Bostick v. Foret
This text of 351 So. 2d 238 (Bostick v. Foret) 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
James W. BOSTICK, Jr.
v.
Clarence P. FORET.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Edwards, Porteous & Lee, Marion F. Edwards, Gretna, for plaintiff-appellee.
McClendon & Denkman, Metairie, for defendant-appellant.
Richard T. McBride, New Orleans for intervenor-appellant, in pro. per.
*239 Before REDMANN, GULOTTA and BEER, JJ.
GULOTTA, Judge.
Defendant appeals from a judgment declaring plaintiff to be the owner of certain batture property on the west bank of the Mississippi River in Jefferson Parish. We affirm.
Plaintiff's possessory action in which he seeks recognition of his right to undisturbed possession of the land in dispute has been converted into a petitory action by defendant's answer and reconventional demand seeking recognition of defendant's ownership of the property and damages occasioned by plaintiff's possession. Defendant's predecessor in title intervenes and seeks dismissal of plaintiff's suit.
In written reasons for judgment, recognizing plaintiff as owner of the disputed property and dismissing defendant's reconventional demand, the trial judge concluded that plaintiff "has clearly acquired title by virtue of 30 years' possession". Citing Pure Oil Company v. Skinner, 294 So.2d 797 (La. 1974), he further stated that defendant had failed to prove that he had acquired title "against the world without regard to title of adverse claimant".
The dispute centers around batture property located between the river and the levee in front of lots fronting on the river road in Jefferson Parish.
In a cash sale dated November 8, 1917, Manuel J. DeBlanc conveyed the road frontage lots, together with two additional lots immediately to the rear,[1] to J. T. Prowell.
On September 8, 1933, Prowell transferred the four lots to David Investment Company. The property description in the conveyance is virtually identical to that in the 1917 sale except that the words "batture and batture rights" are added.
On December 21, 1936, David Investment sold the four lots to James W. Bostick, Sr., plaintiff's father. The act of sale describes the property transferred as "portions of Farm Lots 1, 2, 24 and 25" and makes reference to a Louisiana Meadows Company map attached to the 1917 act. The property is further delineated by reference to "a blueprint of survey by Alvin E. Hotard" attached to the act of sale. No mention is made, however, of "batture and batture rights". Nevertheless, the act contains an acquisition clause stating that the property conveyed is "the same property acquired by vendor by purchase from J. T. Prowell" and identifying the 1933 act by notary, date and number of registry. (The 1933 act includes "batture and batture rights".)
On September 14, 1944, plaintiff acquired lots 1 and 25 from his father. On August 19, 1952, plaintiff acquired lots 2 and 24 by cash sale from his mother, the two lots having been previously sold to her by Bostick, Sr., following their divorce.
Defendant bases his title on a purchase of the batture from David Investment Company in liquidation on December 19, 1974. According to defendant, David had acquired the lots and the then-existing batture by purchase from Prowell in the 1933 sale but had not transferred the batture in the 1936 sale to Bostick, Sr.[2] Intervenor McBride, liquidator of David Investment and warrantor of defendant's title, takes the same position as Foret.
On appeal, in addition to reasserting his claim to ownership of the batture, defendant raises procedural and substantive arguments in seeking a reversal of the trial court's judgment. Defendant and intervenor contend that when the trial judge concluded defendant had failed to establish his *240 title, the judge should have dismissed defendant's petitory demand as a "nonsuit" and should not have considered plaintiff's claim to ownership. In addition to defendant's claim that title to the batture was not transferred to Bostick, Sr., in the 1936 sale, Foret and intervenor contend plaintiff failed to prove either 10 or 30 years' acquisitive prescription.
In connection with acquisitive prescription, plaintiff asserts a valid chain of title dating back to the 1933 sale from Prowell to David Investment in which the four lots are conveyed, together with the batture and batture rights. Because the 1936 sale from David Investment to Bostick, Sr., states that the property conveyed is the same as that acquired by David from Prowell, plaintiff argues that his father acquired all the property, i. e., the four lots and the batture.
At the outset, we find no merit to defendant and intervener's procedural argument that the trial judge, having concluded that defendant had failed to prove a valid title, should have dismissed the action as a "nonsuit" without considering plaintiff's ownership. Though we do not quarrel with the settled jurisprudential rule[3] that the title of a defendant in a petitory action is not at issue until plaintiff has proved valid title in himself, we do not feel that this principle necessitates a judgment of "nonsuit" in the instant case. Of particular significance in our case is the fact that plaintiff initiated litigation by filing a possessory action in which he alleged possession of the batture as owner and prayed for judgment recognizing his undisturbed possession. The suit was converted to a petitory action by defendant's answer and reconventional demand asserting title in himself. Defendant's argument would have merit had he initiated the litigation by filing a petitory action, but under the circumstances, a dismissal of the action as a "nonsuit" would leave unresolved the initial question, i. e., whether plaintiff is entitled to a judgment recognizing his right to undisturbed possession of the batture. We therefore conclude that the trial judge, upon dismissing defendant's reconventional demand asserting title, properly heard evidence on the main possessory demand.
Turning now to plaintiff's contention that he has acquired ownership of the batture by title, we note that a discrepancy exists in the description of the property conveyed. The first part of the description in the 1936 act of sale sets forth the dimensions of the four lots and makes reference to the maps by the Louisiana Meadows Company and Hotard without mentioning the batture; however, the last part of the description of the property, the acquisition clause, states that the property conveyed is the same[4] as that acquired by David Investment from Prowell in 1933. The 1933 act conveys the farm lots and the batture and batture rights. Furthermore, the mortgage and conveyance certificates attached to the 1936 act of sale include in the description the batture and batture rights. This discrepancy creates uncertainty and ambiguity as to whether the batture was in fact included in the 1936 sale of property from David Investment to Bostick, Sr.
Though we are mindful of the settled doctrine that parol evidence cannot be introduced to vary the terms of a written act,[5] when ambiguity exists in the act, resort to extrinsic evidence is permissible to *241 clarify the ambiguity by showing the intention of the parties. Rosenthal v. Gauthier, 224 La. 341, 69 So.2d 367 (1953); Snow-White Roofs, Inc. v. Boucher, 182 So.2d 846 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1966).
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
351 So. 2d 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostick-v-foret-lactapp-1977.