Liner v. Terrebonne Parish School Bd.
This text of 519 So. 2d 777 (Liner v. Terrebonne Parish School Bd.) 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.
Opinion
Stanley E. LINER, et al.
v.
TERREBONNE PARISH SCHOOL BOARD, et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Thomas L. Wright, Houma, for plaintiffs and appellantsStanley E. Liner, et als.
John M. McCollam, New Orleans, for defendant and appelleeTerrebonne Parish School Bd.
John Kennedy, Corinne Morrison, New Orleans, for defendant and appelleeKilroy Co.
Robert Rooth, New Orleans, for defendant and appelleePlacid Oil Co. & Kilroy.
Before COVINGTON, SAVOIE and LeBLANC, JJ.
*778 LeBLANC, Judge.
This litigation involves a dispute regarding ownership of property located in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. Stanley E. Liner and other members of the Stanley Liner family filed suit against the Terrebonne Parish School Board[1] seeking to be recognized as owners of the property in dispute and claiming damages for physical disturbance of their property and for the value of the minerals removed from beneath the property.
The Liners[2] claim ownership of two nonadjacent tracts of land located on the left decending bank of Bayou DuLarge in Township 20 South, Range 16 East ("T20S-R16E"). The Liners hold title to property located in Section 9 of T20S-R16E and claim that the two tracts of land in dispute are located within Section 9 of T20S-R16E.
The School Board also claims ownership of these two tracts of land. The School Board holds title to all land located within Section 16 of T20S-R16E, which lies directly south of Section 9, and claims that the tracts of land are located within Section 16.
The trial court determined that the defendants proved that the disputed land lies almost entirely within Section 16, except for an inconsequential piece of the land, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendants. Plaintiffs appeal.
Plaintiffs concede that if the property in dispute is determined to be located in Section 16, they have no ownership claim based on possession because Section 16 land is state land that cannot be acquired by acquisitive prescription.
The issues presented are:
1. For the purpose of determining whether plaintiffs or defendants bear the burden of proof and what the proper burden of proof is, should this suit be classified as a petitory action or an action for a declaratory judgment?
2. Assuming that plaintiffs have proven that they would prevail in a possessory action, have the defendants proven ownership of the property in dispute?
La.Code of Civ.P. art. 3651 provides that the petitory action is brought by someone who is not in possession of immovable property. Since it is uncontested that plaintiffs have built their homes and live on the property in question and have exercised various other acts of possession on the two tracts of land in dispute during the last fifty years, we find that this suit should be classified as an action for a declaratory judgment.
La.Code of Civ.P. art. 3654 provided at the time this suit was filed:
"When the issue of ownership of immovable property ... is presented in an action for a declaratory judgment ..., the court shall render judgment in favor of the party:
(1) Who would be entitled to the possession of the immovable property or real right in a possessory action, unless the adverse party makes out his title thereto; or
(2) Who proves better title to the immovable property or real right therein, when neither party would be entitled to the possession of the immovable property or real right therein in a possessory action."
Plaintiffs contend that the evidence establishes that they would prevail in a possessory action and thus judgment should be rendered in their favor unless defendants prove ownership of the land in dispute.
We determine that it is unnecessary to address whether the Liners would prevail in a possessory action because we find that the School Board has proven that it owns *779 the property in dispute based on the strength of its own title, except for a small part of the northern tract of land. The record clearly establishes that the School Board has traced its title to the land within Section 16 back to the sovereign. However, to establish title to the property in dispute, the School Board also has the burden of establishing that the land in dispute lies within Section 16. See, Vallee v. Richardson, 331 So.2d 201 (La.App. 3d Cir.), writ denied, 337 So.2d 523 (La.1976). We find that the School Board has met this burden based on the testimony provided by defendants' two expert witnesses and plaintiffs' expert witness.
Defendants' expert land surveyor, William Clifford Smith, prepared a resurvey of the boundary line between Sections 9 and 16. In preparing this resurvey, Mr. William Smith reviewed the original government survey of T20S-R16S, which was prepared in 1838. The monuments set by the government surveyor, which marked the section corners in this township, no longer exist. In order to reestablish the section lines, Mr. William Smith reviewed the private survey work of his father, T. Baker Smith, who performed survey work in the 1920's and 1930's.
T. Baker Smith's survey work and field notes indicate that he reestablished an original government corner, that being the east bank meander corner of Bayou DuLarge where it intersects the western section line of Section 20, T20S-R16E, based on the location of a tree that was marked as a witness tree by the original government surveyor. The government surveyor's field notes indicated where the corner was originally marked in reference to the witness tree. Based on the location of this reestablished government corner, three other original government corners in an adjacent township were established by T. Baker Smith. At this point, Mr. T. Baker Smith's examination of the government surveyor's field notes revealed errors in the government survey regarding certain measurements of distance. Working from the four reestablished government corners and placing emphasis on Bayou DuLarge as a natural monument, Mr. T. Baker Smith prorated the errors in the original government survey work across the township. Based on these calculations, T. Baker Smith identified the boundary line between Sections 9 and 16.
Mr. William Smith testified that he reviewed his father's field notes and calculations and verified the actual position that his father established as the section line between Section 9 and 16. He testified that the survey work he performed was based on the Manual of Instructions for the Surveying of the Public Lands of the United States prepared by the U.S. Department of the Interior which sets forth rules for locating townships and section corners. He further testified that based on his reestablishment of Section 16, T20S-R16E, all of the land in dispute, except for a small triangular corner in the northwestern corner of the northern tract of land, was located in Section 16.
Plaintiffs contend that the testimony of Mr. William Smith regarding the survey work prepared by other surveyors is inadmissible hearsay testimony. We disagree.
In State v. Austin, 282 So.2d 711, 712 (La.1973), the court decided that the testimony of an expert in accident reconstruction should not be barred because his opinion was based on information supplied to him by others. Also, in State v. Fallon,
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519 So. 2d 777, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 10967, 1987 WL 3110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liner-v-terrebonne-parish-school-bd-lactapp-1987.