J^WOODARD, Judge.

This is a boundary dispute. Messrs. Paul S. and Ben Belton Bailey are the owners of a tract of land in Rapides Parish Louisiana, comprising 193.54 acres. On the southern boundary of their property is a tract of land comprising 52.3 acres owned by Mr. Andrew J. Fowler, II. When the Baileys and Mr. Fowler, II were unable to agree upon their shared boundary, the Baileys filed suit to have a court fix it. Mr. Fowler, II answered and reconvened, claiming that a portion of the Baileys’ property belonged to him through acquisitive prescription. The trial court fixed the boundary between the parties, differently from what-each party maintained was correct. The Baileys appealed, as did Mr. Fowler, II. We reverse and fix the boundary.

[132]*132FACTS

On June 30, 1992, the Baileys purchased a tract containing 193.54 acres. When they were unable to reach an amicable agreement with Mr. Fowler, II, who owned a 52.3 acre tract on the southern boundary of their property, they filed a petition against |s»Mr. Fowler, II and his descendants, on November 12, 1992, to have the boundary fixed. On January 4, 1993, Mr. Fowler, II answered the suit and claimed that his tract actually contained 187.36 acres, a large part of which was owned by the Baileys. The matter was tried July 13-15,1993.

The Baileys’ tract was part of Lots A, B, and C of the woodlands of Chaseland Plantation, as shown on a plat prepared by H. J. Daigre, Parish Surveyor, dated February of 1936, which was introduced into evidence. The titles to the Baileys’ property and to Mr. Fowler, II’s property trace back to a common author, Ms. Annie Paul Mathews Chase Mathews, with the Baileys’ title being the more ancient.

On December 30, 1899, Ms. Annie Paul Mathews Chase Mathews purchased Chaseland Plantation from the Union Mortgage Bank & Trust Co., Limited. The property was comprised of 4,210 acres located on both sides of Bayou Bouef, some sixteen miles south of Alexandria, Louisiana. On July 31, 1902, Ms. Matthews sold a 52.3 acre tract of her Chase-land Plantation to T.R. Delaney. Attached to this act of sale was a plat of survey, dated 1902, by George O. Elms. It is this tract which was sold to Mr. Delaney that ultimately comes into Mr. Fowler, II’s possession.

The title of the Baileys’ 193.54 acre tract continues, uninterruptedly, from Ms. Annie Paul Mathews Chase Mathews to the Bailey’s immediate ancestor in title, Ms. Mary Jean Jackson D’Autremont. On April 20, 1909, the Chaseland Plantation was sold by the Sheriff of Rapides Parish from Ms. Annie Paul Mathews Chase Mathews to Mr. Eugene V. Weems. On April 22, 1909, Mr. Weems sold the plantation to Mr. Charles S. Mathews. This was followed by a sale, on February 25, 1918, by Mr. Mathews to: (1) Ms. Ann Mathews Hardy, (2) Mr. Thomas C. Mathews, (3) Ms. Ann G. Mathews, (4) Mr. William Chase Mathews, and (5) Ms. Medorra Mathews Jackson.

Ms. Medorra Mathews Jackson, one of the five persons who purchased a one-fifth interest in Chaseland Plantation, died March 19,1919. A judgment of possession was rendered, recognizing Mr. Joel M. Jackson, Mr. Robert S. Jackson, Ms. Elizabeth M. Jackson, and Ms. Annie Chase Jackson as sole heirs and placing them in possession of her one-fifth interest in Chaseland Plantation. Mr. Robert S. Jackson died and his father, Mr. Robert H. Jackson, and his three siblings, Mr. Joel M. Jackson, Ms. Elizabeth M. Jackson (Skelton), and Ms. Annie Chase Jackson were placed in possession of his interest in Chaseland Plantation. On November 14, 1935, Mr. Robert H. Jackson conveyed his interest in Chaseland Plantation to his remaining three |3children, Ms. Elizabeth Jackson Skelton, Ms. Annie Paul Chase Jackson, and Mr. Joel H. Jackson.

Ms. Ann G. Mathews and Mr. William Chase Mathews, two of the individuals who each purchased an undivided one-fifth interest in Chaseland Plantation from Mr. Charles S. Mathews, sold their two-fifths interest in Chaseland Plantation to Mr. Robert H. Jackson on August 23, 1923. On May 21, 1931, Mr. Robert H. Jackson sold the two-fifths interest he purchased from Ms. Ann G. Mathews and Mr. William Chase Mathews to Mr. Thomas M. Mathews, who had also purchased a one-fifth interest in Chaseland Plantation from Mr. Charles S. Mathews on April 25, 1918. On August 9, 1934, the Sheriff of Rapides Parish adjudicated the three-fifths interest that Mr. Thomas M. Mathews owned in Chaseland Plantation to Ms. Annie Guss Mathews.

On March 28, 1936, Ms. Ann Mathews, the widow of Edward Barrett, who ac[133]*133quired a one-fifth interest in the plantation from Mr. Charles S. Mathews; Ms. Annie Guss Mathews, who had acquired a three-fifths interest in the plantation; and Ms. Ann Chase Jackson, Ms. Elizabeth Jackson Skelton, and Mr. Joel M. Jackson, who owned the remaining one-fifth interest in the plantation entered into a partition of the plantation. The parish surveyor, Mr. H.J. Daigre, prepared a plat of survey of the plantation, dividing it into five lots, labeled A, B, C, D, and E. The Daigre survey shows the 52.3 acre tract, which had been sold to Mr. T.R. Delaney and ultimately came into the possession of Mr. Fowler, II, as being located between lots C and D. In the partition, Ms. Ann Mathews, widow of Mr. Edward Barrett, received Lot B; Ms. Annie Guss Mathews received Lots A, D, and E; and Ms. Ann Paul Chase Jackson, Mr. Joel M. Jackson, and Ms. Elizabeth J. Jackson received Lot C. On January 10, 1966, Ms. Ann Jackson Daniels donated her interest in Lot C to Mr. Gilbert W. Daniels, Jr.

On May 29, 1950, Ms. Annie Guss Mathews sold Lots A, D, and E of the plantation to Mr. Thales E. Cranford. Mr. Thales E. Cranford sold Lots A, D, and E of the plantation to Mr. Joel M. Jackson on August 3, 1950. On that same day, Mr. Joel M. Jackson sold an undivided one-half interest in Lots A, D, and E of the plantation to Ms. Elizabeth Jackson Skelton. Ms. Elizabeth Jackson Skelton sold all of her interest in Lots A, C, D, and E to Mr. James Allen Madison Skelton, Jr. on November 25,1958.

|4Ms. Ann Mathews Hardy Barrett died, and her three children, Ms. Agnes B. Hardy, Mr. Charles H. Hardy, and Ms. Hilda Hardy Hill, were recognized as sole heirs in a Judgment of possession signed May 17, 1938. On August 19, 1960, these children sold their interest in Lot B to Mr. Joel M. Jackson, husband of Ms. Connie Kendall Jackson. When they died, their two children, Ms. Mary Jean Jackson D’Autremont and Mr. Joel M. Jackson, Jr., were placed in possession of their interest in Lots A, B, C, D, and E of the plantation.

On July 30, 1987, the interest of Mr. Joel M. Jackson, Jr. in Lots A, B, C, D, and E of the plantation was adjudicated to the Bunkie Bank & Trust Company by a Trustee’s Deed in Mr. Jackson’s bankruptcy proceeding. The Bunkie Bank & Trust Company sold its right, title, and interest in Lots A, B, C, D, and E of the plantation to Mr. and Ms. Daniel Ball Derouen on February 14,1992.

Approximately four months later, the owners of Lots A, B, C, D, and E of the Chaseland Plantation entered into a partition of immovable property. Ms. Mary Jean Jackson D’Autremont received a tract containing 110 acres, more or less, in the west portion of Lots A and B and a tract containing seventy-nine acres, more or less, in Lot C and all of Lot C lying west of the center of the Central Louisiana Electric Company (CLECO) right of way crossing Lot C. It is this tract owned by Ms. D’Autremont and found to contain 193.54 acres, when surveyed by Mr. Fen-stermaker, which the Baileys purchased on June 30,1992.

On January 4, 1910, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
746 So. 2d 130, 1999 WL 826089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-descendants-of-fowler-lactapp-1999.