Besson v. Mayor of Donaldsonville

21 So. 262, 49 La. Ann. 273, 1897 La. LEXIS 557
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 18, 1897
DocketNo. 12,336
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 21 So. 262 (Besson v. Mayor of Donaldsonville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Besson v. Mayor of Donaldsonville, 21 So. 262, 49 La. Ann. 273, 1897 La. LEXIS 557 (La. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This is an action of slander of title or jactitation, the plaintiffs alleging ownership and possession of the property in controversy, and averring that the defendant, out of possession, is asserting title thereto to their prejudice and injury. Havard vs. Atkins, 24 An. 511; 2 Hennen’s Digest, p. 1489.

Averring further that the defendant had advertised said property for sale, they coupled with their petition a prayer for a writ cf injunction to issue, restraining same, and which accordingly issued.

To this suit the defendant filed a peremptory exception and plea in bar of plaintiffs’ right of action, predicated upon prior judicial proceedings to which they were parties; and same having been sustained and the suit dismissed, the plaintiffs have appealed.

The only evidence introduced in the court below on the trial of the exception and piea of estoppel was the record of the suit entitled Leon Godchaux vs. Mayor and Common Council of Donaldsonville, bearing docket No. 840 in the District Court of the parish of Ascension — the same court from which this appeal is brought up — “ and all the papers contained therein,” and “ the minutes of court showing the proceedings taken in open court in (same) and the different exceptions in (that) suit and the dates of their filing.”

There appear in the transcript certain interrogatories on facts and articles and the answers thereto, as well as the answer of the defendant; but, manifestly, they have no pertinence to the exception, and we will therefore dismiss them from further consideration.

The plaintiffs sue in the capacity of legal co-heirs of Joseph and Celestino Besson, deceased, and allege that their paternal grand[275]*275father, Jacques E. Besson, acquired at a sheriff’s sale made on the 19th of May, 1820, “ a certain parcel of land situated in the city of Donaldsonville, fronting on the Mississippi river, and on Cabahanasse street (now called Railroad avenue), marked No. 2, on the plan of said town, containing such front and depth as to the same then belonged, and all the right, title and interest or demand which the estate of William Donaldson had in and to said lot or parcel of land, on the 14th of April, 1820.”

“ That at the time of said sale (on the) 19th of May, 1820, said parcel of land so conveyed to petitioner’s grandfather fronted on the Mississippi river, nothing intenening between it and said river but the passage-way or street and the levee. That by said sale said Jacques E. Besson acquired said parcel of land described in said deed with the right to every and all accretion or accessions which might thereafter be formed in front thereof by alluvial deposits of said river;” and that, immediately after said sale to him, said purchaser went into actual possession of said property, and remained in posséssion thereof uninterruptedly, up to the year 1860. That during the year 1860, petitioners’ father, Joseph Besson, in certain partition proceedings amongst the heirs of Jacques E. Besson, aforesaid, deceased, of the property of his estate, u acquired all of the right, title and interest of said succession, and of his (Joseph Besson’s) co-heirs in and to the parcel of land” sold at the aforesaid sheriff’s sale “with all the rights of accretion thereto appertaining; and that they derive title by inheritance through him and his wife, their father and mother.”
Petitioners allege that “subsequent to the year 1820, there began to form in front of said parcel of land, a batture or accretion from the deposits of river sand, during high water; that said formation was slow and gradual, and at the time of their (father’s acquisition) of said lot or parcel of land, the batture did not extend more than one hundred feet from the levee in front of said lot to the water’s edge at the low stage of the river. That from 1860 to 1870, there was considerable accretion in front of said property, said batture being further extended toward the river and raised by deposits of river sand during high water in said river.” That at the time Jacques E. Besson acquired said lot or parcel of land in 1820, the levee ran along Mississippi street, on the river side thereof, directly in front of said land, and said levee [276]*276formed the river bank, there being at the time no intervening batture, formed by accretion or otherwise, between said levee and the river. “ That said levee remained in the same position in front of that portion of the town from 1820 to about two years since, when it was replaced by a new line of levee, constructed at a distance of about two hundred feet further out toward the river. That prior to the construction of said new levee, the batture in front of said lot or parcel of land No. 2 was covered with water from two to four feet * * during the high stage of the river, but the same remained exposed and was high above the level of the river at its low stage during the fall and winter months of the year.”

Petitioners then aver that on the 6th of March, 1871, their said father, Joseph Besson, conveyed to his daughter, Felice Besson, one of petitioners, a certain lot of ground situated in the city of Donaldsonville, “ at the corner of Mississippi and Cabahanosse streets, designated as lot No. 2 on the official plan of said city,” measuring sixty feet * * * front on Mississippi street by one hundred and twenty feet * * * on Cabahanosse street, together with all the rights, .ways, etc., thereto appertaining; but that their father did not convey nor divest himself of his right, title and interest in and to the said batture or secretion in front of said parcel or lot of land described in said act,” but that, on the contrary, he “retained his ownership and possession, until his death, of said batture property, which at the time of said sale in 1871, he had uninterruptedly held as owner and possessed under said partition proceedings as an heir of the succession of his father, Jacques E. Besson.”

They “further show that no one now disputes their rights of ownership and possession of said batture or accretion in front of said lot or parcel of land No. 2, as the children and lawful heirs of their deceased father * * * except the municipal authorities of the town of Donaldsonville, who have recently, without any legal right or warrant whatsoever, slandered the title of petitioner to said batture or accretion by claiming the same as the property of the town of Donaldsonville, and advertising same for sale,” etc.

Petitioner further avers “ that since the building of the new levee in front of said town on the river, a strip of batture or accretion in front of said lot No. 2, corner of Mississippi street and Railroad avenue (formerly Cabahanosse street) measuring about sixty feet in width, by a depth of about two hundred and fifty feet toward the river, [277]*277is protected by said levee, and (that same) is no longer subject to be-, overflowed during high water, and has become valuable propertyand that (they) are entitled to be quieted in the possession and enjoyment thereof; and that it is worth more than two thousand dollars.

. Tne prayer of the petition conforms to the foregoing extracts from the averments thereof, and it particularly demands that the defendant be enjoined and restrained from “ selling the strip of land or accretion in front of said lot No. 2, corner of Mississippi street and Railroad avenue

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Bluebook (online)
21 So. 262, 49 La. Ann. 273, 1897 La. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/besson-v-mayor-of-donaldsonville-la-1897.