Kimbrough v. Hirsch

736 So. 2d 871, 98 La.App. 3 Cir. 967, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 213, 1999 WL 44890
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 1999
DocketNo. 98-967
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 736 So. 2d 871 (Kimbrough v. Hirsch) 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
Kimbrough v. Hirsch, 736 So. 2d 871, 98 La.App. 3 Cir. 967, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 213, 1999 WL 44890 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

liPICKETT, Judge.

The Plaintiffs appeal a judgment rendered by the trial court. In this boundary action, the trial court found that the eastern boundary of the Plaintiffs’ property and the western boundary of the. Defendants’ property had never been established. The trial court further found that the Plaintiffs were the owners of the western 100 acres of the original contiguous tract originally owned by the Plaintiffs and Defendants’ ancestor in title. Thereafter, the trial court ordered a survey to establish a boundary with the costs to be shared by both parties. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

FACTS

| aThis matter comes before us as a result of a boundary action between the Plaintiffs 1 and the Defendants.2 The Plaintiffs are owners in indivisión of immovable property located in the Bayou Chicot community of Evangeline Parish, Louisiana. The property immediately east of this land is owned by the Plaintiffs and Defendants. Both tracts at one time belonged to the Plaintiffs and Defendants’ ancestor in title, Captain Samuel Haas. Captain Haas purchased the property in three separate transactions from Charlotte Peck Heath.

The first on December 17, 1873, by Act Number 13148 of the Conveyance Records of St. Landry Parish, conveyed the following property:

[A] certain tract or parcel of land situated and lying in the settlement of Bayou Chicot, in said parish bounded north by land of Samuel Haas, south by William Thomas, east by land of Mrs. Charlotte Peck Heath and the Bayou Chicot and west by [the] public road, being all the land on [the] west side of Chicot Bayou containing 100 acres more or less with all improvements thereon.

The second sale was on March 16,1877, by Act Number 15352 of the Conveyance Records of St. Landry Parish, which conveyed “a certain [tract] or parcel of land situated and lying on the east side of Bayou Chicot, described and bounded as follows, to-wit:”

Beginning on the south side of the public road, running from Bayou Chicot to Holmesville at the east end of Bayou Chicot Bridge and running nearly north on a straight line as near as possible to the bayou not touching the bayou at any point to MRS. C.P. HEATH and MISS MARY ESTHER HEATH, north line intersecting the north line between T.H. Thompson’s farm and said Sam Haas’ farm and thence along the said north line west to Bayou Chicot thence south along the said bayou to [the] beginning point at the bridge.

|3The final act of sale between Captain Haas and Mrs. Heath was on March 1, 1880, by Act Number 18480 of the Convey-[874]*874anee Records of St. Landry Parish, which conveyed the following property:

[A] certain tract or parcel of land with all the improvements thereon situated in [the] Bayou Chicot Settlement known as the Beach Wood Plantation and being the place where John (S. or D.) Heath last resided bounded as follows to-wit: North and North West by lands of Mrs. Lee and [the] Prescott heirs, T.H. Thompson and purchaser, East by lands of David and Obed Griffith, South by the Public Road running from Bayou Chicot to Bayou Bouef, and West by the Bayou Chicot and lands of [the] purchaser containing four hundred acres more or less.

Captain Haas died on January 9, 1919. His estate was inherited by his four children: Dr. John A. Haas, Hattie Haas, A.M. Haas, and Leon S. Haas, Sr. On April 15, 1924, Hattie Haas and Natalie Haas, the daughter and sole heir of Dr. John A. Haas, conveyed the following to Leon Haas, Sr.:

All their undivided right, title and interest in and to a certain tract or parcel of land, together with all the buildings and improvements thereon, situated at Bayou Chicot, Evangeline Parish, Louisiana, containing One Hundred (100) acres, more or less, and being bounded on the North by land owned jointly by the Estfate] of Samuel Haas and the Est[ate] of J.E. Hawkins; South by [the] public road leading from Ville Platte to St. Landry, and land of Sam Thomas; East by property of the Estate of Samuel Haas known as the Heath place; West [by the] public road leading from Ville Platte to Turkey Creek. The above property being what is known as the old Samuel Haas home place, and included five acres on which the old store building and cotton gin are situated, acquired by Samuel Haas from Jane Foreman, and two acres known as the John Heath tract, and all embraced within the above boundaries.

Leon Haas, Sr. bought A.M. Haas’ interest in the above described property in a sale from the Estate of A.M. Haas, through his minor daughter, Martha Haas, on December 20, 1924. Subsequently, Leon Haas, Sr. made a dation en paiment to his wife Mary Roos Haas of the same property described above, as well as other properties, on September 18,1928.

|4In the present action, the Plaintiffs, the descendants of Leon Haas, Sr. and Mary Roos Haas, filed suit to determine the boundary between their property and the property they co-own with the Defendants. The trial court concluded that the eastern boundary of the Plaintiffs’ property and the western boundary of the Defendants’ property had never been established. The trial court further concluded that the Plaintiffs were the sole owners only of the western 100 acres of the original contiguous tract originally owned by the Plaintiffs and Defendants’ ancestor in title. Thereafter, the trial court ordered a survey to establish a boundary with the costs to be shared by both parties. Plaintiffs now appeal.

OPINION

In their appeal, the Plaintiffs set forth eleven assignments of error, namely:

1. The trial court committed manifest error in finding that the eastern boundary of the Plaintiffs’ property (the Sam Haas Homeplace) and the western boundary of the Defendants’ property (the Heath Place) had never been established when, in fact, the boundary between the two tracts had clearly been establish by the deed of 1877.
2. The trial court committed manifest error in finding the intention of the parties to the acts of sale by which Leon Haas, Sr. acquired the property could not be determined due to their unavailability when there was ample evidence of the parties’ intentions and the documents themselves clearly established the boundary.
[875]*8753. The trial court committed manifest error in holding that there was no way of knowing what portion of the land was considered to be the Heath Place when the weight of the evidence clearly established that the Heath Place was the land located east of Bayou Chicot and described in the 1880 conveyance document.
4. The trial court committed manifest error in holding that the eastern boundary of the Sam Haas Home-place was not described by natural monuments, artificial monuments or distances and courses when the boundary was described by both a natural monument (Bayou Chicot) and reference to a contiguous tract of land (the Heath Place).
| ¿5. The trial court committed manifest error in finding that the Plaintiffs were the owners of only the western 100 acres of the larger tract of land formerly known as the Old Sam Haas Homeplace and ordering that a survey be appointed to fix the eastern boundary of Plaintiffs’ property based upon ownership of 100 acres only.
6.

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Bluebook (online)
736 So. 2d 871, 98 La.App. 3 Cir. 967, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 213, 1999 WL 44890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimbrough-v-hirsch-lactapp-1999.