Gormley v. Oakey

7 La. 452
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 La. 452 (Gormley v. Oakey) 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
Gormley v. Oakey, 7 La. 452 (La. 1834).

Opinion

Bullard, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs allege, that they are owners, by purchase from Louis Foucher, of a tract of land, having a front on the Bayou des Cannes, of three arpents, less two toises, and .running back until the two lateral lines come to a point, containing ninety-two arpents and three hundred toises, in superficies; that the defendant Oakey, is the proprietor of the tract adjoining the above, and sets up title to about forty arpents of their land, pretending that his upper line should run so, as to touch the land .of the plaintiffs, at the distance of forty-two arpents from the front, instead of sixty-six arpents, which is the true depth of their tract, according to the original titles. They pray, that he may be cited, and that a boundary line may be judicially established, between their respective lands, in such a manner, as to give the plaintiffs a depth of sixty-six arpents, and that the forty superficial arpents claimed, may be decreed to be their property. They further pray, that their vendor, Foucher, may be made a party, and that if judgment should be rendered, in favor of the defendant Oakey, they may have judgment in warranty, for twenty thousand dollars.

The defendant, Oakey, denies that he has ever claimed more land than he is entitled to, avows his readiness to establish a boundary, provided it be at the costs of the plaintiffs, and sets up title to the land claimed by him, in the neighborhood of the plaintiffs, under a sale from Livaudais & Trudeau, whom he cites in warranty.

L. Foucher, the vendor of the plaintiffs, thus cited in warranty, denies^ their right of action against him, and alleges, that the plaintiffs are in possession of all the land, which he sold them, and that if they ever had any right of [456]*456action against him, for a deficiency of quantity, which he denies, it is prescribed. In his turn, he calls in his vendor and warrantor, J. Roffignac, who answers by a general denial.

This state of the pleadings, presents for the consideration of the court, mixed questions of title, boundary and recourse in warranty. The rights of the plaintiffs, as well in relation to the defendant Oakey, as to their warrantor, depend upon the true construction and legal effect of the sale, from Foucher to Gormley, on the 2d of April, 1S28, and of the certificate of confirmation, on the part of the United States. We come, therefore, at once, to the examination of those two evidences of title, as forming the basis of the pretensions of the plaintiffs, ' to the locus in quo.

The act of sale declares, that Foucher sells to Gormley, “all that tract or parcel of land, situated, lying and being in the suburb Religieuses, about one mile above this city, and on the same side of the river, as per plan hereunto annexed, and signed ne varietur, by the said contracting parties, and me notary, measuring three arpents, less two toises, front on the Bayou des Cannes, and running back from said Bayou, about forty-two arpents, more or less, and until the two lateral lines come to a point, and touch each other, the whole composing about ninety-two arpents three hundred toises, more or less,, superficial measure; bounded on one side by property heretofore owned by Pierre Rousseau, deceased, and on the other, side by property, owned at present, or heretofore owned by J...E. Uivaudais,”.&c. The price is declared to be ten thousand dollars, payable by instalments, and the vendor declares, that he purchased the same tract from Joseph Roffignac, and the executors of Ciríaco de Cevallos, by act passed before Michel de Armas, notary public, on the 17th June, 1816.

The plan referred to in the act, and identified with it, by the signature of the parties, and the paraph of the notaiy, represents the premises as forming a triangle, with a base of eighty-eight toises and one foot, or one-sixth, on the Bayou des Cannes, equal to three arpents, less one toise and five-[457]*457sixths, one foot more than the deed calls for, and one of the side lines, which divides the tract from the land of veuve Parvis,' as measuring eleven hundred and nineteen toises, from the base near the Bayou, and nineteen hundred toises, from a point not given, but presumed to be the river.

In a sale per aversionem with reference to known definite boundaries, they will control the enumeration of quantity, ami the purchaser is not entitled to a diminution of price proportioned to a diminution of So where a sale is made with reference to a natural boundary on one side, and on the other two sides by lands of the adjoining* proprietors, and the length of all the lines are given on a plan annexed to the conveyance, and the whole is sold for a gross sum: Held, that it is a sale per aversionem, and the purchaser bought whatever is embraced within those limits and nothing more, although less than the quantity specified as sold in the act of sale.

The other line is represented as twenty-three toises shorter. The certificate of the surveyor, does not express the superficial contents, but on the face of the plan it is stated to be ninety-two arpents and three hundred toises, and the sale in question, describes it as a tract of that extent. It is manifestly impossible it can contain that quantity, according to the limits and measurements furnished by the deed itself, and the certficate of the surveyor. This error can be accounted for only, by supposing that the surveyor multiplied the whole depth of nineteen hundred toises by one half the base on the Bayou des Cannes, instead of taking the true length of the side line from the base.

This sale appears to the court, clearly one per aversionem. This court has had frequently occasion to consider the principles which govern sales of that character, and it has been settled in several cases, that where a sale is made with reference to known and definite boundaries, they will control the enumeration of quantity. Cuny vs. Achinard, 5 Martin, N. S. 238. Johnston vs. Quarles, .3 La. Reports, 91. Brand vs. Daunoy, 8 Martin, N. SD. 160.

In the case now before the court, the sale is made with reference to a natural boundary on one side, and on the two other sides by lands of the adjoining proprietors, and the length of all the lines of the triangle, are given in the plan annexed to the conveyance, and the whole is sold for a gross sum. The plaintiffs purchased whatever is embraced within those limits, and nothing more.

But the plaintiffs contend, that they have a certificate of confirmation, by the U. States, of their title, to the whole extent of ninety-two arpents and three hundred toises, and that being a title derived immediately from the sovereign, entitles them to recover that extent of land. It is true, the certificate in favor of Louis Foucher, describes the tract of land confirmed [458]*458to him, as one of ninety-two arpents and three hundred toises, pav¡ng a definite front on the Bayou des Cannes, with side iineg converging to a point, without giving the length of those side lines. Taken by itself, it might be considered an abandonment of title on the part of the United States, to the superficial quantity expressed, and, as against the government, authorise an extension of the side lines, to such an extent as, with the definite front given on the Bayou des Cannes, would include that superficies. But as relates to the defendants, it may be answered : 1.

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Bluebook (online)
7 La. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gormley-v-oakey-la-1834.