Fortier v. Soniat

143 So. 2d 91, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2120
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1962
DocketNo. 670
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 143 So. 2d 91 (Fortier v. Soniat) 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
Fortier v. Soniat, 143 So. 2d 91, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2120 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

YARRUT, Judge.:

Plaintiffs-Appellants sue to establish title to Section 34, Township 13 South, Range 22 East, Southeastern District of Louisiana, West of the Mississippi River, Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.

Defendants-Appellees, on the other hand, claim title only to that portion of Section 34 as is described in their answer. As stipulated between the parties, the issue is confined to that portion of Section 34 identified as the “property in dispute,” a 129.67 acre tract of a total of 184.27 acres.

In 1866 Theodore Soniat, Sr. acquired the property known as Section 34, Township 13 South, Range 22 East, Southeastern Land District of Louisiana, west of the Mississippi River, located within the Parish of Jefferson and containing some 184.39 acres, at sheriff’s sale made on March 17. On January 23, 1882, Theodore Soniat, Sr. sold certain property to Eugene and Amedee Fortier. Plaintiffs contend that Theodore Soniat, Sr. therein conveyed title to Section 34, presently in dispute, to the two Fortiers. The Defendants deny this.

All parties have stipulated that, unless the deed of January 23, 1882, did transfer title to Section 34, Theodore Soniat, Sr. never parted with title to Section 34, or any interest therein, subsequent to the sheriff’s deed of 1866, with the exception of one right-of-way.

Plaintiffs are the heirs of Amedee For-tier, who, on December 7, 1893, acquired from Eugene Fortier the other half interest in the property transferred on January 23, 1882. They are also heirs to one-third of the Succession of Theodore Soniat,. Sr. Defendants are other heirs of Theodore Soniat, Sr.

Neither Plaintiffs nor Defendants, nor any other person, are in possession of Section 34, the property in dispute; so- the-only question presented in this litigation is-the interpretation of the description- contained in the deed from Theodore- Soniat,. Sr. to Eugene and Amedee Fortier, in order to determine whether Theodore Soniat,. Sr. disposed of, and the Fortiers acquired,, the “property in dispute,” viz.:

“A certain tract of land situated' in-the Parish of Jefferson on the Right Bank of the Mississippi River, at about nineteen miles from the City of New Orleans, measuring more or less Fifteen (15) arpents, one hundred andtem (110) feet front on the Mississippi-River by a depth of Forty (40) arpents-between side lines which close im such a manner that said plantation- has on the rear lines Eleven Arpents Eighty Five feet (11 arpents 85 ft.) more or less; together with all the buildings and improvements thereon, consisting of steam engine, sugar mill, kettles, boilers, sugar house, and accessories,, stable, cabins and a small dwelling house, thirty three mules, nine carts,, fourteen plows, five hundred barrels corn, eighty cart-loads of pea vines, eighty cords of wood, and also all other-agricultural implements, tools and accessories and dependencies thereunto-belonging and appertaining.
“Being the same property which the-present Vendor Theodore Soniat du-Fossat, Senior, had acquired at a sale-made by the Sheriff of the Parish of' Jefferson, on the 17th day of March,. [93]*931866, in the matter of Theodore Soniat vs. Benjamin Johnson, et als, No. 2045 of the docket of the late Second Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, which deed was registered in the Conveyance Office Book I.J. Folio 304 on the 12th April, 1866, recorded in Deed Book B, folio 364 on the 13th April, 1866 Clerk’s Office, and also registered in the Conveyance Book M, folios 451 to 454 on the 22nd November, 1872.”

It is conceded that if the transfer by Theodore Soniat, Sr. to the Fortiers, father and son, did convey title to this property, Plaintiffs own the whole thereof. Conversely, if Theodore Soniat, Sr. did not transfer the property in dispute, then Plaintiffs and Defendants own the property in indivisión in the proportions set forth in the judgment.

The district court rendered judgment in favor of Defendants and against Plaintiffs, decreeing Defendants to be owners of an undivided two-thirds interest in the “property in dispute” (describing it in detail), and Plaintiffs to be owners of the other undivided one-third thereof, reserving to all parties their right to assert an interest in the remaining portion of Section 34, not at issue here.

From this judgment Plaintiffs have taken this appeal, contending they should have been decreed to be owners of the whole of the “property in dispute.”

Plaintiffs contend the above description of the property in the 1882 deed is ambiguous, and that the court should consider evidence dehors that deed to determine the intention of the parties.

Defendants on the other hand contend: The 1882 deed did not convey to the For-tiers any title to, or interest in, the property in dispute; that said deed is not ambiguous; that if there is evidence to the contrary, the right to reform said deed of 1882 has long since prescribed under LSA-C.C. Art. 3544, which prescription Defendants have specially pleaded.

The sale made in 1882 clearly described and conveyed to the purchasers therein title to a tract of land in Section 3 of Township 13 South, Range 22 East, and did not describe, and hence did not convey, any land in Section 34 of that same Township and Range, as is readily ascertained from a consideration of that deed in connection with the Official Township Plat, and the undisputed testimony of Mr. Ben S. Garrett, a civil engineer and surveyor.

The Official Township Plat reveals that Section 3, Township 13 South, Range 22 East, lies along and is bounded in the front by the Mississippi River, and the rear by the 40-arpent line, which is the boundary common to Sections 3 and 34, the latter being the section in which the property in dispute is located. An examination of the description in the 1882 deed reveals that the property conveyed is bounded in the front by the Mississippi River and has “a depth of 40 arpents * * * ”

It is not disputed that the 1882 deed from Soniat, Sr. to the Fortiers conveyed a portion of Section 3, Township 13 South, Range 22 East; and that the instrument expressly confines itself to property situated exclusively in Section 3, and does not include any portion of the property in dispute, situated in Section 34, in the rear of said 40-arpent line.

That the 1882 deed did not cover any portion of property “in dispute” is revealed by the testimony of Mr. Garrett, Civil Engineer and Surveyor, called by Defendants in this matter, and by an examination of the top overlay of the plats prepared by Mr. Garrett.

Mr. Garrett, from prior experience in the vicinity of the property in dispute, was .retained by Defendants to determine whether lots 4 through 7 covered property in both Sections 3 and 34. On direct examination be described how he reconstructed the Surgi plan, showing lots 1 through 17 thereof on Exhibit G-2 in solid black lines. He testified that those lots as shown by the solid black lines on Exhibit G-2 extended [94]*94from the River to the 40-arpent line, which was also the rear line of Section 3.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 2d 91, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortier-v-soniat-lactapp-1962.