Levraea v. Boudreaux

259 So. 2d 642, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6538
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 13, 1972
DocketNo. 8727
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 259 So. 2d 642 (Levraea v. Boudreaux) 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
Levraea v. Boudreaux, 259 So. 2d 642, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6538 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Judge.

This is a petitory action to which petitioner, Joseph Levraea, and defendant, Wilfred J. Boudreaux, both claim title to a strip of land some 48 feet in width lying between properties of plaintiff and defendant which is not in dispute.

The record discloses that on July 1, 1942, Charles Wibel sold to defendant, from whom plaintiff derives his title, some 13 acres in the west half of the west half of the west half of the southwest quarter of Section 27, Township 9 South, Range 3 East, Southeastern District of Louisiana. It is not disputed that the true northern boundary of the property so conveyed was a section line which runs roughly along the center line of Louisiana Highway No. 429. This highway existed when defendant purchased the property. During the year 1951, defendant conveyed a servitude to the Department of Highways for the purposes of blacktopping the highway. As result of this, the highway right-of-way encroached unto defendant’s property some 39.47 feet at its western boundary, and 47.92 feet at its eastern boundary.

By deed dated April 30, 1956, defendant transferred a portion of his property to Octave J. Babin by deed recorded in COB 114, Folio 376. The portion of this deed which has given rise to this litigation is as follows:

“A certain tract of land situated in the Parish of Ascension, Louisiana, in the West one-half of the West one-half of the West one-half of the Southwest Quarter of Section 27, Township 9 South, Range 3 East, Southeastern District of Louisiana, and being the North four (4) acres of the tract of land acquired by vendor herein from Charles Wibel July 1, 1942, . . . bounded on the North by the Gonzales — St. Amant blacktopped highway, . . .”

Shortly after entering into possession of the property, Mr. Babin erected a fence toward the southern edge of this property. It was agreed between him and defendant that the location of this fence would be merely provisional pending a true location by a surveyor. However, Mr. Babin died shortly thereafter, and no survey results were ever communicated to the defendant.

Mr. Joseph Levraea, plaintiff, acquired the western half of the above property in 1968, by deed from David R. Wilson, who had acquired the said property from the widow of Octave J. Babin.

In July of 1968, Boudreaux learned of the results of a survey ordered by a Mr. Smith, who had purchased the eastern half of the same four acres from Mrs. Maisie Babin Geismar. Boudreaux then moved the provisional southern fence some 48 feet north in order to mark what he claimed to be the true southern boundary of the north 4 acres. This boundary was measured from the section line which roughly divided Louisiana Highway 429.

Petitioner then entered into an aet of correction with Mrs. Maisie Babin Geismar and David R. Wilson, his authors in title in an attempt to correct the description to show the northern boundary of the property conveyed from Boudreaux to Babin as not actually the section line, but the southern edge of the highway right-of-way. The effect of this instrument was to place an area lying between the provisional fence and [644]*644Boudreaux’s new fence within the compass of the two acres originally conveyed. Therefore, by virtue of the act of correction, the property encompassed an area extending from the section line in the center of the highway in a southerly direction to the provisional fence, an area greater than the original two acres.

Levraea then brought this petitory action against Boudreaux. The only question is as to the location of the northern and southern boundaries of the property of petitioner.

The Lower Court found that the deed from Boudreaux to Babin, conveyed the property only to the right of way line, and thus the approximately 48 foot strip at the southern edge is within petitioner’s property. Judgment was entered recognizing Babin’s provisional fence as the true southern boundary, and the section line as the northern boundary. From this judgment the defendant has taken this appeal.

It is contended by the defendant that the Lower Court erred in holding that the deed from Boudreaux to Babin conveyed property only to the highway right-of-way line on the north. It is defendant’s contention that the northern property line should be along the quarter section line which is approximately in the center of the highway right-of-way. In support of this contention, the defendant cites R.S. 9:2971 which provides as follows:

“It shall be conclusively presumed that any transfer, conveyance, surface lease, mineral lease, mortgage or any other contract or grant affecting land described as fronting on or bounded by a waterway, canal, highway, road, street, alley, railroad or other right-of-way, shall be held, deemed and construed to include all of grantor’s interest in and under such highway, road, street, alley, railroad, or other right-of-way, whatever that interest may be, in the absence of any express provision therein particularly excluding the same therefrom.”

R.S. 9:2971 was enacted as Act No. 555 of 1956 and this statute did not become effective until August 1, 1956. The conveyance of the above tract from which petitioner derives title was completed on April 30, 1956, or more than 3 months prior to the effective date of the statute in question.

In State Department of Highways v. Tucker, 247 La. 188, 170 So.2d 371, the Supreme Court held that R.S. 9:2971 should not be retroactively applied as same would impair the obligation of contracts and of vested rights, and therefore would be vio-lative of both the Federal and State Constitutions. The Statute is, therefore, not applicable to the particular sale in question.

We feel that the Trial Judge correctly found that the sale from Mr. Boudreaux to Mr. Babin during the year 1956 was a sale per aversionem. This sale recites the property as being “the north 4 acres of the tract of land acquired by vendor herein from Charles Wibel on July 1, 1942, by . bounded on the north by the Gonzales — St. Amant Blacktopped Highway, East by Dawson Melancon, South by vendor and West by Gravel Road or T. S. Landry.”

In Hulin v. Hale, La.App., 137 So.2d 709, the Court held that a deed having a description of property which fixed boundaries on three sides and the vendor on the fourth side was a per aversionem sale, or a sale by metes and bounds. The Court also said that a sale by fixed boundaries is a per aver-sionem sale even though measurements or quantities are also given. The boundaries given then control over the enumeration of measurements or quantities, and the sale thus conveys all of the property found between the boundaries given. The Court there emphasized that the effect of the intent of the party was the controlling consideration.

The act of sale from defendant to Octave Babin shows that it was the intention of the defendant to sell and the Babins to acquire a homesite of 4 acres. The act of sale further clearly implies that the front or northernmost boundary of the said tract of land was the Gonzales — St. Amant Blacktopped [645]*645Highway, and we feel that the highway as specified, would adjoin the property sold at the right-of-way line. The front, or northern portion of the property sold therefore should be measured along the Gonzales— St. Amant Blacktopped Highway.

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Bluebook (online)
259 So. 2d 642, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levraea-v-boudreaux-lactapp-1972.