Hebert v. Chargois

106 So. 2d 15
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 1958
Docket4610
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 106 So. 2d 15 (Hebert v. Chargois) 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
Hebert v. Chargois, 106 So. 2d 15 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

106 So.2d 15 (1958)

Joseph HEBERT et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Caesar CHARGOIS, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 4610.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 8, 1958.

*16 Babineaux & Huval, Lafayette, for appellants.

McBride & Brewster, Lafayette, for appellee.

TATE, Judge.

This possessory action was instituted by the owners of a tract described as containing 35 arpents to secure their quiet possession thereof.[1] Defendant Chargois was charged with disturbing plaintiffs' possession of their land by, inter alia, erecting a fence upon it.

Plaintiffs' suit was dismissed by the trial court upon a holding that it did not comply with the statutory requirement that a possessory action be brought by the possessor of the land within a year of the time his possession was disturbed. Articles 49, 59, Code of Practice.

The principle question raised by this appeal is whether, as the District Court held, defendant disturbed plaintiffs' possession of their property by exercising exclusive grazing privileges thereupon without the consent of plaintiffs from 1953 (or earlier) up to and through the suit filed on December 2, 1955; or whether, as the plaintiffs contend, the first act by which defendant put them on notice of an adverse claim to the property, or by which defendant prevented them from enjoying the use thereof quietly, was the erection of a fence across a portion of their land in March of 1955, which precipitated the present suit which was thus timely filed in December of that year.

*17 It should at the outset be noted that, unlike a petitory action wherein title or ownership is at issue (Articles 43-45, C.P.), the possessory action involves only the right of one actually in posession of the land (irrespective of his title thereto) to be maintained in his possession against one disturbing same, subject to certain specified codal requirements (Articles 46-60, C.P.). That is, even though the plaintiffs have the better title and might prevail in a petitory action where title is at issue, they cannot prevail in this possessory action unless they meet the statutory requisites thereof, including undisturbed possession for more than one year prior to the defendant's disturbance of same. Article 49, C.P.

For convenience in discussion we are setting forth below a sketch of a portion of the survey depicting the property in dispute and the relevant fences.

*18 Plaintiffs' claim that their possession of the tract shown on the sketch as HIJLE5GH was interrupted by defendant's construction of the new fence IJL thereupon in March 1955, cutting off the disputed tract from the remainder of their land.

In brief recapitulation of the facts, plaintiffs' ancestor in title acquired in 1906 a tract described as containing 35 arpents in Lafayette Parish and, about 35 years before the present suit, he fenced same. At this time also, the "old fence" (ZX) was erected to separate the cultivated fields which formed the major portion of the tract, which lay west of the ZX fence, from the densely wooded and overgrown portion east thereof bordering on the coulee. This wooded easterly portion was thenceforth used as a pasture.

The preponderance of the evidence indicates that by the time defendant Chargois acquired in 1950 his tract bordering plaintiffs' on the latter's eastern end, any old fence line along the extreme eastern end (from H to G to 5 to E) had deteriorated and could mainly be ascertained through the remnants of a few old wires embedded in trees. However, it is uncontradicted that the old cross-fence from Z to X was still standing and was still maintained to keep cattle from entering the crop-area, as was another old fence running along the coulee westward from X used for the same purpose. The existence of an old fence eastward to the coulee from X through J is disputed and, as will be seen, is of substantial importance in the resolution of the legal issues here involved.

Defendant Chargois stated that the old fence from Z to X to J to the coulee was pointed out to him as his western boundary line and that, therefore following his acquisition in 1950 he commenced to graze his four head of cattle in the wooded and densely overgrown area enclosed by same. He further testified, corroborated by a neighbor, that he maintained and fixed said fences to prevent his cattle from straying into the cultivated fields north and west of this enclosed portion; also stating that he fixed the southern fence line (XJL) too.[2] The District Court found that this act of grazing cattle in the enclosed area, commencing more than one year before the suit was filed, was the initial disturbance of plaintiffs' possession and that, therefore, this suit by them was not timely filed. Vermilion Parish School Bd. v. Muller, La.App. 1 Cir., 92 So.2d 77.

The plaintiffs, however, claim that their possession was not disturbed until defendant erected the "new fence" (east of the old fence) at IJL in March of 1955. Defendant erected this fence within a week after plaintiffs' tenant plowed a portion of the land east of the old fence (ZX) and planted some Irish potatoes therein. (The fence cut off the eastern end of the potato patch, about 14 rows.)

It is forcefully argued that the fact that defendant fenced in only a portion of the *19 pasture which he claimed he owned in whole[3] is indicative of a lack of bona fide belief on his part that he had any right to have cattle on the land in Lafayette Parish across the coulee (which is the boundary between Lafayette and Vermilion Parishes), especially since his deed of title called only for land in Vermilion Parish. Whatever arguments as to defendant's good faith may be based upon this circumstance, our concern in the present litigation is solely whether the grazing of the cattle upon the property claimed by plaintiffs constituted, under the circumstances of this case, such a disturbance of plaintiffs' possession as to commence the tolling of the year within which the suit must be brought.

To show their own possession, plaintiffs point to their cultivation of the western portion of their tract and rely upon the legal principle that where a contiguous body of land is conveyed by a single deed, possession exercised on any part of that tract extends, constructively, to the limits of the land as called for in the deed itself (LSA-C.C. Arts. 3437, 3498; Rhodes v. Collier, 215 La. 754, 41 So.2d 669); further, in view of the uncontradicted testimony of an initial corporeal possession by plaintiffs' ancestor in title through the construction of a fence more than 35 years before the suit on the east side of the coulee along what is claimed to be the eastern boundary line of plaintiffs' property (HG5E), able counsel for plaintiffs rely upon the additional principle that as a matter of law, following the initial corporeal possession, possession continues constructively even if the corporeal detention ceases (LSA-C.C. Arts. 3429, 3431, 3442; Case v. Jeanerette Lumber & Shingle Co., La.App. 1 Cir., 79 So.2d 650, Daull v. Smith, La. App. 1 Cir., 51 So.2d 138), which constructive or civil possession thus preceded by physical possession is sufficient possession for purposes of maintaining a possessory action (Art. 49, C.P., as interpreted by Ellis v. Prevost, 19 La. 251 and the succeeding jurisprudence, see Hill v. Richey, 221 La. 402, 59 So.2d 434; Riseman, "The Possessory Action in Louisiana", 20 Tul.L.Rev. (1946) 524, 533-535.)

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 2d 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hebert-v-chargois-lactapp-1958.