Koerber v. City of New Orleans

76 So. 2d 466, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 959
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1954
DocketNo. 20394
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 466 (Koerber v. City of New Orleans) 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
Koerber v. City of New Orleans, 76 So. 2d 466, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 959 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinions

McBRIDE, Judge.

The City of New Orleans, defendant, has appealed from the judgment in this petitory action in which plaintiff claims ownership of a tract of four acres of land (fully described in the petition and judgment), which forms part of the Moisant International Airport at Kenner, Parish of Jefferson, which is owned and operated by the City of New Orleans. Neither the pleadings nor the proof affirmatively shows that the value of the land in controversy exceeds $2,000, and therefore this court has jurisdiction of the appeal. Castleberry v. Ethridge, 223 La. 466, 65 So.2d 138, and cases there cited.

Both the plaintiff and the City of New Orleans claim to be the record owners, by rival chains of title, of the property in question, but it is conceded by the City Attorney that plaintiff has the more ancient and superior record title which runs back to a sheriff’s sale made in the year 1866. [468]*468The City of New Orleans traces its title to the Kenner Project, a corporation which purportedly owned the property in 1910. There is no question that when the City made entry upon the property in 1941 its officials honestly believed that it had a good title thereto by virtue of a deed from Liberty Homestead in' Liquidation, dated October 30, 1941.

The City of New Orleans interposed several exceptions and pleas which are no longer material and need not be discussed in view of the defenses raised by the answer and also in view of our conclusions in the matter.

Defendant relies heavily’ on the plea of prescription of ten years established by LSA-C.C. art. 3478, and let it be said here that the City unquestionably acquired the Pailet Tract (which embraces the four acres to which plaintiff lays claim) in good faith and by a just title. The Pailet Tract in turn forms. part of a larger tract which was formerly known as Kenner Project. However, the City of New Orleans has not produced sufficient proof to serve as a foundation for the plea of ten years’ acquisitive prescription in that the City had been in corporeal possession for a period of less than ten years up to the date of the instant suit, November 21, 1949, and it has not been adequately shown that any of the City’s ancestors in title had actual possession for a sufficient period, which added to the City’s possession would aggregate a continuous period of tén years. See' LSA-C.C. art. 3493.

The City Attorney argues that the corporation Kenner Project, to which the City traces its title, went into public and unequivocal possession as required by the Civil Code for the prescription of ten years acquirendi causa by virtue of having dug certain drainage canals along the boundaries and laterally across the large tract. True, a map of Kenner Project, dated November 21, 1914, notes certain canals, but we find no evidence in the record showing the actual location of the canals. The City’s witness, Morgan, made mention of the Duncan and Butler canals, but he did not know where they were located with reference to Kenner Project. Neither is it shown by whom the canals were dug. It could be that they were not the work of Kenner Project at all, but had been constructed and maintained for public drainage purposes by some governmental authority. It is also asserted that Kenner Project had some shallow oil wells drilled on its property, but again there is no evidence to that effect. The only reference to oil wells appears in a recital contained in the act of sale by Kenner Project to American Securities Corporation on February 13, 1919, wherein it is stated that a few shallow wells had been drilled on Kenner Project “but that the same did not prove successful.” Certainly this is of no probative value.

It is also contended that the American Securities Corporation, which acquired Ken-ner Project on February 13, 1919, and owned the land until its sale to Dusenbury on December ‘4, 1924, went into actual physical possession of the tract by virtue of having had the land cleared. That the land was cleared is not shown for Morgan, the City’s witness, who it is claimed performed the work, would not say whether it was the property of American Securities Corporation which he cleared.

Dusenbury sold what later came to be known as the Pailet Tract to Lester Pailet on December 4, 1924. This vendee deeded the land to Liberty Homestead on August 29, 1929, and it was deeded back by the homestead on the same day to Pailet. On January 3, 1933, Lester Pailet sold the tract to Pailet Realty Company, a corporation, and this -vendee deeded the property back to Pailet on June 3, 1936. Liberty Homestead in Liquidation, the immediate author in title of the City of New Orleans, acquired the land from Lester Pailet on November 24, 1937.

Defendant produced two witnesses, namely, Alongi and Wool, who gave testimony with reference to their possession of the Pailet Tract on behalf of the owner during the Pailet ownership. Alongi says he lived in a house on what he thought was Pailet’s land from 1931 to 1935; that he fenced in and used the portion of the tract for agri[469]*469cultural purposes during that period; that he rented out to other persons portions of the land for “Mr. Pailet’s” account. Alongi also stated that he cut logs from the properly in 1933.

This testimony fails to impress us as Alongi could not say that the house was on Pailet’s land, nor could he testify that his negotiations with reference to his going upon the land were had with an owner of the property. Alongi stated that he dealt with “Old Man” Pailet, who was Lester’s father, and it is to be noted no other Pailet except Lester ever owned the land. Significant also is Alongi’s statement that he quit the land in 1934 “when Mr. Pailet died.” Title to the property during that year was registered in the name of Pailet Realty Company, and subsequently Lester Pailet and later the Liberty Homestead in Liquidation had title to the property. Even if Alongi’s testimony is to be accepted as showing a physical possession on his part, such could avail the City nothing because Alongi left the property in 1934. In the tacking of possession continuity is required. LSA-C.C. art. 3495 provides:

“But to enjoy this advantage, the different possessions must have succeeded each other without interval or interruption.”

Wool told of a rather vague conversation had with both “Old Man” Pailet and Lester Pailet some time in 1929 or 1930. It is pertinent to mention that from 1929 until the City acquired title in 1941 the Pailet Tract changed hands six times. Wool’s testimony does not show that he ever dealt with the record owner of the property or with an agent of the owner. Not alone that, but the evidence does not make out a case of possession in that Wool cannot be said to have ever physically occupied any portion of the land. His meager activities, assuming they were conducted on the Pailet tract and with the owner’s consent, did not amount to corporeal possession. The only connection Wool had with the land was his claim that at certain times of the year he would enter not only the Pailet property but also the property of other persons and throw seeds beneath trees which he said would germinate and produce vegetables which he would sell at a market.

We think that the plea of ten years’ acquisitive prescription is unavailing to defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 466, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koerber-v-city-of-new-orleans-lactapp-1954.