Esmele v. Violet Trapping Co.

166 So. 477, 184 La. 491, 1935 La. LEXIS 1810
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 2, 1935
DocketNo. 33456.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 166 So. 477 (Esmele v. Violet Trapping Co.) 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
Esmele v. Violet Trapping Co., 166 So. 477, 184 La. 491, 1935 La. LEXIS 1810 (La. 1935).

Opinions

LAND, Justice.

Plaintiff leased certain lands in the parish of St. Bernard, owned by the Godchaux Sugars, Inc., and was in peaceful and undisturbed possession of same under the lease for more than 2 years prior to December 18, 1933.

Plaintiff secured trappers and placed them on this property for the purpose of catching muskrats for their pelts.

*493 During the trapping season, beginning December 1, 1933, and ending March 1, 1934, the defendants, Violet Trapping Company, Inc., and Mirandona Bros., a commercial partnership, through their agents and employees, came upon the lease of plaintiff 18 days after the opening of the trapping season and forcibly ejected plaintiffs trappers from a large portion of the property under lease, or about 1,000 acres, and trapped the lands thereafter themselves.

Suit was filed in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans for damages sustained from December 10, 1933, up to January 10, 1934, and the present suit is for damages resulting from trespass from January 20th to March 1, 1934, or for a period of 39 days.

Plaintiff sues for damages in the sum of $8,365, the alleged value of 12,870 muskrat pelts, which he would have taken from the lease, at an average value of 65 cents each, because of the fact that he was not permitted by defendants to trap his lands. Pie also sues for the sum of $96.80, the alleged value of 22 dozen traps belonging to plaintiff and tortiously removed, from the lease by defendants; and also for the further sum of $15, the alleged value of a pirogue, which had been smashed by the agents and employees of defendants.

In their answer, defendants denied all of the allegations in plaintiff’s petition and set up that the lands of which they took possession were lands under lease to defendants.

In reconvention, defendants claim that plaintiff removed from their lands 9,684 muskrat pelts of an average value of 41.92 cents, or a total value of $4,059.53, and that the customary profit thereon to the lessee of trapping lands at that time amounted to 65 per cent., or a total of $2,-638.70, of which amount, it is averred in the answer, the plaintiff has illegally deprived defendants and reconveners.

Defendants state in their brief that the disputed line ran some 3 miles, and that the disputed trapping lands involved some 300 acres, and that all disputed territory is within the limits of lands leased by the Violet Trapping Company.

Plaintiff leased from the Godchaux Sugars, Inc., 2,850 acres (estimated) in township 13 S., R. 14 E., in the southeastern district, on the east side of the Mississippi river, and described as the W. %, and W. % of E. y2 of section 14; all of fractional section 15; E. y2 of S. E. % of section 21; all of section 22; W. % of section 23; N. W. % of section 26; all of section 27; and fractional E. y2 of E.'% of section 28.

Plaintiff leased this property in 1929 for the trapping season of 1929-1930, 1930-1931, and 1931-1932, when his lease expired, but was extended for 1932-1933, and 1933-1934.

Plaintiff planted on the leased lands some “three-cornered grass,” a grass particularly attractive to muskrats.

There are cement markers along the eastern boundary of the property of Godchaux Sugars, Inc. The lands of defend *495 ants adjoin, on the east, the lands leased by plaintiff.

During the 4 or 5 years that plaintiff has been leasing and trapping this property, he has used the cement markers along its eastern boundary as the property line defining the eastern limit of the Godchaux Sugars’ lands.

Prior to the season 1933-1934, no one had ever questioned the cement marker line of the Godchaux Sugars property, which was - also posted against trespassers.

In the year 1926, Walter Y. Kemper, a well-known and competent civil engineer, surveyed the Godchaux Sugars property, and all corners were marked with wooden stakes. A year'or two afterwards he was on the property and found that the cement markers had been put where he had originally placed the wooden stakes. Tr. pp. 16, 17, 18, 52.

Max Carig, a witness for plaintiff, testified that he worked for Mr. Kemper during the survey made by him of this property in the year 1926, and that the cement markers that are there now, defining the eastern boundary of the property, are in the same position in which Mr. Kemper had placed the wooden stakes.

This witness also testified that he had been trapping on this land since about the year 1923; that in the years 1926 and 1927 he leased it; that he has trapped with plaintiff since he leased the property; and that he used the boundary of the Godchaux Sugars lands on the eastern side, and that this line was accepted by everybody. Tr, p. 20.

Plaintiff testified that a surveyor, named Hawkins, was sent to his lease by defendants about December 18, 1933, or about 18 days after the trapping season for 1933-1934 commenced, and that this surveyor drew a line 2,500 feet wide inside of the-eastern boundary of the property; that defendants trapped this territory until about 10 days before the trapping season ended March 1, 1934, and that the trespass covered about 1,000 acres.

Plaintiff had six trappers on his land from December 1st to December 10th, before the trespass was committed, and his employees were forcibly ejected therefrom, by “the frontier process” employed by defendants in this case.

Plaintiff, testifying from his books, gave the catch of each of these trappers upon the property as follows:

Max Carig, 660 pelts during the 10-day period.

Richard Virueda, 641 pelts during the 10-day period.

Angel Ramirez and Alex Perelta (working together) 1,138 pelts during the 10-day period, or 569 pelts each.

Fred Gailen and Alfred Ramirez, 561 'pelts each during the 10-day period.

It appears, therefore, as stated in plaintiff’s brief, that 3,461 pelts were taken in-10 days by 6 trappers, or an average of 576 pelts for each man during the 10-day period, or an average of 57 pelts per day.

Plaintiff has taken an average, of 55 pelts a day as the basis for his claim.

*497 Plaintiff was deprived of his property for a period of 39 days — January 20 to March 1, 1934 — and the six trappers averaged 55 pelts a day, or 330 pelts per day for a period of 39 days, during which time plaintiff and his employees were ejected from his property by defendants. At 65 cents each, the total catch, estimated at 12,870 pelts, amounts to $8,365.00.

Plaintiff would have realized for these pelts $8,365, 50 per cent, of which he would have had to pay his trappers. He therefore lost as a result of the depredation of the defendants $4,182.50, for which he presents his claim in the present case.

Because of a suit in the United States court, where an application for an injunction by plaintiff against defendants was being applied for, and in order to prevent further trouble, an arbitrary line was accepted by both sides, by agreement of counsel, for the remainder of the trapping season, 10 days before its expiration.

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Bluebook (online)
166 So. 477, 184 La. 491, 1935 La. LEXIS 1810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esmele-v-violet-trapping-co-la-1935.