Joseph v. Sliman

6 La. App. 552, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 170
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 12, 1927
DocketNo. 23,539
StatusPublished

This text of 6 La. App. 552 (Joseph v. Sliman) 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
Joseph v. Sliman, 6 La. App. 552, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 170 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

Appeal from the District Court, Parish of St. Landry, B. H. Payy, Judge. Petitory action, involving a strip of land, the ownership of which is dependent on the dividing line separating two contiguous estates, emanating from the same author.

James E. Hatfield and Martin S. Hatfield sold and delivered to Mrs. Hiley B. Toliver, wife of William Toliver, by authentic act, dated January 19, 1903, “A certain lot of ground situated at Palmetto on the south side of the Texas & Pacific Railroad track bounded on the north by the Texas & Pacific Railroad track, on the south, east and west by the lands of vendors, said lot measuring on the north line fronting said railroad track, one hundred feet, and on the east and west line, one hundred and twenty-six feet, said lot [553]*553■beginning at a point, one hundred and sixty-four' feet east of the store building occupied by M. L. Parbe and owned by vendors.” This title was duly recorded on the same day in the conveyance records of the Parish of St. Landry.

James E. Hatfield departed this life leaving his brother, Martin S. Hatfield, and his sister, Mrs. Mary Hatfield, wife of T. L. Stokes, as his sole heirs at law.

Martin S. Hatfield and Mrs. Mary Hatfield Stokes, on August 20, 1903, sold and delivered to M. L. Parbe, out of the same tract, of which the lot sold to Mrs. Toliver was part, “A certain lot of ground, situated in the town of Palmetto and to be known thus: Cofnmencing on the west, within fifteen feet from the store now occupied by purchaser and running east and bounding with the lot owned by J. M. Toliver, bounded north by the Texas & Pacific Railroad and running from the railroad south, one hundred and twenty-three feet.” This title was also recorded on the day it was passed in the conveyance records of the Parish of St. Landry.

The front measure of the lot sold and delivered to Parbe is not stated in terms, but it is definitely fixed by. the place of beginning and its western boundary on the lot referred to as J. M. Toliver, but which was in fact Mrs. H. B. Toliver, wife of Wm. Toliver. The lot sold to Parbe, commencing fifteen feet from the Parbe store building and extending from thence to the lot sold and delivered to Mrs. Toliver, it follows that 164 feet, less 15 feet leaves, 149 feet. The Parbe lot therefore fronts on the railroad for 149 feet. It also follows that the east line of the Parbe lot is at the same time the west line of the lot sold to Mrs. Toliver, the two lots adjoining 164 feet east of the Parbe store. The lot sold to Mrs. Toliver having been sold and delivered first, the location of the same 164 feet east of the store building occupied • at the time by M. L. Parbe, and owned by James E. and Martin S. Hatfield, determines and definitely fixes the location of the lot sold and delivered to Parbe. Parbe sold and delivered his lot to Godchaux and Godchaux sold and delivered same to Charlie Joseph, the plaintiff. Mrs. Toliver sold and delivered her lot to J. M. Phillips and Phillips sold and delivered same to Alexander Sliman, the defendant.

The titles of the plaintiff and defendant deraigns from the vendors, James E. and Martin S. Hatfield. At the time these two lots were sold, the tract of land out of which they were taken had not been platted into streets nor squares. The plaintiff alleges that the defendant has entered on, taken possession of and detains from him eighteen feet front on the Texas & Pacific Railroad track by a depth of one hundred twenty-three feet from the eastern side of his lot adjoining defendant. The object of this suit is to recover possession. Defendant’s answer is seemingly inconsistent, in that defendant in one part -of his answer denies that his lot is the original Toliver lot, yet he claims in his answer title and possesssion under Phillips and Mrs. Toliver. He admits that he has possession of the strip of land described in the petition of the plaintiff, and alleges that it is part of the lot which he acquired from Phillips. He alleges that his title from Phillips included this strip of land. That his authors had possession of the same and that he has had actual physical corporeal possession of the strip of land in question, under inclosures, as owner in good faith by • title translative of property, since he acquired from Phillips. He ipleads the prescription of ten years acquirendi causa in aid of his title. He further al[554]*554leges that the plaintiff has stood by and seen him erect a garage and filling station on the strip of land, that plaintiff in fact agreed to the erection of the same. That plaintiff has by his conduct estopped himself from claiming the strip of ground in controversy. Alleging title, possession and limits under’ Phillips, he called X M. Phillips in warranty. Phillips appeared and for answer to his demand, denied that he had sold or delivered the strip of land to defendant. He alleged that the property he sold and delivered to defendant was that which he had acquired from Mrs. Toliver and that the strip of land in controversy was not part of, nor included as part of same. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant appealed. There is no dispute about titles on the trial of the case. Several witnesses testified without effort to show to the contrary, that the Hatfield store building, occupied by M. L. Farbe in 1903, has never been moved and stood at the time of the trial in the identical place where it was standing at the time of the sales to Mrs. Toliver and M. L. Farbe. That actual measurement by a steel tape line from the stor.e building in question one hundred sixty-four feet east, proved that the strip of land claimed by the plaintiff was part of the lot which Martin S. Hatfield and Mrs. Mary Hatfield Stokes had sold and delivered to M. L. Farbe and which Farbe and his successors in title had sold and delivered to the plaintiff. The title from Phillips to the defendant declares that Phillips sells and delivers to him the same property which he had acquired from Mrs. Toliver. The evidence shows without effort to show to the contrary, in fact defendant proved it himself, that Mrs. Toliver had enclosed her lot soon after buying it and Mr. Phillips testified positively and without dispute that he never changed the fence, but sold the same limits to the defendant, that had been establshed by Mrs. Toliver. The evidence shows without question to the contrary that defendant’s possession of the strip of land in controversy commenced after he had bought the property from J. M. Phillips. Plaintiff soon after buying from Godchaux, who had bought from Farbe, erected on his lot a small building which he used as a restaurant, adjoining and so close to the line between him and the defendant that the drip from this little building fell on defendant’s land. Defendant objected to the drip, and about twelve years ago, acting through an attorney, he wrote plaintiff to move his house. Plaintiff complied and moved his house about twenty feet from the line that then stood in the form, of a fence . between them. Defendant almost immediately,- acting on his own volition, moved the fence that had been erected by Mrs. Toliver on the west line of her property and which had been maintained in the same place by Phillips, so as to enclose and include the strip of land situated in between the fence which had been erected by Mrs. Toliver, 164 feet east of the Farbe store building and the place to which the plaintiff had moved his building and defendant has kept possession ever since. Lately and of his own free will and accord he decided to erect a garage and filling station on the’ strip which he had thus enclosed. He did not ask permission of the plaintiff to move the fence which Mrs.

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6 La. App. 552, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-v-sliman-lactapp-1927.