Honeycutt v. Bourg
This text of 588 So. 2d 1204 (Honeycutt v. Bourg) 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.
Opinion
William Peyton HONEYCUTT
v.
Bonnie Jean BOURG, Dorris Jean Holland, Margaret Virginia Jolley, and Marie Crosby Brown.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
D. Blayne Honeycutt, Denham Springs, for appellant.
Richard B. Minogue, New Roads, for appellees.
Before LOTTINGER, EDWARDS and GONZALES, JJ.
GONZALES, Judge.
Plaintiff petitioned the lower court to fix the boundary between his campsite, located on False River in Pointe Coupee Parish, and that of the neighboring campsite, owned by defendants. In response to plaintiff's petition, defendants filed exceptions pleading the objections of ten years acquisitive prescription, thirty years acquisitive prescription, and ten years liberative prescription. The trial court rendered judgment maintaining defendants' objection of ten years acquisitive prescription, and, denying defendants' objections of ten years liberative prescription and thirty years acquisitive prescription. Plaintiff has appealed and assigns as error the trial court finding of ten years acquisitive prescription.[1]
FACTS
The tracts of land in question are fronted by La. Highway 413, and bounded in the rear by False River. (A portion of a map showing the survey made of the property for the instant lawsuit is reproduced in Appendix "A".) The tracts of plaintiff and defendants, along with a third tract of land (shown on the appended map as belonging to Wallace Mackensen[2]) were originally a part of a larger tract of land owned by Lynn Hubble; the remainder of the parent tract lies across La. Highway 413 and is *1205 designated on the survey map as owned by Ada B. Hubble.
Plaintiff's Exhibits A, B, and C show plaintiff's chain of title as follows: February 19, 1952sale by Lynn Hubble to James H. Singer (of a tract of land having a front of 49 feet on the highway); April 8, 1959sale by James H. Singer to Robert F. Odom (no designation of feet of highway frontage); January 10, 1980sale by Robert F. Odom to William Peyton Honeycutt (no designation of feet of highway frontage). The property description in plaintiff's act of sale is as follows:
A certain lot or parcel of land, with all buildings and improvements thereon, and with all rights, ways, privileges and servitudes thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining, situated on the Island of False River, in the Parish of Pointe Coupee, State of Louisiana, fronting on the Right of Way of the public State blacktopped highway which runs along False River (known as State Highway No. 413) and by a depth extending to False River, and which said lot or parcel of ground is bounded as follows: In front or Southeast by the said public highway, in the rear or Northwest by the said False River, on the upper-side or Northeast by the property of Clarence W. McCormick and Mrs. Hazel McWilliams McCormick, and on the lower side or Southwest by property of Richard Robillard. [Emphasis added.]
The Bourg defendants' chain of title is as follows: February 22, 1949sale by Lynn Hubble to James H. Singer (with 55 feet of frontage on the highway and having side boundaries between parallel lines); September 8, 1958sale by James H. Singer to Clarence W. McCormick and Mrs. Hazel McWilliams McCormick (with 59 feet of highway frontage and with side boundaries between parallel lines); June 8, 1962 sale by Mrs. Hazel McWilliams McCormick Coleman to Adrian E. Kaiser, Jr.[3] (with 59 feet of highway frontage and with side boundaries between parallel lines); June 22, 1972sale by Adrian E. Kaiser, Jr. to Charles Ray Allen (with 59 feet of highway frontage and with side boundaries between parallel lines); July 10, 1973sale from Charles Ray Allen to Bonnie Jean Bourg et al. (with 59 feet of highway frontage and with side boundaries between parallel lines). Defendants' property description in their title is as follows:
A certain lot or parcel of land, with all buildings and improvements thereon, and with all rights, ways, privileges and servitudes thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining, situated on the Island of False River, in the Parish of Pointe Coupee, State of Louisiana, having a front of fifty-nine (59.0) feet on the right-of-way of the Public State Blacktop Highway which runs along False River (known as State Highway No. 413), by a depth between parallel lines extending to False River, and which said lot or parcel of ground is bounded as follows: in front or Southeast by said Public Highway, in the rear or Northwest by said False River, on the upper side, or Northeast by property formerly belonging to Clarence W. McCormick, et ux, now belonging to Otto B. Mackensen, et ux and on the lower side or Southwest by property formerly belonging to James H. Singer, now belonging to Robert F. Odom. [Emphasis added.]
The chain of title of the Mackensen tract is as follows: February 22, 1949sale by Lynn Hubble to Collins D. Pinkard[4]; October 22, 1949sale by Collins D. Pinkard to James H. Singer (of lot with front of approximately 1 arpent on the highway less 104 feet)[5]; May 13, 1958sale by James *1206 H. Singer to Clarence W. McCormick and Mrs. Hazel McWilliams McCormick (with 88 feet of highway frontage and side boundaries between parallel lines); August 3, 1961sale by Mrs. Hazel McWilliams McCormick Coleman to Otto B. Mackensen (with 88 feet of highway frontage and side boundaries between parallel lines). The title describes the Mackensen tract as follows:
A certain lot or parcel of ground, with all buildings and improvements thereon, situated on the Island of False River, in the Parish of Pointe Coupee, Louisiana, having a front of 88 feet on the right of way of the public State Black-top Highway which runs along False River (Known as State Hwy. No. 413), by a depth between parallel lines extending to False River, bounded Front or SE by said Highway, rear or NW by False River, Upper side, or NE by property now or formerly of Adam Bouanchaud, and on lower side or SW, by property of the parties Clarence W. McCormick and Hazel M. McCormick, being a portion of the property acquired by the vendor and her late husband, Clarence W. McCormick, from James H. Singer. [Emphasis added.]
ACQUISITIVE PRESCRIPTION
Louisiana Civil Code article 3473 governs acquisitive prescription of ten years:
Ownership and other real rights in immovables may be acquired by the prescription of ten years.
Further, La.C.C. art. 3475[6] provides as follows:
The requisites for the acquisitive prescription of ten years are: possession of ten years, good faith, just title, and a thing susceptible of acquisition by prescription.
Just title is defined by La.C.C. art. 3483[7] as follows:
A just title is a juridical act, such as a sale, exchange, or donation, sufficient to transfer ownership or another real right. The act must be written, valid in form, and filed for registry in the conveyance records of the parish in which the immovable is situated.
The burden of proof rests upon the party claiming the benefit of adverse *1207 possession. Levatino v. Williams, 396 So.2d 380 (La.App. 1st Cir.1981); Carpenter v. Cobb, 293 So.2d 888 (La.App. 1st Cir.1974). One cannot by the prescription of ten years acquire property not embraced within the title upon which the plea of prescription is founded.
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588 So. 2d 1204, 1991 WL 226457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honeycutt-v-bourg-lactapp-1991.