McDaniel v. Roy O. Martin Lumber Co., Inc.
This text of 560 So. 2d 676 (McDaniel v. Roy O. Martin Lumber Co., 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.
Opinion
Morris E. McDANIEL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ROY O. MARTIN LUMBER CO., INC., Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*677 Dauzat, Falgoust, Cariness & Bienvenu, Steve Bienvenu, Opelousas, for plaintiff-appellant.
Sandoz, Sandoz & Schiff, Lawrence Sandoz, Jr., Opelousas, for defendant-appellee.
Before FORET, STOKER and LABORDE, JJ.
STOKER, Judge.
This is a suit for treble damages filed by Morris E. McDaniel through his curator, Robert L. McDaniel, against the Roy O. Martin Lumber Co. for the wrongful cutting of timber on a tract of land along McDaniel's eastern boundary.[1] McDaniel alleges he has title ownership of the tract. Martin Lumber answered and pleaded ownership of the property through 30 years acquisitive prescription. The trial court held that neither party carried its burden of proving ownership of the property. McDaniel has appealed this judgment and Martin Lumber has answered the appeal.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Plaintiff-appellant assigns as error the following:
The trial court erred in concluding that the plaintiff did not establish record title to the disputed property and further erred in denying plaintiff's claim for the wrongful cutting of the timber.
Defendant answered the appeal and assigns as error the following:
The trial court erred in denying defendant's claim to acquisition by 30 years acquisitive prescription of that portion of the 31.28-acre tract located within the fence line and the painted lines maintained by the Turner Lumber Company, ancestor in title, and by Roy O. Martin Lumber Co., Inc., for a period in excess of 30 years.
OPINION
Initially, we must note and clarify the precise property at issue in this case. Plaintiff's petition and defendant's answer refer to a 31.28-acre tract lying north and south of Bayou Rouge between plaintiff's "apparent east boundary" and the section line which forms defendant's west boundary. Bayou Rouge bisects the tract from east to west. Plaintiff presented his case to establish title ownership of this entire tract. However, the parties later agreed at trial that their dispute involved only that part of the tract lying south of Bayou Rouge, or about 18 acres. Apparently, no timber was cut by defendant in that part of the tract lying north of Bayou Rouge. Therefore, plaintiff cannot claim damages for the northern section of the tract and plaintiff's ownership of the northern section is not placed at issue in this case.
Consequently, the only property at issue in this case is that part of the 31.28-acre tract lying south of Bayou Rouge. We express no opinion as to the ownership of that portion of the 31.28-acre tract lying north of Bayou Rouge.
McDANIEL'S CLAIM TO OWNERSHIP
McDaniel's claim to ownership of the 31.28-acre tract is based on his title and two surveys which were introduced into evidence, the Tate survey and the Fontenot survey. We have attached to this opinion as Exhibits A and B sketches which are adaptations of the Tate survey and the Fontenot survey.
Plaintiff's title sets forth the following property described, in pertinent part, which allegedly includes the disputed tract:
"A certain tract of land, partly cleared, but principally uncleared, together with *678 all the buildings and improvements thereon, more or less, lying on both sides of Bayou Rouge and situated partly in the southeast corner of the southeast quarter of Section Twenty Six (26) and partly in the northeast corner of the northeast quarter of Section Thirty Five (35), all in Township Three (3) South, Range Five (5) East, St. Landry Parish, La., and bounded as follows: North by property of St. Landry Bank & Trust Company; South by property of Mrs. May Hawkins Neal, widow of J.A. Neal; East partly by property of W.G. Ellerbee, and partly by property of Turner Lumber Company; and West partly by property of Estate of Richard D. Lamson, deceased, and partly by a tract of approximately one hundred acres of land owned by Morris Edward McDaniel and acquired by him from Richard D. Lamson on March 27, 1953, by deed recorded as No. 331247 in Conv. Book A-10 at page 31 of the Recorder's Office of the Parish of St. Landry, La.
"The property now being described is Lot Three (3) of the Plat of Survey and Subdivision of the property of the joint estates of Ernest M. Monteilh, et ux., Claudia Villerette, both deceased, which said plat was made by Albert Tate, C.E., on April 15, 1922, and is attached to and made part of the Act of Conventional Partition in Kind of said joint estates, which said partition and plat are recorded as No. 91101 in Conv. Book E-5 at page 200 et seq. of the aforesaid Recorder's Office."
(Emphasis added)
The 1922 survey by Albert Tate illustrates the partition of the E.M. Monteilh estate into three 127-acre lots. In 1941 McDaniel purchased from Aras McGee Lot 1, lying within Sections 27 and 34 of T3S R5E at the western end of the Monteilh estate. In 1953 McDaniel bought from Richard Lamson 100 acres of Lot 2, lying within Sections 26 and 35 of T3S R5E in the middle of the Monteilh estate. The 27 acres in Lot 2 lying north of Bayou Rouge were not conveyed to McDaniel. In 1959 McDaniel purchased from Roscoe Baham Lot 3, lying within Sections 26 and 35 of T3S R5E at the eastern end of the Monteilh estate. The east boundary of Lot 3 is in dispute.
The three lots purchased by McDaniel from the Monteilh estate contain 354 acres according to the titles. However, it is unclear from the Tate survey whether the east boundary of Lot 3 lies on the north-south section line between Sections 26 and 25 and Sections 35 and 36 or whether it lies about 515 feet west of and parallel to the section line. The area between the section line and the alleged boundary line (515 feet west of the section line) is a 31.28-acre tract. The southern portion of this tract, or the portion lying south of Bayou Rouge, is the object of this dispute.
A subsequent survey was made in 1982 by Paul Fontenot of all the land then owned by Morris McDaniel. The Fontenot survey encompasses the original three lots from the Monteilh estate purchased by McDaniel, labeled Tract 1 and Tract 2, plus two smaller parcels to the west of and adjoining Tract 2, which are labeled Tract 3 (12.93 acres) and Tract 4 (17.07 acres). The disputed tract, which adjoins Tract 1 on the east, is labeled Tract 5.
The Fontenot survey shows the east boundary of Lot 3 of the Tate survey (or Tract 1 of the Fontenot survey) as lying 515 feet west of and parallel to the section line. The west boundary of Lot 1 of the Tate survey is the same as the west boundary of Tract 2 of the Fontenot survey.
The Fontenot survey contains an apparent discrepancy in that it appears to state that Tract 1 contains 383.26 acres, whereas it also states, somewhat ambiguously, that the property contained in the 1922 Tate survey, composed of three lots totaling 381 acres, is the same property contained in Tracts 1 and 2 of the Fontenot survey, excluding the 30-acre tract. Apparently the "30 acre-tract" refers to the 27 acres north of Bayou Rouge which was excluded from the sale of Lot 2 to McDaniel by Richard D. Lamson. (Tr. 154)
At trial, Paul Fontenot testified that he had intended to indicate that all of McDaniel's property (Tracts 1, 2, 3 and 4) contains 383.26 acres and that Tracts 1 and 2, comprising *679 the Tate survey property minus 27 acres, contain 353.26 acres.
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560 So. 2d 676, 1990 La. App. LEXIS 905, 1990 WL 47898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-roy-o-martin-lumber-co-inc-lactapp-1990.