Cheramie v. Vegas
This text of 194 So. 2d 189 (Cheramie v. Vegas) 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
Daize (Daes) CHERAMIE et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Raphael VEGAS et al., Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*190 Edward T. Diaz, of Diaz & Erny, Golden Meadow, for appellants.
Walter I. Lanier, Jr., of Pugh, Lanier & Pugh, Thibodaux, Percy Sandel, New Orleans, for appellees.
Before LANDRY, ELLIS and BAILES, JJ.
BAILES, Judge.
This is a boundary action which was instituted to establish the dividing line between two contiguous properties, owned respectively by the plaintiffs and the defendants. The property is located in Section 5, Township 18 South, Range 21 East, Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. The plaintiffs are collectively the owners of a parcel of land having a front of one arpent by a depth of forty arpents, and the defendants, collectively, are the owners of a contiguous parcel having a front of two arpents by a depth of forty arpents, both tracts fronting on Bayou Lafourche.
Upon the filing of the suit on February 27, 1961, the court a quo appointed Mr. Carl *191 E. Heck, a registered Civil Engineer of this state to survey the boundary line sought to be established. On March 28, 1962, Mr. Heck filed his proces verbal of his work and a map of his survey. The plaintiffs, being satisfied with the line as established by Mr. Heck are proponents thereof and seek to have it established and recognized as such by the court, whereas the defendants oppose the Heck line. In opposing the Heck line, defendants employed Mr. Ben Garrett, a registered surveyor of this state, to fix the boundary line as he deemed correct.
As the trial court found the reasons advanced for the recognition of the respective lines based on technical testimony which required professional interpretation, and by and with the consent of the litigants involved herein, it appointed Mr. William Clifford Smith, a registered civil engineer of this state, an expert in surveying, to consult with and advise the court in this proceeding. This appointment was made on June 1, 1965. On the report of Mr. Smith to the court, the boundary line established by Mr. Heck was approved as the true and correct boundary between the property of the plaintiffs and the defendants. The trial court also casted each side with one-half of the costs of establishing the approved boundary line and court costs.
Defendants appeal, and the plaintiffs answer the appeal. The defendants appeal from the judgment establishing the boundary line, and the plaintiffs, in answering the appeal, contend the court erred in assessing them with one-half of the costs.
From the record it appears that Raphael Vegas purchased a tract of land from Mrs. John D. Nix, Jr., in 1917, measuring three arpents along the right descending bank of Bayou Lafourche by a depth of forty arpents. He sold the northern most one arpent frontage by a depth of forty arpents of land to Daize Cheramie in 1939, retaining the remaining two arpents by forty arpents for himself. This land has since, in part, passed by sales to other parties who are included in this suit either as plaintiffs or defendants. This three by forty arpent tract was a part of a tract of land which was originally confirmed by the United States to James Rigaud in 1817. This original tract of land measured sixty arpents on the front by forty arpents in depth. It was designated as Section 5, Township 18 South, Range 21 East on a plat of survey of the township by Joseph Gorlinski, Deputy Surveyor, and approved by the surveyor general of Louisiana in 1858.
It should be mentioned that the defendants are not contesting the location of the property within Section 5 or the establishment of the boundary line 19½ arpents north of the south line of Section 5, however what is vigorously disputed and contested by them is the location of the south line of Section 5 as fixed by Mr. Heck. The location of that line is the key to the dispute between the plaintiffs and defendants.
The defendants objected to the introduction of the proces verbal of Mr. Heck, although, in the dialogue between counsel and the court, defendants' counsel stated: "I think that one of the grounds of my objection was that the proper foundation has not been laid for the introduction of this particular document in view of the fact that this witness (Mr. Heck, the surveyor) has not testified as to what he did in the preparation on the ground for this proces verbal. I think it would be more in order for the introduction of this particular document to be made after the witness has testified." and further counsel stated: "* * * I quite agree with the court that the proces verbal is a report of what the Court appointed surveyor was appointed to do, but the best evidence of what the Court appointed surveyor did is the testimony of the witness himself who is here present in Court, and I think it would be more in order to have him testify and state what he did and then if they want to introduce the proces verbal itself, it would be all right." (Emphasis supplied by the court.) The record demonstrates that Mr. Heck was on the stand at that time identifying the proces *192 verbal, and he was interrogated at great length by both counsel for the plaintiffs and counsel for the defendants.
The defendants have devoted about one-half of their one hundred page brief to a discussion of the facts, the law and the jurisprudence on the question of the deficiencies of the proces verbal. We certainly have no quarrel with the defendants' positions that the proces verbal should be clothed with the formality prescribed by LSA-C.C. 833 through 836; however, the law governing the formality and contents of the court-appointed surveyor's proces verbal is of utmost importance and bears the greatest significance in cases where there is no other proof of proper establishment of the boundary line, and there is no opposing or corroborating evidence before the court. Such is not the case before us herein. The court appointed Mr. Heck to make a survey and thereby to establish the boundary; however, the defendants hired their own surveyor and proof of the correctness of the line as fixed by their surveyor was offered to the court. Furthermore, the court appointed an expert to examine into the work of both the court appointed surveyor, and the defendants' surveyor, to assist it in determining which survey was correct. We find the expressions of the law of this state as enunciated in the cases of Simmons v. Dixon (1965) La.App., 174 So.2d 138, 141; McMichael v. Williams (1962) La.App., 138 So.2d 22; Boudreaux v. Stutes (1960) La. App., 119 So.2d 879; Talbot v. Pittman (1959) La.App., 114 So.2d 117; Randazzo v. Lucas (1957) La.App., 92 So.2d 398, and Conrad v. Roussell (1948) La.App., 37 So. 2d 449 are not apropos to the particular facts of this case.
Directing our attention and discussion now to the question of which survey has produced the correct boundary line, we find the defendants are essentially opposing the Heck line on the ground that he did not use an established government section corner as his beginning point, that he changed the government course calls and that he failed to retrace the original survey to find the actual corners of this survey on the ground. It is the appellants' contention that the court appointed surveyor should have begun his survey at the SE corner of Township 18 South, Range 21 East since this is an established government corner marked by a government surveyor, P. A. Thibodeaux, in 1875.
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