Gasquet v. Conway

41 So. 44, 116 La. 709, 1906 La. LEXIS 556
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 26, 1906
DocketNo. 15,749
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 So. 44 (Gasquet v. Conway) 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
Gasquet v. Conway, 41 So. 44, 116 La. 709, 1906 La. LEXIS 556 (La. 1906).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, J.

The plaintiff alleged that she was—

“The owner of the property known as No. 4905 St. Charles avenue, next to the corner of Upper-line street, acquired by purchase from Mrs. Marr- L. Kennedy, wife of Charles Genella, separate in property, by act before Theodore Cotonio, notary public, dated May 18, 1893. A certain lot of ground with the improvements thereon and the appurtenances thereof in the islet bounded by St. Charles avenue and Upper-line, Carondelet and Robert streets, forming a subdivision or part of a larger lot acquired by her vendor by an act passed before James Fahey, notary public, on the 10th June, 1885, measuring 34 feet front on St. Charles avenue and depths and dimensions and right to all extra frontage by the new alignment of the line of said square of ground fronting on St. Charles avenue, together with all the rights of use to a rear alley extending to Upperline street, as will all more fully appear from the act of purchase, a certified copy of which is hereto annexed.
“That James J. Conway of the city of New Orleans had purchased previously from the same vendor, the common author of the two titles, the said Mrs. Mary L. Kennedy, wife of Charles Genella, a subdivision of the original property forming the corner of St. Charles avenue and Upperline street, by act before Hunter C. Leake, notary, dated January' 14, 1893.
“That petitioner was desirous of ascertaining and fixing'the boundary line between her property and the property of the said James J. Conway and separating the two properties.
“That petitioner has met with unwillingness on the part of said neighboring proprietor who, notwithstanding notice to join in and establish the said line or appoint a surveyor, has had recourse to the other defendants herein, heirs of the said vendor or common author, viz.: Cornelia D. Genella, wife of S. Sansum and Aseneth Genella, feme sole, both of the city of New Orleans, to purchase from said vendor’s heirs a piece or strip of ground now claimed by them to be intervening between his said property and the property of petitioner, notwithstanding full knowledge on his part and recognition by him of the fact that the said piece of ground was embraced in petitioner’s purchase and included in the measurement and survey of her property, and notwithstanding 'formal previous written notice to the said defendant in advance of his said pretended purchase, which was communicated to vendors aforesaid, that he was violating the rights of petitioner, and that the said ground in question was not the property of vendors and was embraced in petitioner’s title or lawful possession.
“That the said space of ground attempted to be encroached upon and taken away from petitioner is valuable to petitioner in a sum exceeding $2,000 in connection with her investment of $7,100 for the said property, and to lose the same would damage petitioner in a sum exceeding $2,000.
“That although by the said deception in the act of sale the property of petitioner measuring 34 feet front on St. Charles avenue is said to begin at a point 35 feet from Upperline street, yet there is not much distance from Upperline street to the point of beginning of the land remaining to the common vendor after her sale to Conway as will appear from the sketches annexed to the act.
“That the 34 feet front on St. Charles avenue and dimensions, as described by petitioner’s title, were conveyed to petitioner inasmuch as the measurement of the 34 feet front on St. Charles avenue after the said previous sale [712]*712to the said Conway, and the designation of the point of beginning as 35 feet from Upperline street is immaterial as not controlling petitioner’s area. That no reservation of any portion of the same or notice thereof was made in the sale to petitioner and defendants were estopped by their author’s disposition of the said two properties and the destination of the former proprietor. That if there was any excess of ground remaining to the said common vendor beyond the said conditions after the said sale to petitioner, the said excess, if any, was acquired by just title by possession in good faith as owner by petitioner after a lapse of over 10 years, by 10 years’ prescription.
“Petitioner shows that the said pretended conveyance and transfer of 23d March, 1904, to the said defendant from the heirs of Mrs. Genella is illegal and null and void as to petitioner. That the acts of the said Genella heix-s are an open bi'each on their part of the obligations of warranty of their alleged author the said common vendor.
“That the illegal acts of defendants have caused petitioner serious annoyances, inconvenience, and loss and depreciation of the disposable value of her property and expenses and attorneys’ fees, etc., for which defendants are liable in solido for damages in an amount exceeding $500 in addition to the said thi-eatened loss and dismemberment of her property for which petitioner would be entitled, should same occur, to additional damages in a sum exceeding two thousand dollars. Petitioner avers that amicable demand has been made on defendants to no effect.”

In view of the premises petitioner prayed that the said James J. Conway may be cited to answer this petition and that the said Mrs. Cornelia D. Genella, wife of S. Sansum, separate in property and the said S. Sansum, to authorize and assist his wife, and the said Miss Asenath Genella, be made parties to this action and cited to answer this petition, and that after due proceedings there be judgment in petitioner’s favor and against the said defendants treating as naught and annulling and canceling from the Conveyance Records, in so far as the said sale affects the property of petitioner, the said pretended sale of March 23, 1904, of the said Genella heirs, defendants to James J. Conway, by act under private signature acknowledged before M. M. Boatner, notary public, recorded in Conveyance Office Book 196, folios 322 and 323, and ascertaining and fixing the limits of and separating the said respective properties and for further judgment in petitioner’s favor in the sum of $500 damages, against said defendants in solido and for costs and general relief.

Mrs. Asenath Genella and her husband, George W. Dodds, and Mrs. Cornelia Genella and her husband, Samuel Sansum, excepted on the ground that there was an unlawful joinder of actions and xxarties.

Defendant James J. Conway answered. After pleading the general issue, he averred that on or before the 14th day of January, 1893, Mrs. Mary Louise Kennedy, wife of Charles Genella, was the owner of a tract of land situate in the Sixth district of the city of New Orleans in the square bounded by St. Charles avenue, Upperline, Carondelet, and Robert" streets, measuring 69 feet,* 4 inches, more or less, in front on St. Charles avenue 182 feet more or less, in front and depth on Upperline street, 165 feet, 5 inches more or less on the side line nearest Robert street by a width in the rear of 65 feet.

That prior to the date aforesaid the said Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 So. 44, 116 La. 709, 1906 La. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gasquet-v-conway-la-1906.