Faunce v. City of New Orleans

148 So. 57, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1785
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1933
DocketNo. 14305.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 148 So. 57 (Faunce v. City of New Orleans) 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
Faunce v. City of New Orleans, 148 So. 57, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1785 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit in jactitation, plaintiff, Faunce, asserting that the city of New Orleans is slandering the title to his property, by claiming that it encroaches upon a public street. By its answer the city of New Orleans converts the matter into a petitory action and seeks judgment upholding its contention that the property claimed by Faunce is, in fact, a part of Peoples avenue to the extent set forth in the answer.

Wellrick Realty Company intervenes, and, aligning itself with the city of New Orleans, asserts that Faunce encroaches upon the public street on which the property of intervener fronts, and alleges that the property referred to was purchased from Andrew Fitzpatrick and Nicholas C. Cromwell, who had bought from Dennis Sheen by a deed which, it is claimed, contains a legal recognition by Sheen of the fact that the street in question had been dedicated to public use.

It is argued that, since Faunce also claims-his title through Sheen, the common ancestor in title, he cannot be heard to say that there was no such recognition of the fact that-there had been a sufficient dedication to make-the said street permanently public property.

In the district court there was judgment as prayed for by the city of New Orleans,, and Faunce has appealed.

The chain of title to the property in controversy is not in dispute, but the bone of contention is whether or not there has ever-been a dedication to public use of Peoples avenue, which Faunce contends has never had. existence either in physical reality or by dedication, and which the city of New Orleans maintains has for many years been public-property by reason of dedication generations; ago by the then owner or owners and confirmed and ratified since by the owners of adjacent properties.

The real question is whether there is or is not a so called “Peoples avenue” crossing-what is presently known as Gentilly road, and1 extending along the western bank of the drainage canal known as Peoples or Peoples-Avenue canal.

In 1845 a large tract of land which had. been acquired by the Hopkins family by original grants, and which was then known as the Hopkins plantation, was purchased by Charles W. Hopkins. At that time it was divided into two portions by Bayou Sauvage, and Gentilly road which was located along, the bank of the said bayou. The bayou and the road extended in a general easterly and westerly direction.

There is evidence which tends to show that, during or about the year 1872, the city of New .Orleans caused to be dug a drainage canal known, apparently then as now, as the Peoples or Peoples Avenue canal. This canal crossed Bayou Sauvage and Gentilly road very nearly at right angles and ran in a -general northerly and southerly direction, and also divided the Hopkins plantation so that the drainage canal and Bayou Sauvage divided the tract of land into four large,, although unequal, sections. At that time, as we shall hereafter show, there was in existence a map made by one D’Hemecourt— though it is not sho.wn that that map was in any way official — showing the strip of land, on which the canal was dug, as a public street. When the city authorities by digging the canal thus appropriated to public use property which, so far as the records showed, was privately owned, the acquiescence therein by the private owners may not of itself have constituted a dedication, but it indicated that there was some intention on their part not to interfere with the city’s plan to make of the appropriated land public property. Of course, it is not this acquiescence which is *59 relied on by the city as a dedication, but it is maintained that from this beginning the other acts to which we shall hereafter refer as having been performed by the subsequent owners cumulated in evidencing a clear and unambiguous intention of the later owners to dedicate.

In 1881 the city of New Orleans authorized the New Orleans &. Northeastern Railroad Company to locate, construct, and operate a railroad line into the city, and granted to that company permission to deepen the Peoples or Peoples Avenue canal and to use the earth so removed as a foundation for its tracts along the said canal.

We find in the record nothing to show that there was objection on the part of the owners of the adjacent property to the action of the city in thus granting a railroad right of way over the said strip of land, and this acquiescence in the action of the city in disposing of the right to the use of a portion of the strip, unobjected to by those who might have claimed to be the owners, further evidenced an intention to permit the property to be dedicated to such public use as a city may be permitted to make of its streets.

When Hopkins died, his succession was duly opened, and, after proper proceedings, there' was judgment ordering the sale of the said plantation. In carrying out the order for the sale to effect a partition among the heirs, some, at least, of whom were minors, the property was divided into five unequal portions. Lots 1, 2, 3, and 4 formed the four contiguous corners, each having a frontage •on the road located along Rayou Sauvage known as Gentilly road and each also having a frontage on the Peoples or Peoples Avenue canal. The lot numbered 5 was adjacent to lot No. 2, but was not adjacent to any of the others.

The plan, according to which the said property was divided into five parts, was made by John F. Braun, and was dated May 15, 1886, and on it there was set forth an open strip of land running in a northerly and southerly direction, separating lot 2 from lot 4 and lot 1 from lot 3, and on this strip were shown the lines of the New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company tracks, and, though no measurements of the width of that strip appeared on that plan, there was apparently a width considerably greater than was necessary for the tracks of the railroad. The drainage canal was not shown on that plan.

At the partition sale one Dietz bought lot No. 1, which was the northeasterly lot. We are not concerned to any great extent with that lot.

Dennis Sheen became the purchaser of lots 2, 3, and 4, and with lots 2 and 4 we are 'much concerned.

Lot 5 was bought by George Denegre, as attorney for the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company.

We may focus our attention upon lots 2 and 4. Lot 4 is south of Bayou Sauvage and east of the open strip referred to as being shown on the Braun plan. Lot 2 is south of Bayou Sauvage and west of the said open strip. Lots 2 and 4 are thus contiguous,, except that they' are separated by the open strip between them. It is this open strip which forms the basis of the contention now before us, the city of New Orleans contending that it is a public street, two hundred feet in width, and'Faunce maintaining that it has never been dedicated as a street; that it is much narrower than two hundred feet, and that on it are located only' the tracks of the railroad and the canal, and that private ownership commences at the water’s edge on the west bank of the canal, and that there is no open strip of land between the canal and the boundary of lot No. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 57, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faunce-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1933.