Culligan Water Conditioning, Inc. v. Heirs of Watson

370 So. 2d 129, 1979 La. App. LEXIS 3465
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 26, 1979
DocketNo. 13836
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 370 So. 2d 129 (Culligan Water Conditioning, Inc. v. Heirs of Watson) 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.

Bluebook
Culligan Water Conditioning, Inc. v. Heirs of Watson, 370 So. 2d 129, 1979 La. App. LEXIS 3465 (La. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

MARVIN, Judge.

This appeal of a declaratory judgment involves title to portions of a 150-foot strip of land in Shreveport on which a track was maintained by a railroad for more than a hundred years until it was removed about 1962. Plaintiff’s title, which was recognized in the judgment, stems from heirs of the person who owned the property when the railroad was built. Defendants, who are appealing the judgment, generally are owners of city lots abutting the strip whose claims or titles stem from the railroad and adverse possession.1 We affirm.

[131]*131This case is somewhat of a sequel to Bray v. Boyd, 286 So.2d 508 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1973), writ refused. Plaintiff’s principal stockholder was the plaintiff in that case. There the instrument by which it is claimed that the railroad acquired its authority over the strip was construed as a mere servitude. That decision must be reexamined in light of this record and the contentions made here relative to the later holding in Pure Oil Company v. Skinner, 294 So.2d 797 (La. 1974), that the plaintiff in a declaratory-petitory action who is not in possession, must make out its title good against the world.

The disputed strip was a part of a 145 acre tract acquired by Eliza Harris in 1841. She later married Matthew Watson and entered into a marriage contract, retaining the control and management of this, her separate property, which became known as Idlewilde Plantation. Matthew Watson, who of parenthetical historical significance was the sheriff of Caddo Parish, sold to the railroad in 1853, without the authorization of his wife, what Bray held was a servitude across the 150-foot strip.

Eliza Harris Watson, who died in 1869 leaving eight children, willed to three of her children the property which she described as lying between the railroad and a public road (Greenwood Road) to the north. The remaining property, partitioned into lots, was willed to all eight children. Lot 30 of the partition was described as and was shown on the partition plat as being south of the railroad. By these or similar descriptions, through mesne conveyances, the property was sold to people who eventually subdivided it into city lots. Idlewilde Courts, north of the railroad, was subdivided in 1925 by J. S. Swann and others. Bellview Subdivision, south of the railroad, was subdivided in 1913 by Thomas Bell.

A part of the plat of Bellview Subdivision, on which we show the relative position of Idlewilde Courts, Interstate 20, and the property in dispute here and in Bray, is reproduced:

Illustration to follow.

[132]*132[[Image here]]

The 150-foot strip was described in the 1853 instrument from Matthew Watson to the railroad as . .75 feet of land on each side of the middle of the line of said road as located by the survey . . .”

In 1916, the railroad quitclaimed to Thomas Bell’s heirs the southernmost 25 feet of the south half of the strip and these heirs in turn, quitclaimed to the railroad their interest in the remaining 50 feet. The subdivision plats show that the south line of the Idlewilde lots is the north line of the 150-foot strip and that the north line of the Bellview lots approximates the south line of the 150-foot strip when the alley shown on the Bellview Subdivision plat is taken into consideration. This alley was declared abandoned by the City in 1967.

In 1962 the railroad removed its tracks from the 150-foot strip. In 1964 the railroad sold and began to sell by non-warranty deeds, specifically described tracts in the 150-foot strip. Each railroad vendee generally was conveyed the property in the strip immediately corresponding to the subdivision lot or lots owned by the vendee. Plaintiff’s declaratory judgment action was filed in 1974, within 10 years of the date of the first such deed by the railroad.2

[133]*133Appellants, in an answer and reconven-tional demand below, sought to have plaintiff’s demands rejected and alternatively sought judgments for the taxes, improvements and expenditures. Here appellants do claim that they have acquired title by acquisitive prescription of 10 and 30 years even if plaintiff’s title be found to comply with Pure Oil and CCP 3654(1), 3653(1). The record, however, does not support this claim.

There is no evidence that any person other than the railroad possessed any portion of the north half of the strip so as to meet the requirements of a 30-year prescriptive title. Even good faith possession for more than 10 years, but less than 30 years, is not sufficient to establish a prescriptive title in the absence of a deed translative of title. C.C. Art. 3499.

A quitclaim deed may be the basis of the 10-year acquisitive prescription but such a deed, without a showing of good faith possession, does not alone establish prescriptive title. The 25 feet that was quitclaimed to the Bell heirs by the railroad in 1916 generally approximates the 20 foot alley shown on the Bellview Subdivision plat of 1913. Whether or not the public used the alley, the heirs of Thomas Bell are bound by his dedication in 1913 of the alley to public use and notwithstanding their quitclaim deed from the railroad in 1916, they cannot adversely possess against the public. La.Const. (1921) Art. 19, § 16; La. Const. (1974) Art. 12, § 13; Louisiana Highway Commission v. Raxsdale, 12 So.2d 631 (La.App. 2d Cir. 1943). The dedication of the public alley was not revoked or abandoned by the City until 1967, some seven years before suit was brought. In any event, defendants have not shown what, if any, possession was exercised by the Bell heirs after 1916 of the alleyway in question.

The evidence does not show that the south line of the strip encroaches into the Bellview Subdivision lots or vice versa. When the subdivision was platted, there may well have been 75 or more feet between the north line of the Bellview lots and the once existing centerline of the railroad. Plaintiff does not appeal from the judgment, however, excepting the north five feet of certain numbered Bellview lots from its recognized title. See footnote two.

The record is devoid of evidence showing any acts of adverse possession in the south half of the 150-foot strip before 1944 (or more than 30 years before this suit was filed by plaintiff). We are not hesitant then to conclude that appellants’ claims to title by acquisitive prescription are without factual support because plaintiff brought this action within 10 years of the date of the earliest deed by the railroad to any defendant.

This conclusion turns us to the reexamination of the 1853 instrument and the record title to the strip in the light of Pure Oil.

When the children of Eliza Harris Watson sold their interests in the property lying on each side of the railroad, they tacitly accepted their mother’s succession. C.C. Arts. 988, 994, 999, 1002, Southern Natural Gas Company v. Naquin, 167 So.2d 434 (La. App. 1st Cir. 1964). These children were seized or vested with the ownership of all of their mother’s estate, even though a succession was not formally opened or a succession judgment recorded on the public records. C.C. Arts. 1626, 940, 946. The rights of the now living heirs of Eliza Harris Watson in successions which were not opened or which were perhaps not even accepted by the then heirs were nevertheless transmitted to the living heirs by operation of law. C.C. 944, 1626; Succession of Martin, 234 La.

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Opinion Number
Louisiana Attorney General Reports, 2004
Culligan Water Conditioning, Inc. v. Heirs of Watson
373 So. 2d 525 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1979)

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370 So. 2d 129, 1979 La. App. LEXIS 3465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culligan-water-conditioning-inc-v-heirs-of-watson-lactapp-1979.