LeBlanc v. Barrios

89 So. 2d 447, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 835
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1956
DocketNo. 4220
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 So. 2d 447 (LeBlanc v. Barrios) 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
LeBlanc v. Barrios, 89 So. 2d 447, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 835 (La. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

ELLIS, Judge.

Plaintiff has filed this suit for the purpose of having judicially established and determined the boundary between his property and that of the defendant. The defendant first plead the prescription of ten and thirty years which was overruled, and a trial on the merits resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff approving the line established by J. A. Lovell, surveyor, who had been commissioned by the Court. The original judgment was rendered on the 30th day of November, 1942, and the defendant, on December 16, 1942, was granted a devolutive appeal to this Court returnable on the 15th day of January, 1943. The case was continued on joint motion of counsel on April 7, 1943, and again on November 10, 1943 and on April 5, 1944 this court again continued the case on motion of counsel for appellant and appellee, and further ordered “This being the third continuance of this case it is ordered that same be placed on the ‘dead docket’ by the Court, and to remain pending further orders by the Court.”

The case, on motion of counsel for appellant, was recently recalled from the dead docket and argued.

Counsel for defendant-appellant contends, first, that the survey was incorrectly made in that the surveyor considered all of the titles rather than just the titles [449]*449of the plaintiff and defendant. On this point appellant argues in his brief:

* * * As stated by the surveyor in his proces verbal, the tracts owned by the plaintiff and defendant originally composed part of a tract having a front on Bayou Lafourche of five arpents, more or less, with a depth between parallel lines of forty arpents. This tract composes all of Sections 69, 33 and 68 of Township 17, Range 19 East and was owned at one time by Rosalie Foret, widow of Louis Bourgeois, who on September 6, 1888 subdivided it into eight tracts of varying frontage on Bayou Lafourche. The four lower subdivisions were acquired by J. N. Bourgeois, Jr. by several mesne conveyances emanating from Rosalie Foret. On April 27, 1920 J. N. Bourgeois, Jr. conveyed these four tracts to Raphael Galiano. (See Abstract, Page 41) In the conveyance to Galiano a consolidated description is also used giving the whole tract a frontage on Bayou Lafourche of two arpents and thirty seven feet, or some eight feet, ten and one quarter inches (8', 10(4") less than the original frontage.
“The defendant’s tract is derived from a tract of land sold by Rosalie Foret, widow of Louis Bourgeois, on September 6, 1888, the same day as that of the sales of the four lower subdivisions. This tract, originally calling for a frontage of One hundred forty one feet, seven inches (14F, 7"), was sold to Mrs. Adrien Barbier, and on June 9, 1911 it was donated by Mrs. Barbier and her husband to Paul Bar-bier. (Abstract, Page 37.) Clerville Barbier acquired this subdivision from Paul Barbier by Act of Sale dated August 14, 1920. (Abstract, Page 42) It will be observed that in the sale by Clerville Barbier the frontage of the defendant’s tract is for the first time expanded to three quarters of an arpent. Thereafter, on July 16, 1927 Clerville Barbier sold this tract to the defendant. (Abstract, Page 43.)
“The tract acquired by Raphael Galiano was conveyed to the widow of J. N. Bourgeois on July 25, 1928 and later sold by the heirs of Mrs. Bourgeois to the plaintiff on March 29, 1938. (Abstract, pages 47 and 49) In these latter transfers the plaintiff’s tract retains its frontage description of two arpents and thirty seven feet.
“In the location of the boundary line, the court appointed surveyor established a line 429 feet, 10(4 inches above and parallel with the lower or southern line of Section 33.”
******
“Furthermore, we think that intention of the Widow Rosalie Foret to sell by measurements is manifested by the minute attention to frontage given in her deeds. Numbering the subdivisions sold by Rosalie Foret from 1 to 8, beginning with the uppermost tract, these measurements are stated as follows:
Tract No. 1 107', 1(4”
Tract No. 2 98', 8"
Tract No. 3 182', 5"
Tract ¡No. 4 141', 7"
Tract No. 5 89', 6"
Tract No. 6 101', 6(4"
Tract No. 7 86', 5"
Tract No. 8 152', 5"
“Whether the sales by the Widow Rosalie Foret were intended as per aversionem sales, however, may be considered a subordinate point inasmuch as the surveyor was called upon to fix the limits of the LeBlanc and Barrios tracts according to their respective title. Without conceding that the subdivisions of Rosalie Foret were per aversionem sales, the principal reason why the survey should have been rejected by the trial court was [450]*450that the surveyor failed to locate the line according to the description called for in Rene LeBlanc’s deed of acquisition.
“As noted previously in this brief, the frontage of the four lower subdivisions was diminished by eight feet, ten and one quarter inches (8', 10J4") in the sale by J. N. Bourgeois, Jr. to Raphael Galiano on April 27, 1920. What the vendor’s intention was in diminishing the size of the tract transferred to Raphael Galiano is left to conjecture. It is, of course, possible that was done to allow for some encroachment from the adjoining proprietor above. Some substance is added to this theory by the concomitant expansion of the Barrios tract four months later in the sale by Paul Bar-bier to Clerville Barbier on August 14, 1920, in which act the frontage is increased to three fourths of an arpent. If our contention is correct and the Galiano sale is construed as a sale by measurement rather than a sale per aversionem the upper line of the Le-Blanc tract would fall several feet south of the Lovell line.
“Since the upper line of the Barrios tract is not at issue here we do not feel called upon to account for the location of that line as result of the expanded frontage called for in the 1920 deed; we think it sufficient to say that the most reasonable assumption is that the expansion occurred at the lower boundary of the Barrios tract where there was a contemporaneous diminution of the LeBlanc tract. And, since LeBlanc’s ancestor in title, J. N. Bourgeois, designated new limits to the tract, ‘the limits anciently subsisting between the * * * estates, must not be regarded * * * ’ R.C.C. 844.”
“ ‘And if such a division fence had been erected previous to the time Cam-bre became the purchaser and proprietor of the two tracts, the union of both in his person, and the sales made by him giving different boundaries, would destroy any right in subsequent purchasers to claim under ancient limits. This very case is put in the Roman Digest, Liv. 10, tit. 1, law 12. And the framers of our code have adopted the principle, and it now makes a part of the positive regulations of the state. Louisiana Code, 840. (R.C.C. 844) Bourguignon v. Boudousquie, 6 Mart. N.S., 697.’
“In summary, it is our position that the sale to Rene J.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Owens v. T. Miller & Sons Building Supply Co.
101 So. 2d 773 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 So. 2d 447, 1956 La. App. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leblanc-v-barrios-lactapp-1956.