Levy v. Germania Plantation, Inc.

395 So. 2d 366
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 1981
Docket13959
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 395 So. 2d 366 (Levy v. Germania Plantation, Inc.) 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
Levy v. Germania Plantation, Inc., 395 So. 2d 366 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

395 So.2d 366 (1981)

Standord J. LEVY, Jr.,[1] Miriam Levy Lichentag, Marie Louise Levy Steuer, Sidney G. Roos, and Leo S. Roos
v.
GERMANIA PLANTATION, INC. and Victor Schexnayder.

No. 13959.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

January 26, 1981.

*367 R. Ryland Percy, Percy & Percy, Gonzales, for plaintiff-appellee.

Miriam T. Attaya, Attaya & Bell, Gonzales, for defendant-appellant.

Sidney A. Marchand III, Talbot, Sotile, Carmouche, etc., Donaldsonville, for defendant-appellee.

Before LOTTINGER, EDWARDS and PONDER, JJ.

EDWARDS, Judge.

Victor Schexnayder appeals a trial court judgment denying his claim of acquisitive prescription of certain Ascension Parish property. We affirm.

We adopt as our own the excellent opinion of Judge Becnel.

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

"This matter comes before this Court based on a possessory action filed on behalf of STANFORD J. LEVY, JR., MIRIAM LEVY LICHENTAG, MARIE LOUISE LEVY STEUER, SIDNEY G. ROOS, AND LEO S. ROOS. The plaintiffs alleged that their peaceful possession of a tract of land containing thirty (30) acres located in Ascension Parish, Louisiana, in Sections 69, 72, and 77 of Township 10 South, Range 2 East had been disturbed by the recordation of mineral leases covering the property which had been granted by each of the defendants, VICTOR SCHEXNAYDER and Germania Plantation, Inc. Defendants answered each claiming ownership and possession of the tract in question. Both defendants claimed ownership based on the principle of thirty (30) years acquisitive prescription contained in articles 3499 et seq. of the Louisiana Civil Code.

This Court is satisfied that the plaintiffs have, through various documents, established record title to the properties involved in these proceedings. Neither defendant attempted to contravene the claim of the plaintiffs that they and their predecessors in title had record title to the property; the record title in plaintiffs is therefore judicially admitted. Unless the defendants possessed the property to the extent required by law to establish ownership by adverse possession, this court is bound to grant plaintiffs the relief prayed for.

During the course of the trial, defendant, Germania, Inc., attempted to prove physical possession of the property vicariously through co-defendant Victor Schexnayder. Germania, Inc. contended that their possession was through Victor Schexnayder, a lessee of Germania Plantation, Inc. Throughout the trial Germania, through its representative, Douglas Hayward, supported the contention of defendant, Victor Schexnayder, that he, Victor Schexnayder, physically possessed the property in question along with other lands adjacent to and adjoining the subject lands, which adjacent lands formed part of a larger tract owned by Germania. Schexnayder readily admitted being a lessee of Germania, Inc. and being in physical possession of lands as lessee of Germania lying to the North and East of the lands made subject of this lawsuit. He contended however that as to the lands made subject of the lawsuit, he did not work, cultivate and possess those lands as lessee of Germania. The nature of that possession and its legal consequences is the ultimate question this court is called upon to decide.

The lands made subject of this lawsuit were described in plaintiff's petition as follows, to wit:

(1) All of Farm Lots 188 ad 189 of Farm Subdivision No. 37 as designated on a map or plat of survey made by Frank T. Payne, dated March, 1911, a copy of which is recorded in the Conveyance Records of Ascension Parish, Louisiana, said lots being situated in Sections 69 and 72, Township 10 South, Range 2 East, containing a total of 9.0 acres, more or less.
(2) A certain tract or parcel of land containing 23 acres and being a fractional portion of Lot 2 of Section 77, Township 10 South, Range 2 East, being situated in Ward No. 6 in the Parish of Ascension and being the identical property acquired by E. P. Brady from John C. Klos on the 7th day of June, 1922 and recorded in *368 C.O.B. 63, folio 421, in the official records of the Parish of Ascension, Louisiana.

The uncontradicted testimony of all of the parties as well as exhibits offered and made part of the evidence, indicates that the 23 acres of item number (2) above described lies immediately to the South and West of a large tract of land to which record title lies in Germania Plantation, Inc.

The record also supports the finding that the 9.0 acres in item (1) are adjacent to and to the southwest of this 23 acre tract, the exact location of which was either by design or otherwise, never established to the satisfaction of this Court with legal certainty by the respective parties. For reasons hereinafter shown, except for a certain portion of that tract, the establishment of the exact location of the entirety of the nine acres is irrelevant to the adjudication of this lawsuit.

It should be noted at the outset that plaintiffs did not show where they exercised any acts which would constitute physical possession of the lands to which they established proof of having record title. Mr. Stanford Levy, Jr., one of the plaintiffs and the only one called to testify admitted that neither he or any of his co-owners ever fenced the property; that it was not cultivated or used for cattle grazing by him or his co-owners; that none of the plaintiffs or their predecessors cut timber or exercised any physical acts of ownership over or on the subject property. In fact the only direct involvement Mr. Levy had with the property was to visit it on several occasions, beginning when he was a young boy when he accompanied his father, to 1973 when he visited the property when an oil well was being drilled on the 23 acre tract and shortly prior to trial when he went to visit the tract with his attorney preparatory to this lawsuit.

As part of its case, defendant Germania employed the services of Vincent Pizzolato, a registered land surveyor to make a physical survey of the property claimed by it, which plat of survey was introduced in evidence by Germania as `Germania 1'. Mr. Pizzolato testified that according to his physical examination of the property he was called upon to observe, he found the property to be bounded on the north by a body of water about 30 to 40 feet in width known as Bayou Conway, on the East by a canal which was referred to as the Marchand Canal, on the south by what appeared to be evidence of an old fence, and what this Court found as utter confusion as to the West side. Although Mr. Pizzolato testified that his survey was a physical survey, i. e., he was noting on his plat what he observed, he nonetheless plotted an imaginary or assumed section line running from one confirmed grate bar to the north of Bayou Conway and one confirmed grate bar to the south or what would be presumed to be the Southwest corner of the 23 acre tract. On his plat Mr. Pizzolato shows what purports to be old Bayou Conway to the west of the tract but slightly to the east of the assumed section line. He then shows what he indicates to be a ditch connecting Bayou Conway to what he shows as a canal, all lying somewhat west of his assumed section line.

In his testimony, Mr. Pizzolato testified that he saw the fences as indicated on his plat; that the fences were barbed wire fences attached mostly from tree to tree and except for along Bayou Conway, the fences generally surrounded the tract which the court assumes constituted part or all of the 23 acre tract.

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

Related

Sterling v. Estate of Vicknair
631 So. 2d 463 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1994)
Williams v. McEacharn
464 So. 2d 20 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1985)
Kelley v. Stringer
422 So. 2d 189 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
395 So. 2d 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levy-v-germania-plantation-inc-lactapp-1981.