Hines v. Hyde

251 So. 3d 686
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2018
DocketNo. 52,103–CA
StatusPublished

This text of 251 So. 3d 686 (Hines v. Hyde) 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
Hines v. Hyde, 251 So. 3d 686 (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

*688Karen Womack Hyde appeals a petitory judgment which found that her lot, in the city of Winnfield, measures only 54.3 × 104.4 feet, instead of the 74.3 × 104.4 feet stated in her credit sale deed. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The plaintiff, Carolyn Hines, and defendant, Karen Womack Hyde, are next-door neighbors on West South Avenue in Winnfield: Ms. Hines to the west, Ms. Hyde to the east. Ms. Hines alleged that in early 2013, Ms. Hyde's family members started parking vehicles on the east side of her (Ms. Hines's) lot, built a fence on her lot, and threatened and "cussed" her when she tried to have her lot surveyed. Ms. Hines filed this suit, in August 2013, for possession of her lot, preliminary and permanent injunction, and damages.

Ms. Hyde reconvened, in March 2014, alleging that she actually owned the eastern strip of Ms. Hines's lot. In support, she cited her own credit sale deed, dated April 21, 1986, from W.R. "Bill" Roberts. This described her lot as starting 208.7 feet west of the SE corner of Lot 3, Old Town of Winnfield (this point of beginning, hereinafter "POB", is not in dispute), and then running 74.3 feet to the west. By this measure, she contended, she owned the strip of land that Ms. Hines had been using for years as a driveway.

Ms. Hines responded, first urging that by converting the matter to a petitory action, Ms. Hyde conceded that she (Ms. Hines) had been in physical possession of the contested strip. She then alleged that an ancestor in title, Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp., owned both lots prior to 1961. In May 1961, by separate acts, Olin sold both tracts to someone named James Scales. One of these acts described the eastern lot (now belonging to Ms. Hyde) as starting 208.7 feet west of the POB and the running 54.4 feet to the west. The other described the western lot (now belonging to Ms. Hines) as starting 263.1 feet west of the POB (note, 208.7 + 54.4 = 263.1 feet) and running west 54.4 feet. In 1979, Scales's heirs sold both tracts to Roberts, with both lots as described in the 1961 conveyances. In December 1984, Roberts sold the western lot to Ms. Hines and her husband; however, the property description said it began 283 feet west of the POB, instead of the 263.1 stated in the prior acts, and ran 54.4 feet to the west. Ms. Hines attached a 2013 survey showing that if her boundary line was that far over, it would run through a brick apartment house on the west side of her lot. Ms. Hines conceded that in 1986, Roberts sold the eastern lot to Ms. Hyde, described as starting 208.7 feet west of the POB and running 74.3 feet to the west. She contended, however, that an error had occurred in her property description, and that, at any rate, she had exercised possession of her lot for over 30 years.1

*689Ms. Hines then filed a motion for summary judgment. She reiterated all the facts of her earlier pleadings, and argued that the documents showed that the original owners, Olin and Roberts, owned two adjacent lots, each with a 54.4-foot frontage; however, when Roberts conveyed the east tract to Ms. Hyde, he erroneously listed a 74.3-foot frontage. Ms. Hines argued that under La. C.C. art. 532, her deed from the common ancestor, Roberts, came first, so it took precedence.

Ms. Hyde opposed the motion. She attached a boundary agreement from May 1984 in which the common ancestor, Roberts, settled his western boundary with his neighbor to the west, someone named Machen (LeMart's predecessor in title). This document described the east lot as starting 208.7 feet west of the POB, the west lot as starting 263.1 feet west of the POB, and Machen's lot as starting 316.15 feet west of the POB. By the agreement, Roberts and Machen declared they would fix the boundary, under La. C.C. art. 789, in accord with "markers on the ground," whereby Machen's lot was to start 337.4 feet west of the POB (21.25 feet farther west). Ms. Hyde also showed that in 2001, Machen's successor sold this tract to LeMart, by cash sale deed that used exactly the same description as in the boundary agreement, 337.4 feet west of the POB.

Ms. Hyde then filed her own motion for summary judgment. She contended that when Ms. Hines filed her petition, she did not have 30 years' uninterrupted possession of the contested strip. She disputed Ms. Hines's view that the boundary issue stemmed from "misunderstandings, or typos"; instead, in 1984, pursuant to the boundary agreement, Roberts, the common ancestor, owned 20 feet more frontage than had been described in his deeds from Olin. She argued that Roberts added the 20 feet to the eastern lot (Ms. Hyde), giving it a 74.3-foot frontage, while the western lot (Ms. Hines) still had the 54.5-foot frontage stated in her deed. Ms. Hyde suggested the real problem was between Ms. Hines and the LeMart lot.

ACTION OF THE DISTRICT COURT

The matter came for a hearing on the opposing motions for summary judgment in February 2017. The parties laid out their respective documents and argued. In written reasons for judgment, the court found that the deeds initially described both lots as having a 54.4-foot frontage. It then found that the boundary agreement actually resolved only a 1.35-foot strip, not the 19.9 feet claimed by Ms. Hyde. The court concluded that Ms. Hyde owns a 54.3-foot frontage to the east, and Ms. Hines owns a 54.4-foot frontage to the west, exactly as shown in the 2013 survey. The court rendered judgment to this effect.

Ms. Hyde filed a motion for new trial. At a hearing in July 2017, Ms. Hyde argued that the court had improperly used parol evidence to find that the boundary agreement was in error. Ms. Hines responded that after Roberts sold her the western lot, he could not sell Ms. Hyde a lot with a 74.3-foot frontage, because he no longer owned it. The court denied the new trial.

Ms. Hyde has appealed, raising two assignments of error.

DISCUSSION

By her first assignment of error, Ms. Hyde urges the court erred in granting Ms. Hines's motion for summary judgment, and in ruling that Ms. Hines owned a 54.4-foot frontage and Ms. Hyde, only a 54.3-foot frontage, "in contradiction of the deeds filed of public record." She concedes that prior to 1984, Roberts, the common ancestor, owned both lots, totaling 108.7 feet frontage; however, she contends, the *690boundary agreement, in May 1984, moved Roberts's western boundary 20 feet to the west, giving him the extra 20 feet that he added to the east lot when he sold it to Ms. Hyde in 1986. She submits that that district court's reasons "went awry" of these public records, based on a mere "assumption." She contends that both she and Ms. Hines are third parties to the boundary agreement, La. C.C. art. 3343, and thus subject to what is written on that document, and to nothing else. She concludes that strict reliance on the public records shows that Roberts acquired the extra 20 feet by the boundary agreement in May 1984; Roberts sold it to her in April 1986, by credit sale deed that clearly gave her a 74.3-foot frontage; and the court committed legal error by finding that she owned anything less. By her second assignment of error, Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 So. 3d 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hines-v-hyde-lactapp-2018.