Fruge v. Lyons

373 So. 2d 220
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1979
Docket7046
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 373 So. 2d 220 (Fruge v. Lyons) 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
Fruge v. Lyons, 373 So. 2d 220 (La. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

373 So.2d 220 (1979)

Emelia M. FRUGE et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Lovina S. LYONS et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 7046.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

June 29, 1979.

*221 Ryder & Deshotels, Alfred Ray Ryder, Oberlin, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Jerry J. Johnson, Lake Charles, for defendants-appellees.

Before DOMENGEAUX, GUIDRY and STOKER, JJ.

STOKER, Judge.

This is a petitory action. The action was commenced as a petition for injunction to prevent defendants from re-erecting a fence which plaintiffs had torn down. The fence is claimed by defendants to be the boundary line between plaintiffs' and defendants' respective parcels of land which adjoin one another. As a result of numerous pleadings filed by both sides the action ultimately became a petitory action, particularly through a specific supplemental and amending petition to that effect filed by plaintiffs. (Tr. 48-50) When the case came to trial, it was agreed that the action was a petitory action. (Tr. 183-184) At oral argument it was also agreed that the action was a petitory action. The trial court found for the defendants and decreed them to be the owners of a specifically described parcel of land measuring 557.66 feet on its north and south sides by fourteen feet on its east side and 20.66 feet on its west side. The land is located in Allen Parish.[1] We affirm.

It is clear that the case before the court is a petitory action. However, certain principles of law relating to the boundary action have been raised and argued, principally as they relate to prescription. As a defense to the petitory action, defendants admit they rely entirely on prescription. Initially, they relied on the prescription of ten years provided by LSA-C.C. art. 853 and 30 years as provided by LSA-C.C. art. 852. (Tr. 32) By subsequent amendment defendants also claim the strip of land in question through acquisitive prescription of ten and twenty years under LSA-C.C. art. 853, by thirty years under LSA-C.C. art. 852 and/or thirty years under LSA-C.C. art. 794 as amended by Act 169 of the 1977 Session of the Louisiana Legislature. (Tr. 54-56)

At the time trial on the merits began there was in effect a preliminary injunction [2] prohibiting defendants from rebuilding *222 the fence removed by plaintiffs. A temporary restraining order to that effect was issued on August 18, 1975, in response to plaintiffs original petition. Defendants filed a rule (Tr. 11) to dissolve the temporary restraining order and for damages and attorney's fees for services rendered in connection with the seeking of the dissolution. In their answer and reconventional demand (Tr. 28-34) defendants seek damages for mental anguish, humiliation and embarrassment. Further, defendants seek a court order requiring defendants-in-reconvention (Emelia M. Fruge, et al.) to rebuild the fence or alternatively, to award damages for the cost of reconstruction of the fence.

FACTS

The trial judge gave no specific findings of fact in his reasons for judgment. His conclusions are confined to the following paragraph consisting of two sentences:

The Court is convinced that the defendants have acquired by 10 and 30 years prescription the property in question. This was amply proven by the evidence introduced at the trial, including the position of the fence torn down on July 4, 1975, and the length of time it had been in existence.

Inasmuch as defendants admitted they were unable to present evidence of title to the disputed strip and rely solely on prescription, the trial court did not pass on the merits of plaintiffs' title. We affirm the trial court. Therefore, we do not pass on the merits of plaintiffs' title per se.

The plaintiffs are Emelia M. Fruge, widow of Jefferson D. Fruge, and the latter's heirs George Edward Fruge, William J. Fruge and John M. Fruge. Plaintiffs will be referred to simply as the Fruges. The defendants are Lovina S. Lyons, Esther L. Myers and Molly L. Garnette. The defendants, who are also reconvenors, will be referred to simply as the Lyons. The latter two are married daughters of Lovina S. Lyons and Dock Lyons. The latter is deceased.

Accompanying this opinion is a sketch showing the layout and relationship of the two properties in question. The two tracts are contiguous and both front on the east on Green Oak Road which runs along the east side of Section 14, Township 6 South, Range 5, West, Louisiana Meridian. According to their titles the Lyons' property lies north of the Fruges' property, and the line separating them is a line running almost due east (South 89° 05' East as shown on the sketch) running from the Southeast corner of the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 14. (See plaintiffs' Exhibit, P-2.) There is no dispute about this insofar as record titles are concerned, or a least as to the descriptions by which the parties acquired their respective properties.

Difficulties arose when a survey was made for the Fruges in May or June of 1975 by a surveyor, Robert A. Fenstermaker. The survey disclosed that the fence separating plaintiffs' and defendants' properties ran south of the survey line. As shown on the sketch, the fence began at a point fourteen feet south of the front (east) corner and ran to a point 20.8 feet south of the survey line at the southwest corner of the Lyons tract and 11.5 south of the survey line at the southwest corner of another tract of land known as the Myers tract. (The Lyons tract is a two-acre tract acquired from the Myers lying in the southeast corner of the Myers tract. The Lyons tract measures 557.66 feet along the Fruge tract. The Myers tract then borders on the Fruge tract for another 536.6 feet. (See Plaintiffs' Exhibit, P-2.)

Dock and defendant Lovina Savant Lyons acquired the two-acre tract from George and Calvin Myers in 1956 and 1957 (D-46, Tr. 160 and D-47, Tr. 161). In 1938, George and Calvin Myers acquired the property from Austin Langley. (D-1-A, Tr. 92) Calvin Myers testified they moved on to the *223 property in 1930, but actually bought in 1934 but did not record a deed until 1938. (Tr. 101 & 102)

When the Fenstermaker survey disclosed to the Fruges that the fence was south of the survey line marking the north boundary of what was called for in the Fruges' title, they tore the fence down without agreement or consent from the Lyons. The fence was removed on July 4, 1975. Fearing the Lyons were going to re-erect the fence exactly where it had been, the Fruges instituted this action which, as stated above, was originally for injunctive relief to prevent the Lyons from putting the fence back.

In the course of the trial on the merits numerous witnesses testified for both sides. There is no question but that on July 4, 1975, the fence was located where Mr. Fenstermaker's survey showed it to be. In fact, he had made a survey in April of 1971 of the George Myers tract for a loan agency which showed the fence in the same location. (D-1, Tr. 91) After the fence was taken down, the Lyons had Surveyor Paul N. Fontenot survey the former fence line, and his survey corroborated the Fenstermaker survey. (See P-2 and Tr. 204-212)

The sole factual question presented in this case is whether the trial court was correct in its finding that the Lyons, and their ancestors in title before them, had possessed the 557.66 foot strip sufficiently to acquire title by prescription.

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Bluebook (online)
373 So. 2d 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fruge-v-lyons-lactapp-1979.