Dupuy Storage & Forwarding Corp. v. Cowan

216 So. 2d 610, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4383
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 2, 1968
DocketNo. 3195
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 216 So. 2d 610 (Dupuy Storage & Forwarding Corp. v. Cowan) 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
Dupuy Storage & Forwarding Corp. v. Cowan, 216 So. 2d 610, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4383 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

HALL, Judge.

Plaintiff brought this petitory action against Mrs. Mary Cowan, widow of Albert Chalona, seeking to be declared the owner and as such entitled to the full and undisturbed possession of a narrow strip of land approximately thirty-two feet in length, having a width of approximately two and one-half feet on one end and approximately two feet on the other, which strip is more fully and accurately described in the petition.

Plaintiff alleges that Mrs. Chalona is in possession of this strip of land by reason of the fact that the rear of the building situated on her property encroaches upon [611]*611the rear of plaintiff’s property by the width of the strip in question. Plaintiff coupled with its petitory action a claim against Mrs. Chalona for damages for breach of contract and/or damages resulting from such encroachment in the sum of $195,742.00.

After the suit was filed but before it came to trial, the defendant, Mrs. Chalona, sold her property to Salvador Módica, Jr. and Roy P. Stubenrauch, who were subsequently made parties defendaST't© the'peti-tory action only.

Following trial on the merits judgment was rendered in plaintiff’s favor recognizing and declaring it to be the owner of the strip of land described in plaintiff’s petition and ordering the three defendants to deliver possession thereof to plaintiff. The judgment denied all claims for damages. The three defendants appealed. Plaintiff answered the appeal praying that the judgment appealed from be amended by awarding plaintiff damages against Mrs. Chalona in the sum of $195,742.00 as originally prayed for.

The Petitory Action

The record reveals that at the time suit was filed the defendant, Mrs. Chalona, owned lot 1 (sometimes described as lot 5) in Square 13 of the City of New Orleans which is an irregular shaped square bounded on the north by Decatur Street, on the east by Almonaster Avenue, on the south by North Peters Street and on the west by Spain Street. (The names of the streets bounding the square have been changed from time to time but we shall adhere to the above nomenclature.) Mrs. Chalona’s lot 1(5) fronts on Almonaster Avenue. Plaintiff claims title to and ownership of lot 9 (sometimes described as Pt. 11) which is situated in the same square and fronts on Spain Street. The lot claimed by plaintiff lies to the rear of the Chalona lot and plaintiff alleges that the building on the Chalona lot 1(5) encroaches on the rear portion of its lot 9 (Pt. 11).

At the trial plaintiff produced evidence of its title tracing same back to Bernard Marigny in the year 1811. Bernard Marigny was the owner of “Fabourg de Bernard Marigny” which included what is now known as Square 13, and is the common author of all persons owning property in this square. We have carefully examined all of the links in plaintiff’s chain of title and in our opinion plaintiff has successfully borne the burden of proving a good and valid record title to lot 9 (Pt. 11). Defendants have pointed to no flaws in plaintiff’s title to this lot. What defendants contend is that the boundary line between plaintiff’s lot 9 (Pt. 11) and the Chalona lot 1(5) has never been fixed; that plaintiff has not proved the depth of its lot and consequently has not proved its ownership of the narrow strip upon which the alleged encroachment exists by the strength of its own title but has attempted to rely on the weakness of defendant’s title to make out its ownership thereof. Of course plaintiff in a petitory action must recover on the strength of its own, and not upon the weakness of defendant’s title.

The issue presented to us is thus narrowed to the question whether plaintiff has proved on the strength of its own title that its lot 9 (Pt. 11) includes the narrow strip in dispute.

First it might be well to observe that the surveys in the record leave no doubt that plaintiff’s lot 9 (Pt. 11) is situated immediately to the rear of the Chalona lot 1(5).

Plaintiff acquired the whole of Square 13 with the exception of the Chalona lot and lot 2, (with which we are not here concerned) from the City of New Orleans by and through the Public Belt Railroad Commission by act before Robert L. Hick-erson, N. P. dated September 15, 1949. The property acquired by plaintiff is described in this act by courses and distances beginning at the corner of Spain and Decatur Streets, being the northwest corner of the square, and running thence east along [612]*612Decatur Street to the córner of Decatur Street and Almonaster Avenue, thence in a southerly direction along Almonaster Avenue to the northeast corner of the Chalona lot 1(5) which fronts on Almonaster Avenue, thence west along the northern boundary line of said lot a distance of 92'6"5"' to the northwest corner of said lot, thence southerly along the rear line of said lot a distance of 32'5"4"' to the southwest corner of said lot, thence in an easterly direction along the south line of said lot 1(5) a distance of 81'10"1"' to Almonaster Avenue, thence in a southerly direction along Almo-naster Avenue a distance of 32'6"7/" to the northeast corner of lot 2 which also fronts on Almonaster Avenue. The description then takes us around the perimeter of lot 2 returning to Almonaster Avenue at a point which is the southeast corner of Square 13. From this point the description takes us in a westerly direction along the south line of said square to Spain Street being the southwest corner of Square 13, thence northerly along Spain Street to the point of beginning; all of which is more fully shown by a survey of F. S. Stewart dated May 5, 1948, revised August 5, 1948, which is attached to plaintiff’s acquisition. The act recites that the property acquired is composed of a number of lots, one of which is lot 9 (Pt. 11) with which we are concerned. The individual lots which compose the property acquired by plaintiff were not surveyed but are outlined on the attached Stewart survey. However, the Chalona lot 1(5) (and also lot 2) were surveyed in order to exclude them from plaintiff’s acquisition.

From the above it is seen that plaintiff acquired all of the property surrounding the Chalona lot 1(5). It is also seen that in excluding the Chalona lot the surveyor gave it a depth on its north side of 92'6"5"' measured from its front on Almonaster Avenue, and a depth of 81'10"1'" on its south side.

No actual survey of plaintiff’s lot 9 (Pt. 11) appears in the record but all of the acts of sale in plaintiff’s chain of title describe this lot as measuring 31'9" front on Spain Street by a depth between parallel lines of 63'U"2i/2"'.

We know that plaintiff’s lot 9 (Pt. 11) lies in the rear of the Chalona lot 1(5) and that plaintiff owns all of the land between the rear of the Chalona lot and Spain Street.

By adding "the title depth of plaintiff’s lot 9 (Pt. 11) to the surveyed depth from Almonaster Avenue of the property excluded from plaintiff’s acquisition we find the width of Square 13 between Spain and Almonaster Avenue at the level of the north line of the Chalona lot 1(5) to be 156'5"7i4'" (63'11"2i/2"' plus 92/6"5"'). By the same method we find the width of Square 13 at the level of the south line of the Chalona lot to be 145'9"3i4w (63Tl"2i4'" plus 81'10"1'").

The title depth of the Chalona lot 1(5) is 92,2"0along the north line of the lot and 82,0"0/" along its south line. If we add the title depth of plaintiff’s lot 9 (Pt. 11) to the title

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Bluebook (online)
216 So. 2d 610, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupuy-storage-forwarding-corp-v-cowan-lactapp-1968.