Esparros v. Vicknair

17 So. 2d 924, 205 La. 699, 1944 La. LEXIS 707
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 17, 1944
DocketNo. 36681.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 924 (Esparros v. Vicknair) 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
Esparros v. Vicknair, 17 So. 2d 924, 205 La. 699, 1944 La. LEXIS 707 (La. 1944).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The sole defense to this petitory action is that the defendants, husband and wife, are the owners of the property in controversy by virtue of their corporeal possession thereof for more than thirty years, and their plea of thirty years’ prescription acquirendi causa.

The trial judge originally decided that the defendants had failed to prove their defense. On appeal we held that the testimony “conclusively” showed that the defendants had been in physical possession of the property they now occupy for more than thirty years, but we were unable to determine the boundary or area of that property. The judgment was annulled and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with the views therein expressed. On an application for rehearing by per curiam, we modified the decree so as to reopen the case for all purposes. 192 La. 383, 188 So. 37.-

The case was retried on the same issue, resulting in a judgment in favor of the defendants maintaining the plea of prescription, dismissing the plaintiff’s suit and recognizing the defendants as the owners of a piece of ground comprised within and designated by the letters “A, B, C and D”, being a part of Lot 5, Section 31, Township 11, South Range 8 East, containing 16.84 acres, located in St. John the Baptist Parish, more fully described and identified by -the pink color on the map and survey made and drawn through an order of *701 court by H. E. Landry, Surveyor, dated July 15, 1939.

The plaintiff appealed.

The record shows that the plaintiff, as testamentary heir, inherited 409.12 acres of land located in St. John the Baptist Parish from the Succession of Mrs. Lucille Faure, widow of Romain Buissier, on June 12, 1934, as appears from the judgment of the Civil District Court, Parish of Orleans, in proceedings No. 206,740 of the docket. Lot No. 5 containing 36 acres was a part of the larger tract. The land was in a swamp area and before the construction of the Air Line Highway, subsequent to 1930, access to the property in question was gained through the Gypsy Road. Prior to 1901, the defendant’s, Atanase Vicknair’s, father operated a farm in St. Charles Parish near the St. John the Baptist Parish line fronting on the Mississippi River and extending forty arpents in depth. To the rear of this property and at a distance of about one mile or more lies the land in question. Atanase Vicknair, when a young man, assisted his father in farming, and beginning in 1901 and each year thereafter he cleared the trees and underbrush from a part of the property in litigation, cultivating the portions from which the trees and stumps were removed, until the year 1905, when he had cleared all of the property and had eight or ten acres thereof under cultivation. During that time he erected a small house or camp where he kept his tools and a shed for his mules and had also placed a barbed wire fence around the property. In 1905, the building on the land burned and was replaced. In 1906, the defendant married and for a while lived with his father and, subsequently, at the Fisher place and in New Orleans. He continued to cultivate the property either personally or with the assistance of his father on a share-crop-basis from about 1910 to 1915, when, after building a modest home on the land, he resided there with his wife and three children. His other children were born on the property and all of them were reared there. When the Air Line Highway from New Orleans to Baton Rouge was constructed, it passed over the land leaving a small triangle on one side of the highway and a large portion of the land on the other side. On this triangular piece of land there is a house which was built in 1934 and on the larger piece of land on the opposite side of the highway, the defendant erected a pavilion. Apparently, this building was erected after the Air Line Highway was constructed. On April 18, 1934, the husband (Atanase Vicknair) sold to the contractor, who had the contract to construct the approaches to the BonnetCarre-Spillway Bridge on the Air Line-Highway, the filling to be excavated from a part of the property in question, in order to make the embankment. The consideration was $4,000, payable $500 in cash and the balance in monthly installments. The petitory action was filed on February 14, 1936.

On the original trial, the defendants, besides themselves, placed on the witness stand ten witnesses who were residents of St. John the Baptist Parish for many years and who had lived in the vicinity or section where the land in dispute is located. These people fished, hunted, and trapped on nearby lands and cut timber for cross *703 ties and staves therefrom. All of this property was generally referred to as “Unknown lands” and was considered as owned by the State. Each of these witnesses stated that in going to and from this section, they passed on the Gypsy Road and either bought wood and vegetables or obtained water from the defendant Vicknair, and that he gradually cleared the property — starting in either 1901 or 1902 until it was completely cleared and fenced before the end of 1905. They stated that he had a truck garden, and raised sugar cane and cotton thereon at various times, and had a tool house and mule shed on the land and a fence around it to keep out cattle.

The only countervailing proof was the documentary evidence showing the record title in the plaintiff, which was undisputed, and the testimony of the former sheriff and a former secretary of the Police Jury and the Pontchartrain Levee Board, who stated that the defendant Vicknair asked them in about 1931 to locate the owner of the property so that he could buy the land from him. The sheriff admitted that he did not know when the Vicknairs went on the property and his recollection was there were only seven acres involved, but he did not know where the land was located. The other witness stated that prior to 1925, he could not remember seeing the defendants’ residence on the property and that there was no building there as far as he could recollect. He admitted that there was cultivation of lands by various parties in that section during that - period of time. He would not deny that he bought from defendant Vicknair fire wood, which had been taken from the property in question many years ago.

When this Court originally reviewed the record, we were of the opinion that the defendants had “conclusively” proved that they had occupied the land for more than thirty years.

On the retrial of the case, the defendants again placed on the witness stand, besides themselves, all of the previous witnesses, except two — one who had died since the former trial, and the other who was confined to his bed as a result of an automobile accident. These witnesses testified in substance that the property indicated in pink on the plan made by the surveyor, appointed by the judge, was the land which Vicknair had occupied from either 1901 or 1902, under the circumstances that they had previously described.

To controvert this evidence, the plaintiff introduced some old surveys of the Buissier property which surveys were made and drawn for the purpose of showing the boundaries and designating the places and giving the names of the tenants who occupied various portions of the land. As the defendants were not shown on the old plans to be tenants occupying any portion of the land, it is said that this documentary evidence shows that they were not on the land during those earlier periods of time, or through 1912.

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Bluebook (online)
17 So. 2d 924, 205 La. 699, 1944 La. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esparros-v-vicknair-la-1944.