Estopinal v. Storck's Estate

44 So. 2d 704, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 500
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 1950
Docket19049
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 44 So. 2d 704 (Estopinal v. Storck's Estate) 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
Estopinal v. Storck's Estate, 44 So. 2d 704, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 500 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

44 So.2d 704 (1950)

ESTOPINAL
v.
STORCK'S ESTATE et al.

No. 19049.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.

February 27, 1950.

*705 Thomas Furlow and Emmet Alpha, New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellee.

Jones, Flanders, Waeghter & Walker and William B. Dreux, New Orleans, for defendant and appellee Estate of Dr. Jacob A. Storck.

J. J. Jackson, New Orleans, for defendant and appellant, Mrs. Emma E. Foster, widow of Edward Matt.

McBRIDE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Richard Estopinal, is the owner of certain land in the Parish of St. Bernard in the rear portion of what, with the front portion, once was a single tract owned by Judge Albert Estopinal. Plaintiff acquired the rear portion of the tract from Judge Estopinal on August 27, 1937. On the east side of the original Estopinal tract is the land of Dr. Ambrose H. Storck and Mrs. Elsa Storck Taylor, heirs of Dr. Jacob A. Storck. On the west side of the Estopinal tract is the land of Walter Cure. All three of the tracts, when the center one was owned by Judge Estopinal, fronted on Bayou Terre aux Boeufs. Along that side of the bayou is an unimproved public road which leads to a bridge which crosses the bayou in front of the Storck property, which bridge affords access to an improved state highway paralleling the bayou on the other side.

Judge Estopinal disposed of his tract of land by two conveyances. In 1936 he transferred the front part of the tract (which fronts on the bayou) to the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, and eventually Mrs. Edward Matt acquired this front portion. The retained rear portion of the original tract remained in the ownership of Judge Estopinal until 1937, when it was transferred to plaintiff, Richard Estopinal. The rear portion, after the sale of the front portion as aforesaid, was completely enclosed.

It is obvious that Richard Estopinal has no outlet or right-of-way by which he can reach the local or unimproved road, and by it reach the bridge, and by means of the bridge to cross the bayou and get to the improved highway on the other side. The object of plaintiff in this suit is to obtain a right-of-way which will afford him such outlet.

Named and cited as defendants were the Storck heirs and Mrs. Emma E. Foster, widow of Edward Matt. Walter Cure was not made a defendant.

In his petition, Estopinal substantially alleges the facts above related, and also avers that he has been unable to purchase a right-of-way either from the Storck heirs or from Mrs. Matt, and that "equitably the property of Mrs. Matt and the property of the Estate of Dr. Jacob A. Storck should be condemned to grant unto petitioner a *706 right of way, the Court to fix the compensation therefor, said right of way to be twelve feet, six feet on each property, the dividing line between said properties being the center of said right of way, or, in the alternative, that the right of way be granted over which ever of the properties the Court should find to offer the shortest route, fixing the compensation therefor."

Plaintiff prayed for judgment against the Storck heirs and Mrs. Matt, determining across which property the right-of-way should be granted, and fixing the compensation to be paid to the owner of the tract across which the right-of-way should be established.

The Storck heirs filed an exception of no cause of action, contending that the suit as against them should be dismissed. Mrs. Matt answered denying that any attempt had been made by Estopinal to purchase a right-of-way from her, and denying also that plaintiff is entitled in any event to a right-of-way across her property, contending that since her property is improved and fully utilized it would be very damaging to it should a right-of-way be established across it.

The exception filed by the Storck heirs was referred to the merits of the case.

At the outset of the trial below, it was called to the attention of the court that in another proceeding the heirs of Dr. Storck had filed an action in boundary against Mrs. Matt and Richard Estopinal, seeking to establish the proper boundary line between the Storck property and the property of Mrs. Matt and Richard Estopinal.

After a trial, there was judgment maintaining the exception of the Storck heirs and dismissing the suit as to them. The judgment was also in favor of Richard Estopinal granting him a right-of-way across the property owned by Mrs. Matt, but the judgment did not provide that Mrs. Matt should be compensated.

Referring to the pending boundary suit, the judgment recites:

"And the Court considering, further, the stipulation entered into by counsel representing plaintiff and defendants, and filed in the record,

"It is further ordered, and adjudged and decreed that the right of way and passage granted to the plaintiff as defined in this judgment, shall be exercised and used by the plaintiff until such time as the true boundary line between the properties of the said Mrs. Emma E. Foster, widow of Edward Matt, and the Estate of Dr. Jacob A. Storck, shall have been judicially determined and fixed by judgment in the boundary suit now pending, bearing the number 3146 of the docket of this court; the permanent location and course of the right of way and passage herein granted to the plaintiff to be changed, if necessary, to conform to such judicially established boundaries, so as to establish said right of way and passage over and through the property of the defendant Mrs. Emma E. Foster, widow of Edward Matt, alone."

Eventually a new trial was granted, and there was a second judgment by which it was decreed:

"Insofar as said judgment of July 7, 1947, does not decide the question of whether or not the right of passage granted to the plaintiff should be gratuitous or for a consideration, which question was not presented to the Court for decision at said time but is now submitted to the Court, and the Court being of the opinion that the request of counsel for the defendant that said original judgment be amended so as to include a decision of that question;

"It Is Now Ordered, Adjudged And Decreed, that a right of way and of passage, as more fully set out in said original judgment, be granted the plaintiff over and through the property of said defendant, and that such right of way and of passage shall be gratuitous."

Mrs. Matt has appealed. Plaintiff failed to appeal from that part of the judgment dismissing his suit against the Storck heirs. It follows, therefore, that the only question before this court is the correctness of the judgment rendered in favor of Richard Estopinal against Mrs. Edward Matt. The Storck heirs have passed out of the case.

In this court, Mrs. Matt, appellant, filed an exception of no cause or right of action, *707 and a plea of prescription, reading as follows:

"1. That the said petition and/or the record made up thereunder does not set up or show a cause or right of action; and

"2. That petitioner's demand for a right of passage over the property of the defendant Matt is and has been prescribed and lost by a non use thereof over a period of more than ten years."

Plaintiff-appellee also filed in this court a document styled "Flea to the Jurisdiction Ratione Materiae." In this document, it is contended that the pendency of the action in boundary makes it impossible for the court to render any other kind of judgment "for the plaintiff except a temporary judgment, for the reason that the permanent fixing of the right of way had to abide the fixing of the property lines of both of the defendants in that case with the Estate of Dr. Storck."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 So. 2d 704, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estopinal-v-storcks-estate-lactapp-1950.