Kobler v. Koch

6 So. 2d 55
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1941
DocketNo. 6270.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 6 So. 2d 55 (Kobler v. Koch) 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
Kobler v. Koch, 6 So. 2d 55 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

This is a boundary action. Defendant owns Lot 98 of the Land Subdivision in the City of Shreveport. The plaintiffs, who are the surviving widow and the sole heir of B.A. Kobler, deceased, own a strip seven feet wide off of the west side of Lot 99 of the subdivision. They formerly owned the entirety of said Lot 99. The location of the common line between these lots is in dispute. Plaintiffs allege that defendant is asserting ownership of a strip 2.6 feet wide off of the west side of said 7-foot strip the entire depth of the lots, or 145 feet, and that her residence occupies a portion of said 2.6-foot strip.

H.E. Barnes, a civil engineer, was first appointed by the court to make a survey of and locate the boundary line in dispute. Thereafter on motion of the defendant, the court appointed George E. Dutton, a civil engineer, to also survey and locate the disputed line. Each engineer made a survey as directed and filed proces verbal thereof. They differed in their location of the embattled line. There was no motion filed to homologate either survey. Defendant answered and put at issue the contentions advanced by plaintiffs. The admitted testimony covers a wide range for a case of this character. Plaintiffs champion the Barnes survey while defendant stands upon that made by Dutton. The lower court sustained plaintiffs' contention and approved the Barnes survey. Defendant appealed.

In the year 1901 the several heirs of Mary E. Land, deceased, owned the west one-half (W. 1/2) of the southwest one-quarter (S.W. 1/4) of Section 6, Twp. 17 N., Range 13 W. The record does not disclose if the tract was then within the limits of the City of Shreveport. It was woodland. The heirs decided to subdivide the tract (excepting five acres) into town lots and constitute a subdivision. To effectuate this desire, they employed J.M. Williams, a reputable surveyor, to survey off and delineate the lots, alleys and streets of the subdivision. He did so and in conjunction therewith made up a plat of the subdivision on which the lots (365 in all), were numbered, streets named, measurements and bearings given.

The subdivision was named "Land Subdivision to the City of Shreveport". The plat was recorded on November 25, 1901 in Conveyance Book No. 28, Folio 462, of the Records of Caddo Parish. It does not appear that any proces verbal of the survey was made.

The subdivision is bounded as follows:

North by Olive Street; East by Creswell Street; South by Wilkinson Street, and *Page 56 West by Line Avenue. Lots 98 and 99 each front on College Street (formerly Voorhies Street) 40 feet and extend back northerly between parallel lines 145 feet.

The west boundary of said west one-half (W. 1/2) of southwest one-quarter (S.W. 1/4) of Section 6 is the range line. College Street intersects Line Avenue at right angles. It is 60 feet wide between property lines.

When this subdivision was laid off, there was considerable uncertainty as to the exact location of the range line in the vicinity of said 80-acre tract. This uncertainty was not entirely removed until the year 1910.

The plat of the subdivision prepared by Williams discloses that in his effort to follow the range line (west boundary of the subdivision), he ran a line bearing south 89 degrees 45 minutes east from the center of the intersection of the avenue with Olive Street, being the northwest (N.W.) corner of said west one-half (W. 1/2) of southwest one-quarter (S.W. 1/4) of Section 6. A strip 30 feet wide on the east side of this line the entire length of the tract was set apart and dedicated as the east one-half of Line Avenue. The east side of this 30-foot strip is the west property line.

On February 27, 1911, John R. Land, one of the heirs of Mary E. Land, deceased, sold to B.A. Kobler, thirty-three (33) of the lots drawn by him in the partition of his mother's estate, including numbers 97, 98 and 99.

On March 1, 1922, plaintiffs herein sold to Maurice E. Phillips, Lots 97 and 98 of the Land Subdivision and on May 20, 1922, Phillips conveyed to the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company these two lots and other lots in said subdivision with buildings and improvements thereon, and other property. On June 14, 1923, the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company conveyed to Mrs. Koch, the defendant, Lot 98 of the Land Subdivision. In each of these deeds, save the one from Phillips to the United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, specific reference is made to the map of the Williams survey recorded in Conveyance Book 28, page 462 of the Records of Caddo Parish, for identification purposes.

Therefore, it is seen that plaintiffs and defendant trace their titles to a common author and acquired their respective properties under and with reference to the Williams map, as recorded.

A time was set by the surveyors to repair to the locus and make a joint survey. Mr. Dutton preceded Mr. Barnes to the place. The litigants or their respective counsel were present and produced their title papers. Dutton then began a survey in keeping therewith which meant that the lines as run by Williams and as shown on the map, would be retraced by him. Barnes arrived soon thereafter and on learning how Dutton proposed to make the survey, withdrew, giving notice that in the afternoon he would return and make a survey independent of that which Dutton was making. After Dutton had completed his survey, he marked the boundary line in keeping therewith. According to his survey no part of defendant's residence is on plaintiffs' land. There is a slight overhang of the eaves.

Dutton began his survey at what is known as the Land monument, which marks the center of the intersection of Line Avenue and Olive Street. It is the northwest (N.W.) corner of the said west one-half (W. 1/2) of southwest one-quarter (S.W. 1/4) of Section 6, a well recognized and established corner. From this point he ran south 89 degrees 45 minutes east, 739 feet along the old line as run by Williams, to the center of College Street. Thence he ran at an angle of 90 degrees 15 minutes to left along the center line of College Street 470 feet (the frontage of 11 lots, plus 30 feet allowed for Line Avenue), and set a point. This point is 30 feet south of the south corner common to lots 98 and 99. He then measured 30 feet (on angle of 90 degrees, 15 minutes left) and set an iron stake to mark said common corner, and continued on same bearing 145 feet along common line to north common corner on alley.

Barnes returned to the scene in the afternoon and made a survey. He also began at the Land monument corner but ran south 00 degrees, 2 minutes east which bearing is 13 minutes farther west than the bearing used by Dutton. When Barnes had run 739 feet to the center of College Street he was 3.6 feet farther west than was Dutton. This difference, of course, is due to the divergence of the two lines from the Land monument corner. The south common corner of the lots as established by Barnes, is 3.6 feet farther west than that fixed by Dutton. At the rear of the lots the difference is 3 feet even. According to *Page 57 Barnes' survey, defendant's residence is over the line 2.65 feet. He did not follow the unambiguous description in the title deeds of both litigants. Had he done this rather than adopt new bearings, there would be no variance between his survey and that of Dutton.

We attach a small plat of the locus with varying lines which will be of assistance to any one desiring to acquaint himself with the facts.

Defendant's residence was erected in 1921, some two years prior to her acquisition of the lot. Admittedly, it was constructed with reference to the Williams survey and plat. She has held continuous physical possession of the property since purchasing it.

Mr. J.F. Utz, brother of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
6 So. 2d 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kobler-v-koch-lactapp-1941.