Gaubert v. Gaubert

1 La. App. 719, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 138
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 18, 1925
DocketNo. 4387
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 La. App. 719 (Gaubert v. Gaubert) 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
Gaubert v. Gaubert, 1 La. App. 719, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 138 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

This is a suit between Joseph Gaubert and Leon Gaubert concerning the proper location of the dividing line which should divide into two equal parts between them.

“The lower half of a certain tract of land on the right descending bank of Bayou Lafourche, measuring 2 arpents front by 40 arpents in depth between parallel lines, bounded above and below by lands formerly belonging to Joseph Caesar, hut now to present vendors.”

As stated, it is the lower half of the above two-arpent tract which is to be divided. The description of the twoarpent tract has been copied from the title from P. W. Lefort and Mrs. Eulalie Marie Bourgeois, wife of Philip J. Chapuis, to Joseph Bergeron and Leon Gaubert, dated March 9, 1909. In the answer of Leon Gaubert to the suit of Joseph Gaubert to have divided the said lower half which they own in indivisión, he consents that the land be divided by a boundary line between them.

A survey for the purpose was ordered by the court and J. R. Webb, surveyor, was appointed to establish the dividing line.

A line run by Mr. Webb, pursuant to the appointment of the court is favored by the plaintiff but opposed by the defendant.

Leon Gaubert in his opposition to the dividing line run by Webb alleges an existing established line which already divides said tract between him and Joseph Gaubert and pleads in support of the previously established line the prescriptions of ten and thirty years and prays for the recognition of the same; but he opposes the line run by Webb as being erroneous and contrary to their title, etc.

The district judge, after hearing the testimony, approved the dividing line run by Webb and the defendant appealed.

The contention of Leon Gaubert in his opposition to the Webb line, that a dividing line had been already and previously established between them, cannot he reconciled with his answer to the suit for division in which he consents that a dividing line be run between them. The evidence shows that no line dividing this lower half of the above mentioned tract between the co-owners thereof has ever been run or established in the manner and form prescribed by law; consequently defendant’s contentions about an old-established and existing dividing line, dividing the lower half of said above mentioned tract, [721]*721must be put aside as having no merit; but this still leaves defendant’s opposition to the Webb line that it is incorrect and not in conformity with their title, etc.

. The evidence of Mr. Webb, the surveyor, who ran the line which is in contest, shows that the tract of land to be divided is part of the grant or headright claim No. 116, T. 15, S. R. 17 E., situated on the right descending bank of Bayou Lafourche, that is, on the north side of the bayou. He testified that in order to find the place where the line in question should be he started at a point on the railroad which we take to be from his evidence and the maps and diagrams found in the record, the southeast corner of grant or headright claim No. 11 on Bayou Lafourche. We think from his evidence that his starting point at this place was a proved government comer. Following his evidence and return, he, from this starting point, measured down the bayou meandering its course to a point where he stopped. This stopping place he took to be the southwest corner of grant or headright claim No. 116. He did not find any government mark or corner at this piace and did not search for any. He was told by people assembled there that previous surveyors had accepted the place as the southwest corner of grant No. 116, but he made no effort to prove the fact, except that he had measured to the place from his starting place up the bayou. From this place, taken by him to be the southwest corner of grant or headright No. 116, he measured back along the bayou to the place where he commenced the southern or bayou end of the dividing line in question. The place of commencement on the bayou of the dividing line to be run depends as to whether 'it is correct or not, on whether the place he measured from as the southwest corner of grant or headright 116 was in fact that corner. We have stated that the only fact supporting the place as the true corner is a long meander line down the bayou from the southeast corner of grant or headright No. 11 so long that an error in distance could almost be expected to some extent. If his line down the bayou from headright or claim No. 11 is true in point of distance, then his point of commencement is all right, but it would have been better and safer if he had searched along the bayou south of the claim or headright No. 116 until he found a proved government corner and from there measured back up the bayou so as to tie With the line he had run south if possible at the southwest corner of the claim or grant No. 116. If this had been done the southwest corner of the claim or grant No. 116 could have been located from government starting points with more certainty than was done.

As for the swamp or northern end of the dividing line, he found the northeast corner of the grant, or claim No. 12, a proved government comer. Measuring from there down the swamp, as we understand his return, following government courses and distances until he came to the place which from the distance he had come he calculated was the northwest corner of the claim or grant No. 116.. He did not find any proved or government marks at the place indicating that the place was the corner he took it to be, and he did not search for any. But taking it as the northwest corner of the grant No. 116, he measured back through the swamp to the place where he decided from the distance he had come was the swamp or northern end of the dividing line he had been appointed to run:

If his meander line down the swamp from the grant or claim No. 12 was true, then his points or stopping places are all right; but the swamp line he ran in order to reach these points was so long that some error must be rather expected.

[722]*722It would have been, better and safer if be had found, in addition to the proved point at grant or section 12, a proved point or corner further on down the swamp from the northwest corner of claim No. 116 and had measured báck from there up to the place where the northwest corner of claim No. 116 was supposed to be so as to tie, if possible, with the line he had run from claim No. 12. If this had been done, then the northwest corner of claim No. 116 would have been established with more certainty than was done. As regards the best way to establish government or proved corners and the importance of doing so in surveys like that Mr". Webb was called on to do, we cite the decisions of the Supreme Court in Smith vs. Almond, 157 La. 265, 102 South. '380, and Houston Ice and Brewing Co. vs. Murray Oil Co., 149 La. 228. Having, as .we understand his return, original and supplemental and plan or blue print, and his testimony on the subject, thus determined where the end of the dividing line should commence on the bayou and end in the swamp, he ran the dividing line, and in so doing followed a course S. 16 degrees and 5 minutes W., instead of S. 15 degrees W. called for by the government field notes as the course of the side lines of the grant No. 116 in which the land and line in question is situated." And although he returns and testifies that the dividing line he ran has two government corners for its support, the total course of his line does not connect up with the claim or grant No. 12 but misses it 146 feet short' and S. 80 degrees 35 minutes E.

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Bluebook (online)
1 La. App. 719, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaubert-v-gaubert-lactapp-1925.