Dorkins v. Montgomery

2 La. App. 292, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 157
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1924
DocketNo. 2056
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 La. App. 292 (Dorkins v. Montgomery) 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
Dorkins v. Montgomery, 2 La. App. 292, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 157 (La. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

PORTER, J.

This is a suit to fix the boundaries between two contiguous tracts of land owned by the plaintiff and the defendant, and the petition contains the usual and necessary allegations in such suits, with the additional allegation that the defendant has trespassed on and used since plaintiff’s purchase of the land, at least six acres of plaintiff’s land and two cabins, the rental value of which is, altogether, $150.00 per year.

The prayer is for the appointment of a surveyor to fix the limits between the two tracts of land, and for judgment against the defendant for the rental value of the six acres of land and the cabins, as above stated.

The defendant answered and admitted a number of the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, as modified by paragraphs 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 of the answer. He denied the allegation in the petition to the effect that no boundary had been fixed between the two tracts of land, and averred that, on the contrary, the said line separating the two tracts had been fixed, agreed upon, determined and marked as fully set forth in paragraphs to follow. He denied that he had encroached upon defendant’s land, or that he owed him anything for rent for land or cabins.

The paragraphs in the answer which present the issues upon which the case was tried and decided in the lower court are as follows:

7.
“Further answering, respondent says and avers that about the 18th day of January, 1915, respondent entered into negotiations with C. C. Lewis, then the owner of all the land now owned by respondent, as well as the land owned by plaintiff, to purchase from said Lewis a- tract of land of about forty acres, more or less; ' that in the company with said C. C. Lewis, the owner, and with F. D. Bull, a competent land surveyor, and the parish engineer of East Carroll parish, your respondent did visit the land now owned and occupied by respondent; that said Lewis pointed out to respondent and to said Surveyor Bull a certain telegraph post along the line of M. H. & L. R. R. Company, and said: ‘The south line of the forty acres I propose to sell you is about on an east and west line drawn through the center of this telegraph post; I know toy north boundary and have ascertained the boundary of the quarter section I propose to sell you by counting the telegraph posts and taking the distance' as shown by them from my north boundary; but it may be, and probably is, that this [294]*294distance is not precisely accurate; there fore, it will be understood between us that while my deed to you will convey to you the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of Section 71 T. 20, R. 13, yet this east and west line drawn through the center of this telegraph post shall be your southern boundary; it may run a few acres over, or a few acres under the forty acres for which you are to pay me, and whenever a survey is made, if there is an overplus, you are to pay me for it at the same rate per acre for which I am selling this to you, and if the survey shows less than forty acres north of this telegraph post line, then I will refund to you at the same price per acre for the decreased quantity.’
“Respondent shows that he accepted, agreed upon, determined, and fixed with said C. C. Lewis said southern boundary of said forty-acre tract as above set forth,
8.
“Respondent further shows that later on, to-wit, in the latter part of the month of October, 1917, in the meantime, some three years, he and his said vendor, C. C. Lewis, having scrupulously observed and lived up to the boundary fixed as above set forth), plaintiff herein, Sim S. Dorkins, applied to said Lewis to purchase sixty acres of land just below and adjoining respondent’s purchase; that said Lewis refused to sell to said plaintiff and plaintiff applied to respondent to induce and persuade said Lewis to sell to him; that respondent wrote to said Lewis, urging him to sell the land to plaintiff, and really made the trade between plaintiff and said Lewis; that at the time said trade was consummated, said Lewis informed said plaintiff of the determining and fixing of the limits of the respondent’s lower line and stated to him the agreement between respondent and said Lewis; that is to say, that if his survey showed more than forty acres in respondent’s tract, with the south line fixed as above set forth, respondent would pay for the excess, and if it showed less, the price for the diminished portion would be returned to respondent, and said Sim S. Dorkins, plaintiff herein, agreed with and assured said Lewis and respondent that he would accept, and he did accept, the fixing and determining of respondent’s south line based on said telegraph post, and promised and obligated himself that if a survey showed that the land described in the deed to said Lewis to respondent did not quite come down to said telegraph post, that he, said Dorkins, would, upon that fact being determined to convey to respondent the necessary land to perfect and carry out the agreement between respondent and said Lewis, as ratified by said plaintiff. Avers that said ratification and obligation was made a condition of the sale by Lewis to plaintiff.
9.
“Respondent avers and shows that he and plaintiff herein abided by and considered as fixed and determined said boundary between them until about July, 1918, when respondent caused Surveyor F. D. Bull to run the lines of his property, and when said Dorkins, from information received from him by said surveyor, discovered that the lines as run by said Bull ran so far north' of said telegraph post as to leave out of the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of said Section 71, respondent’s house and another cabin, he, said plaintiff for the first time, attempted to violate said agreement fixing said boundary between them, and seeking to take an unfair advantage of respondent, instigated this suit.
10.
“Respondent further shows that one of the cabins claimed by plaintiff was a cabin situated on land south of the said telegraph post line and on land which is now owned and occupied by said plaintiff, and which said cabin was included in the sale and .delivered to respondent by said Lewis as. an inducement to make the purchase from said Lewis, and was by said Lewis’ directions moved by respondent’ from the land then owned by C.. C. Lewis to the. land sold by said Lewis to respondent.
11.
“Respondent further avers and shows that ’ when informed of plaintiff’s claims and threats, he has endeavored in every possible manner to have plaintiff carry out his agreement that he and respon[295]*295dent and said Lewis had made at the time of said plaintiff’s purchase from said.

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Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 292, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorkins-v-montgomery-lactapp-1924.