Cochran v. Fort

7 Mart. (N.S.) 622
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 Mart. (N.S.) 622 (Cochran v. Fort) 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
Cochran v. Fort, 7 Mart. (N.S.) 622 (La. 1829).

Opinion

Porter, J.

delivered the opinion of the The petitioners state that Bertrand Gravier, of the late Spanish province of Lou- ... isiana, being the owner of part of a plantation formerh belonging to the Jesuits, near the city New-Orleans, sold to a certain Joseph D. of-^ev*a’ of the same place, a portion of said land adjoining the city having sixty feet in front^ with the depth of three hundred and thirteen; _ and that the said Hevia afterwards sold the same to the petitioners.

That it was the intention of Gravier to sell, and of Hevia to acquire along with the said land the right of alluvion, as the same belonged to the vendor: and that by the deed of sale the vendee did acquire this right.

That since the sale of the land to Hevia, a valuable margin of soil has been formed in front of it, and incorporated therewith by allu-vion, which is the property of the petitioners.

That notwithstanding their legal right to ihisalluvion the defendants have illegally enter[623]*623ed thereon, pretending to be the owners, and 71 ° detain the same.

The petition concludes with a prayer, for possession, damages for the detention, and general relief

The defendants plead the general issue. Set up title under four persons, who they aver purchased the premises, at a sale made in virtue of an execution issuing from the district court to satisfy a judgment obtained against the heirs of B. Gravier. That this judgment was rendered for the amount due by Graviers’ heirs, for making a levee, and other, indispensable works and repairs on the lot; which work and labour gave a privilege or lien in it. The pleas of prescription, of ten, and of thirty years, are also contained in the answer.

There was judgment in the court of the first instance for the plaintiffs, and the defendants appealed.

The case made for this court consists not only of the evidence actually given on the trial, but by consent of parties embraces all the testimony taken in the cases of Gravier vs. The Aldermen and Inhabitants of New-Orleans. Morgan vs. Livingston. Gravier and oth[624]*624ers vs. Livingston. Hawkins vs. Livingston, Gravier and others. And Fort & Story vs. The Syndics of B. Morgan. In a word, of all the conflicting evidence, which this seemingly never failing source of litigation, has produced for the last twenty-five years.

The argument, as heretofore, in all the other causes which have grown out of claims to the batture, has been able and elaborate, and several important questions of law have been raised and discussed: but the view we have taken of the case does not require us to examine several of the points to which counsel have devoted their attention.

By the pleadings, the plaintiffs are placed within the operation of the well established rule in petitory actions: that they must recover on the strength of their own title, not on the weakness of their adversaries.

The first question, therefore, for our enquiry is, have they shewn a title to the property claimed in the petition ?

They contend they have, by presenting in the first place, a sale from Bertrand Gravier to Hevia. In this sale Gravier describes the premises as having sixty feet in front to the [625]*625river Mississippi, with 313 in depth, conform-ably to the plan made by Don Carlos Laveau Trideau. This plan has been produced to the court, and it shews the premises to be one of the front lots, but the lines marked on it do not extend to the river.

They offer in the second place, the sale from Hevia to them. In this deed of conveyance the property is described in the same manner as in that from Gravier to Hevia.

And they urge that in virtue of these titles they have a right to all the batture that has been formed in front of them since the period of the purchase from Gravier.

Whether such a right does follow as a consequence of the sale thus made to them, der pends on a question of fact: namely, whether any alluvion of sufficient height and magnitude was formed at the time these conveyances were made to them, to be susceptible of private ownership. If it was so formed, it remained the property of the vendor, and did not pass to the vendee.

This principle was established in the case of Livingston vs. Herman, land it entered .materially into the motives of the decision in the [626]*626case of Morgan vs. Livingston. Its correct ness has not been impugned in argument, and a review of the reasons on which it was found-e(], has satisfied us still more of its correctness. 6 Martin, 19. 9 ibid. 656.

The purchasers of the front lots being in this case the plaintiffs, they are required in order to enable them to recover, not only to shew a title in Hevia, but also the transmission of that title to them. It matters little in the decision of the cause, whether the batture was formed of not, at the period he acquired from Gravier. Admitting it was not, and that the alluvion afterwards added to the lot belonged to him, it behoves the petitioners to shew they have acquired it. Now, the sale from Hevia to them does not expressly convey the batture. If, therefore, it passes any right to the alluvion, in front of the lot sold, it can only do so under the principles already recognized by the court, viz, that there was not at the date of the conveyance any batture formed of sufficient height and magnitude to be susceptible of ownership. If such batture did exist, it was retained by Hevia, and did not pass to the plaintiffs. Our examination of the evidence has therefore been [627]*627directed to an enquiry into the existence, or non existence of the alluvion on the 28th February, 1803, the day of the sale from Hevia, to Cochran and Rhea.

We have perused with attention the voluminous mass of evidence laid before us, and we have extracted what follows from it, as bearing materially on the matter in enquiry.

Trudeau, the former surveyor general of the province, swears, that at the time he made the plan of the fauxburgh St. Marie, and divided it into lots, at the request of Bertrand Gravier, a batture existed along the whole front of it.

Two depositions of Girod have been produced. In that taken on the trial of this cause he states, that he arrived in New Orleans in 1788. In 1793 the batture began to be apparent from Julie street up to Madame D’Lors. Below there was no batture. In 1803, he de. posited cannon on the place where now stands the house of the defendants. In 1805, they were covered eight feet deep with alluvion. l{i August, 1803, a vessel belonging to him of 300 tons, moored within fifteen feet of the levee. In 1807, there was about 20 or 30 feet in space from the levee to the river at low water, and [628]*628no more. In 1810 or 1811, the batture began to form considerably.

I n the testimony giren by the witness in the case of Fort and Story vs. Syndics of B. Morgan, he stated, that in 1793 the batture opposite the property of Madame D’Lor was high, from thence it diminished gradually in breadth till opposite a small fort near the npper line of the city. That in the year 1803 he anchored one of his vessels opposite Hevia’s house, and that she was not more than 200 yards distance from the house. The witness was 77 years of age.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mart. (N.S.) 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochran-v-fort-la-1829.