McCall v. McCall

651 So. 2d 878, 1995 WL 73390
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 1995
Docket94-CA-1614
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 651 So. 2d 878 (McCall v. McCall) 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
McCall v. McCall, 651 So. 2d 878, 1995 WL 73390 (La. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

651 So.2d 878 (1995)

Henry George McCALL
v.
Harry McCALL, Jr.

No. 94-CA-1614.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 23, 1995.
Order Denying Rehearing March 29, 1995.

*879 Thomas W. Tucker, Tucker & West, New Orleans, for appellant Harry McCall, Jr.

Susan H. Lafaye, New Orleans, for appellant Henry George McCall.

Joseph Bernstein, New Orleans, for intervenors/appellants Maury Toledano and Mary Lou Mossy Christovich.

Edward D. Markle, Barrett B. Daly, Markle & Daly, A.P.L.C., New Orleans, for defendant/appellee The Rivergate Development Corp.

Michael Botnick, New Orleans, for defendant/appellee The City of New Orleans.

Harry Rosenberg, Brent B. Barriere, Phelps Dunbar, L.L.P., New Orleans, for defendant/appellee Harrah's Jazz Co.

Before LOBRANO, WALTZER and MURRAY, JJ.

LOBRANO, Judge.

The issue in this appeal requires an interpretation of two agreements executed in 1820 and 1851. The plaintiffs and intervenors (collectively, plaintiffs) are seeking recognition of an undivided fee interest in certain streets which lie underneath the Rivergate *880 Convention Center in the City of New Orleans. The trial court granted summary judgement in favor of the City, the Rivergate Development Corporation and Grand Palais Casino, Inc. (collectively referred to as the City). Plaintiffs' claims arose when the City, on April 15, 1993, enacted an ordinance revoking the dedication of the streets under the Rivergate in anticipation of leasing the land and facility to the Rivergate Development Corporation for eventual lease to Grand Palais Casino, Inc.[1] Our inquiry necessarily requires a journey to a time when many familiar New Orleans landmarks of today were nothing more than the silt of America's heartland being carried by the currents of the Mississippi River.[2]

Sometime in the late 1700's Bertrand Gravier subdivided his property into lots and squares so as to constitute a suburb of New Orleans called "Faubourg St. Marie."[3] The upper (upriver) boundary of this suburb was Delord street (now Howard Avenue) and the lower (downriver) boundary was Common street. Gravier's property was bounded in the front by the river, separated only by Tchoupitoulas Street which, at that time, ran along the river's edge.

Apparently that portion of the river bank fronting this property is what modern terminology would call a "building" bank for in the following years there was major alluvial buildup. Sometime thereafter, a levee was built a considerable distance from Tchoupitoulas Street. Designated as New Levee (now South Peters St.) on maps of the day, the alluvion buildup continued so that by 1820 the batture extended far beyond New Levee. As a result, that area, as well as the alluvion on the landside of New Levee to Tchoupitoulas, became the subject of much controversy between the City and various individual proprietors who had purchased, from Gravier or his assigns, lots fronting the river. Among those individual proprietors were the ancestors in title to the plaintiffs herein.

In 1820, the individual landowners and the City entered into an agreement whereby the individual owners transferred to the City all of their rights and interest in and to: (1) the batture or alluvion between New Levee and the low water mark of the river, and to future accretions along the river; (2) the soil under the New Levee and the levee itself; (3) the soil necessary for the prolongation of the streets of Faubourg St. Mary to the New Levee, and (4) in the bed of Tchoupitoulas Street so as to give it a width of sixty feet. The transfer, however, was made subject to express conditions "without which the said donation will not take place."[4] Among those conditions were inalienability and the obligation not to put the land to any public use other than those "to which they are naturally destined." There could be no buildings or other constructions other than a provision for a fire station. In addition, the owners imposed on themselves the obligations of repairing and enlarging the existing levee, the building of revetments, to construct the streets between Tchoupitoulas and the New Levee and to build platforms and ramparts at their ends nearest the river, to destroy all the buildings then existing on the batture and to construct the buildings necessary for a public market in the faubourg. To secure these considerable financial obligations, the owners mortgaged, in favor of the City, the various lots they retained between New Levee and Tchoupitoulas.

In 1836, by act of the legislature, the city was divided into municipal districts referred to as municipalities. The batture transferred in the 1820 agreement fell in the Second Municipality, and the reservations and obligations in the said act were ratified by the *881 legislature.[5] Numerous theories are advanced as to what precipitated the agreement of 1851. Substantial alluvion had continued to increase the batture area in front of Faubourg St. Mary, far beyond that which existed in 1820. It is suggested that the original batture was no longer suited to the public purposes to which the original proprietors had destined the property in the 1820 agreement. Perhaps the city, apparently in financial difficulties, sought the opportunity to satisfy its debt by placing a portion of the batture in commerce. More probably a combination of these factors caused the city, in 1846, to have the surveyor, G.T. Dunbar, prepare a subdivision of the batture between New Levee and the river. In addition to subdividing the land into various squares and lots, he created three streets running in a general parallel direction with the river. Nearest the river was Delta Street. Front Street was next, and farthest from the river was Fulton Street. What had previously been described in the 1820 act as New Levee had since become a street called New Levee Street. It was on the landside of Fulton and ran parallel to it. The various streets running perpendicular to the river through the faubourg were extended to Delta Street.

As we previously noted, legislative approval was required to change the destination of a public place. It was apparent that even though the "public use" destination had been placed on the batture by the individual proprietors in the 1820 agreement, the City (or Municipality No. 2) had to obtain the blessing of the legislature to alienate the lots laid out on Dunbar's plan. Act 257 of 1850 was the resulting legislation. It authorized Municipality No. 2 to "cause to be laid off ... streets ... as represented on the plan by George T. Dunbar."[6] It further ordained that the batture between the river and the nearest street to it, Delta, be left open for the "accommodation of the public, and the convenience of commerce." And last, it provided "that in the event of an agreement between the original parties to the said compromise (of 1820) for the sale of said batture, it shall be the duty of the (city) to lay off into lots" the portion of the batture not previously reserved for streets. The last proviso required the city to use one-third of the sales' proceeds to satisfy the city's debts. Thus, the stage was set for the agreement of 1851.

On June 30th, 1851 the parties to the 1820 agreement, or their heirs, and Municipality No. Two executed a document entitled "Compromise between The Municipality No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
651 So. 2d 878, 1995 WL 73390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-mccall-lactapp-1995.