Birdwell v. Jeffery
This text of 486 So. 2d 1094 (Birdwell v. Jeffery) 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.
Opinion
John Roland BIRDWELL, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Gwendolyn Birdwell JEFFERY et al., Defendants-Appellees-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Wiener, Weiss, Madison & Howell by Susie Morgan, Shreveport, for defendant-appellee-appellant Carol Birdwell Middleton.
James B. Wells & Associates, P.C. by Sam A. Smith, Bossier City, for plaintiff-appellee.
Before FRED W. JONES, SEXTON and LINDSAY, JJ.
FRED W. JONES, Judge.
A defendant co-owner of property involved in a partition suit appealed that portion of a judgment ordering a partition by licitation of a forty-acre tract, contending the trial judge erred in holding that (1) defendant had the burden of proving the tract was divisible in kind and (2) finding that the tract was not divisible in kind.
John R. Birdwell sued his two sisters, Carolyn Middleton and Gwendolyn Jeffery, and the children of a deceased brother, to partition by licitation the following described property located in Bossier Parish:
Lots 331 and 332, East Shreveport Subdivision, Bossier City, as per plat on file and of record; and Northeast Quarter of Northwest Quarter (NE ¼ of NW ¼), Section 3, Township 19 North, Range 12 West, containing 40 acres more or less.
Birdwell, Mrs. Middleton, and the children of the deceased brother stipulated that the two lots in Bossier City should be partitioned by licitation. Subsequently, Birdwell dismissed the suit as to the children of his deceased brother, alleging that they had conveyed their interests to him.
Mrs. Jeffery made no appearance in the litigation. Mrs. Middleton contested plaintiff's request that the forty-acre tract be partitioned by licitation. When the case went to trial the two participants presented the testimony of appraisers and filed into evidence the reports. Since the testimony was not recorded, a narrative of facts, prepared *1095 pursuant to La.C.C.P. Article 2131, was submitted to, supplemented and approved by the trial judge and made a part of the appellate record.
According to the narrative of facts Mark Montgomery, appraiser who testified on behalf of the plaintiff Birdwell, stated:
"The property, a 40 acre tract of rural property, has not been surveyed but has been visually inspected. The tract is estimated to be 75-80% cleared pasture land. The property has no road frontage but is about 300 feet from the Linton-Bellvue Road and has access thereto by virtue of a verbal agreement with the intervening landowner for the use of his dirt road. Hardwood and pine timber covers about 10 acres of the 40 acre tract, mostly along the western boundary. A small stock pond and an old cattle pen, both of undetermined value, are located on the property. Cattle were grazing on the property at the time of inspection. The highest and best use of the property is continued use as pasture land. The value of the property is $900.00 per acre or $36,000.00 for the entire 40 acres. No appraisal was made of the value of the property if it were divided into four ten-acre tracts. The property is not divisible in kind.
"The property in question was not divisible in kind because the north-south division would result in one ten-acre tract being unimproved timberland and the other three tracts being improved pasture land. Any east-west division of the property in question would result in the necessity of a servitude of passage across at least two of the ten-acre tracts, thus encumbering these tracts and decreasing the value. Location of the stock pond or `mudhole' on one tract would diminish the value of that tract."
Randy Brown, appraiser on behalf of defendant Middleton, according to the narrative of fact stated:
"This is a 40 acre tract of rural, unimproved property located about 300 feet southeast of the Linton-Bellvue Road. Access to the Linton-Bellvue Road is over a dirt road across adjoining land. There is no servitude of passage of record but because of the long and continuous period of free use of the dirt road, a servitude of passage could probably be obtained.
"The property is approximately 80% cleared. There are clumps of timber scattered throughout the tract and along the fence lines. The timber is of an insufficient quantity to have commercial value and does not increase or decrease the value of the property. The property presently is being used as pasture land. When surrounding developments and comparable sales in the area are considered, the highest and best possible use of the property is as four ten-acre rural homesites. The value of the property as a 40 acre unit is $950.00 per acre or $38,000.00 for the entire tract. The subject property is susceptible of division into four tracts of equal size and value by dividing lines drawn in a north-south or east-west manner. If the property were divided into four ten-acre tracts, each tract would be worth $11,000 or $1,100 per acre, an increase of $150.00 per acre. There is a small, apparently unused cattle pen located on the north side of the property but it is not of sufficient use or value to increase or decrease the value of the land. The small stock pond identified by Mr. Montgomery is, in reality, more accurately described as a large mudhole caused by drainage. It neither increases nor decreases the value of the property as a whole or of any of the proposed ten-acre tracts and, therefore, was not relevant to the appraisal thereof."
Brown did not survey the property and offered no estimate of the amount of timber that would be located on either of the ten-acre tracts of land if the property was divided in kind. His appraisal report, received into evidence, contained the following map showing a servitude of passage traversing the forty-acre tract and running in a north-south direction:
*1096 The trial judge, deciding in favor of the plaintiff, gave the following reasons for judgment in the form of a minute entry:
"The matter was held open after the initial determination that the plan submitted by the plaintiff in the matter for partition in kind that the property in question was notdid not present an equal and just division of the property. The parties were all given an opportunity to submit an additional plan that they felt may facilitate the division of the property. No additional plans having been filed, the only additional matter brought to the attention of the court was the reargument of the original demand and a suggestion that the court could determine some way in which the property could be divided in kind. The Court originally found and again finds the property is not subject to division in kind because there is no road frontage on the property and that the property in question, to divide it in kind in any manner, would require a servitude on two of the portions of the property to an additional portion, which would cause an inconvenience and loss of value to the parties receiving the first two tracts of land; and in addition, that there are certain improvements on the property, while of questionable value, that would make it almost impossible to divide the property in kind, that being the opinion of Mr. Mark Montgomery, who was an appraiser and expert land evaluator who was *1097 called as a witness to testify in the case. In addition, the particular property in question consists of partially improved and unimproved property, and this Court, based on the evidence that I heard, is not able to make any determination as to a just division of that property.
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486 So. 2d 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birdwell-v-jeffery-lactapp-1986.