Beene v. Pardue

79 So. 2d 356
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 22, 1955
Docket8038
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 79 So. 2d 356 (Beene v. Pardue) 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
Beene v. Pardue, 79 So. 2d 356 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

79 So.2d 356 (1955)

Walter Harlan BEENE et al., Arkansas Fuel Oil Corporation, Intervenor, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
T. B. PARDUE et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 8038.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

March 22, 1955.
Rehearing Denied April 14, 1955.
Writ of Certiorari Denied May 23, 1955.

*357 Hussey & Smith, Bullock & Bullock, Shreveport, for appellants.

W. S. Waller, W. M. Phillips, George Conger, H. C. Walker, Jr., Robert Roberts, Jr., Gilbert Hetherwick, Shreveport, for appellees.

AYRES, Judge.

The plaintiff, William Harlan Beene, as the owner of an oil, gas and mineral lease covering the NW¼ of the SW¼ of Section 33, Township 21 North, Range 15 West, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, except an oil well situated thereon known as Arkansas Fuel Oil Company's No. 8 instituted this action against T. B. Pardue, as the owner of that part of the SW¼ of the NW¼ of said section, township and range lying east of Black Bayou Canal, and J. C. Trahan, Trans-Gulf Corporation and Weaver-Perry Oil Corporation, as owners of oil, gas and mineral leases or over-riding royalty interests in said property, for the purpose of having judicially determined the boundary between said properties. The Arkansas Fuel Oil Corporation, as the owner of the first described tract, intervened and joined with the plaintiff in seeking the relief prayed for by plaintiff. It is alleged that said boundary is obscure and uncertain and has never been fixed judicially nor by private survey, and that amicable demand for the ascertainment of said boundary was made by plaintiff and refused by defendants. Wherefore, it was prayed that a qualified surveyor be appointed to make a survey of the aforesaid lands, ascertain their limits and make a process verbal thereof in accordance with law, after which there be judgment fixing the boundary between said properties.

Alleging the existence of a visible, established and recognized boundary between said tracts for a period exceeding 30 years, acquiesced in by the owners thereof during *358 said time, the defendants filed pleas of prescription of 10, 20 and 30 years, and particularly alleged "* * * that the NW¼ of SW¼ and the SW¼ of NW¼, Section 33, Township 21 North, Range 15 West, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, have been physically separated by a fence, a road and a levee for more than 30 years, which visible bounds the present owners of said tracts of land and their authors in title have continuously and without interruption recognized and acquiesced in for more than 30 years as the boundary line between their respective properties, having actually and physically, openly, peaceably, continuously and without interruption possessed, as owners, for that period of time, in excess of 30 years, the properties in question up to said visible bounds".

The plea of prescription was first tried in the district court and overruled, for reasons stated by the court as follows:

"The plea of prescription was overruled because the Court found that there has never been a fixing of the boundary by agreement or by extrajudicial survey and that the two tracts had not been separated by a visible boundary for thirty years or more."

Thereafter, Ben E. Ramsey, a registered surveyor, was appointed by the court to make a survey of the properties in dispute and to locate the boundary between them. Accordingly, the survey was made and a plat and process verbal thereof were duly returned to and filed in court. Defendants urged the acceptance and homologation of said survey, which was objected to by plaintiff and intervenor as being inaccurate and erroneous and not clearly locating the boundary between said lands. After trial of the issues thus presented, Ramsey's survey was rejected and the survey introduced by plaintiff and intervenor made by S. D. Armstrong, another registered surveyor, was approved and accepted. Judgment was accordingly rendered and signed approving the boundary as located by Armstrong, who was ordered to affix suitable markers or monuments for the identification of said boundary line.

From the judgment thus rendered and signed, defendants, T. B. Pardue and Weaver-Perry Oil Corporation, appealed. The other defendants have neither appealed nor made any appearance in this court.

This court's appellate jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this litigation has been conclusively determined heretofore. 223 La. 417, 65 So.2d 897; La.App., 67 So.2d 337; 226 La. 606; 76 So.2d 902.

The pleas of 10 and 20 years' prescription have been abandoned by defendants as inappropriate and inapplicable. The issues remaining concern the questions, first, whether said properties have been physically separated by visible bounds recognized and acquiesced in for more than thirty years by the owners of said lands and, second, the correctness of the judgment rejecting Ramsey's survey and accepting that of Armstrong.

The approximate 1100 pages in the transcript of this case have received our most careful and painstaking consideration. Our labors, however, have been greatly minimized by the thorough and exhaustive briefs of counsel and the written opinion of the trial judge.

The evidence establishes that during the early 1900's J. W. Dixon owned the entire Section 33, Township 21 North, Range 15 West, Caddo Parish, Louisiana; that between 1904 and 1906 he caused to be erected a net and barb wire fence running east and west entirely across said section but somewhat south of the east and west center line thereof. The north portion of this tract was under cultivation; the south portion was low, wooded land. The fence was constructed not for the purpose of serving as a boundary between two estates, as, in effect, only one estate existed at the time, but for the purpose of protecting crops from roaming livestock. It could not be concluded, therefore, that it was initially intended that the fence serve as a boundary. By separate deeds dated April 14, 1910, Dixon sold the south half of the section to John M. Robinson and George W. Robinson and the north half to the Louisiana Gas *359 Company, and through said vendees, as their authors and predecessors in title, the present owners acquired title to the portions of said property as hereinabove described and as involved in this litigation. In all the conveyances in the chains of title down to the present owners, the properties were sold by governmental subdivisions; no mention was ever made anywhere of any fence or other visible boundary. Other than as to a section of approximately 300 feet on the west side of the said NW¼ of the SW¼, it was not disclosed that the fense was ever repaired or maintained by subsequent purchasers of either tract. Through the lapse of time, lack of repair and by action of the elements, the fence rusted and deteriorated and its original purpose was terminated by the enactment of stock laws.

Although the exact date was not shown, during the 1920's, a small levee was constructed in the vicinity of but slightly north of the aforesaid fence but only partially across the disputed lands, and, at the same time, the remains of the fence were torn down and destroyed other than for a short distance on the west side. This levee was some 4 to 6 feet in height at its eastern end and gradually decreased to ground level as the grade inclined to the west. This levee was constructed for the purpose of keeping backwater off of the then cultivated portion of the property. Defendants contend that the levee replaced the fence as one of the visible bounds.

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79 So. 2d 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beene-v-pardue-lactapp-1955.