Loutre Land and Timber Co. v. Roberts

47 So. 3d 478, 2010 WL 3023355
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 11, 2010
Docket45,355-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 So. 3d 478 (Loutre Land and Timber Co. v. Roberts) 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
Loutre Land and Timber Co. v. Roberts, 47 So. 3d 478, 2010 WL 3023355 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

CARAWAY, J.

| iThis is a real action involving the ownership of immovable property. The former owners of the property had adversely possessed the disputed tract of approximately 15 to 18 acres along with 100 additional and adjacent acres to which they held title. The former owners’ ownership of this property was conveyed in succession proceedings by two deeds to the parties’ to this action. On the strength of those deeds executed in 2002 and 2003, the parties now claim ownership of the disputed tract. From a ruling in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant now appeals. Finding error in the trial court’s ruling, we reverse and recognize the ownership of the defendant. The case is remanded to fix the boundary to the property in accordance with survey data submitted at trial.

Facts

Prior to deeds executed in 2002-2003 which prompted this lawsuit, the owners of these adjacent properties held title to the land under longstanding recorded deeds which described the following two tracts:

East Half of the Southeast Quarter (E/2 of SE/4) of Section 3, Township 16 North, Range 8 East (hereinafter the “Section 3 Tract”)
The North 15.50 chains (or 1023 feet) of the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (NE/4 of NE/4) of Section 10, Township 16 North, Range 8 East (hereinafter the “Section 10 Tract”).

The ideal boundary between these two tracts therefore was the governmental section line between Section 3 to the north and Section 10 to the south separating the SE/4 of the SE/4 of Section 3 and the NE/4 of the NE/4 of Section 10 (hereinafter the “Ideal Boundary”).

|2The Marie Wilson Morgan family owned the 80-acre Section 3 Tract along with 20 additional and contiguous acres lying in the SW/4 of Section 2 (hereinafter collectively the “100 Acres”). The Morgan chain of title to this 100 Acres is evidenced in the record dating back to a deed in 1943 and the Morgan family’s ownership of the 100 Acres is not in dispute.

The Wilton A. Roberts family has held title to the Section 10 Tract for over 40 years. In 1964, Wilton A. Roberts, husband of Rebecca Jane Roberts, was conveyed the Section 10 Tract in a deed from Dorothy Harbour, et al. Edward W. Roberts (“Roberts”), who inherited the interests of his parents, Wilton and Rebecca, following their deaths, is now the defendant in this action.

At the heart of this property dispute is an old fence which runs from east to west [480]*480approximately in the middle of the Section 10 Tract. The land between the old fence north to the Ideal Boundary is the property now in dispute (hereinafter the “Disputed Tract”). The size of the Disputed Tract revealed by the survey data introduced at trial appears to be 14.36 acres but had been referred to by the parties in varying amounts as comprising up to 18 acres. The Disputed Tract is a portion of the Section 10 Tract, and is roughly described in the present judgment as follows:

[TJhat part of the Northeast Quarter, Section 10, Township 16 North, Range 8 East, lying north of the boundary fence, which fence separates the property owned by Edward Roberts (previously property of Wilton A. Roberts, et al) from the “Morgan Place”1

IsWhile the record does not disclose who constructed the old fence, the conflict between the two tract owners arose because of acts of adverse possession by the Morgan family extending from their Section 3 Tract into Section 10 down to the old fence. The evidence shows that even before 1964, when Wilton Roberts acquired title to the Section 10 Tract, approximately half of his land, this Disputed Tract north of the old fence, was in the possession of the Morgans. At all times, the Morgans, or their tenant farmers, actively farmed the Disputed Tract. Testimony from Alton McKeithen, previous game warden for Franklin Parish; Susan F. Turner, Mrs. Morgan’s daughter-in-law; and Harold Dean Cole, who previously hunted and farmed the Disputed Tract, consistently revealed that the fence formed the boundary line between the two properties and had done so for over thirty years. Edward Roberts even acknowledged that when he was a small child his father farmed the Disputed Tract by renting the land from the Morgans and presumably paying rent in order to do so. From these facts, the trial court determined that the Morgan family possessed the Disputed Tract for over thirty years and further found that the possession was continuous, uninterrupted, public, and unequivocal and extending up to the old fence. Roberts makes no assignment of error as to this finding, and we therefore agree with the trial court that the Morgans corporally possessed the Disputed Tract for over thirty years.

On July 29, 2002, the Succession of Marie Wilson Morgan (“the Succession”) executed a full warranty deed in favor of Loutre Land and | ^Timber Company (“Loutre”) transferring the following described tract of land situated in Franklin Parish:

The South Half of the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (S-l/2 of SW-1/4 of SW-1/4) of Section 2, Township 16 North, Range 8 East, Franklin Parish, Louisiana, and the East Half of the Southeast Quarter (E-l/2 of SE-1/4) of Section 3, Township 16 North, Range 8 East, Franklin Parish, Louisiana, consisting of 100 acres, more or less, including all crop base acres (65.2),

“together with all rights or prescription, whether acquisitive or liberative, to which said vendor may be entitled.” This deed (hereinafter the “Loutre Deed”) was recorded on August 5, 2002, in the conveyance records of Franklin Parish. The price for this conveyance, as stipulated in the Act of Sale, was $75,000.

Subsequent to Loutre’s acquisition of the above described tract, Roberts obtained a survey which confirmed that his family’s 1964 record title did in fact include the Disputed Tract. On advise of counsel, [481]*481Roberts procured a quitclaim deed from the Succession (hereinafter the “Quitclaim Deed”). Daniel C. Wirtz, the Succession’s attorney, testified that he was uncertain if the Succession still maintained ownership of the Disputed Tract after its sale to Loutre. Despite his reluctance, Wirtz accepted consideration in the amount of $3,000 on the Succession’s behalf. The Quitclaim Deed was dated January 29, 2003, and recorded on February 27, 2003. It conveyed without warranty any rights, title, or interest of the Succession in the Section 10 Tract, described as follows:

Beginning at the northeast corner of Northeast Quarter of Northeast Quarter of Section 10, Township 16 North, Range 8 East, and running due west along the north line of said forty to the Northwest corner thereof, thence due south a distance of |,45.50 chains, thence due east to the eastern boundary of said forty, thence due north a distance of 15.50 chains, to the northeast corner of said forty and the point of beginning, containing 32 acres, more or less, in the Northeast Quarter of Northeast Quarter of Section 10, Township 16 North, Range 8 East.

Thus, while the description in the Quitclaim Deed is overly broad, including all of the Section 10 Tract, the portion of the tract north of the old fence, the Disputed Tract, was clearly included in the description.

In June 2003, after obtaining the Quitclaim Deed, Roberts went on the Disputed Tract and attempted to erect a new fence along.the Ideal Boundary according to the recent survey.

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Related

Loutre Land & Timber Co. v. Roberts
63 So. 3d 120 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2011)
Loutre Land and Timber Co. v. Roberts
47 So. 3d 478 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 So. 3d 478, 2010 WL 3023355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loutre-land-and-timber-co-v-roberts-lactapp-2010.