McDaniels v. Miller

136 So. 2d 763
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 18, 1961
DocketNo. 5385
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 136 So. 2d 763 (McDaniels v. Miller) 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
McDaniels v. Miller, 136 So. 2d 763 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinions

LANDRY, Judge.

This matter originated upon plaintiffs’ application for an injunction to restrain defendant from trespassing upon plaintiffs’ properties and more particularly, from building a fence thereon. In addition to injunctive relief, plaintiffs prayed for damages for defendant’s alleged wrongful cutting and removal of certain fences assertedly situated upon plaintiff’s properties and also for injury and damage to plaintiffs’ livestock reputedly resulting therefrom.

Defendant answered the suit making numerous factual allegations concerning agreements purportedly entered into with plaintiffs concerning their mutual boundaries. In reconvention defendant alternatively prayed that the court establish the boundary between the litigants after a survey by a qualified surveyor appointed by the court. In the further alternative, defendant requested that the court fix the common boundary according to certain fence lines in conformity with pleas of prescription filed on defendant’s behalf.

As requested by plaintiffs the trial court issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting defendant from further trespass upon plaintiffs’ property. However, upon trial of the matter on the merits the learned trial court declined to issue a permanent injunction, rendered judgment in defendant’s favor fixing and establishing the boundary lines between the properties and awarded plaintiff Charles Ivy McDan-iels judgment against defendant in the sum of $50.00. From the aforesaid judgment plaintiffs appeal requesting an increase in the award and seeking recognition of another -boundary predicated upon a plea of thirty years adverse possession. Defendant has answered the appeal praying for reversal of only that portion of the judgment awarding plaintiffs damages herein.

The record discloses that whereas the judgment of the esteemed trial court fixed the boundary line between the property of plaintiff Charles Ivy McDaniel and defendant Ivy Miller she did not do so pursuant to a survey by a surveyor appointed by her. We observe in the record the following notation by the learned trial judge in lieu of an order appointing a surveyor:

“Parties have stated there are several former surveys & the Court believes a survey at this time is unnecessary. 2/10/59. (Sgd.) F. E. Burch, Judge.”

For a number of years plaintiffs and defendant have owned adjoining lands, the tract owned by plaintiff McDaniel bounding defendant’s property on the south and the parcel belonging to plaintiff Pevey forming the eastern boundary of defendant’s estate. The controversy presently before the courts arose when defendant [766]*766commenced construction ■ of a line fence along the southern boundary of his lands (the northern boundary of plaintiff McDaniel) in conformity with an ex parte survey made by W. A. Tycer, Civil Engineer, for defendant in 1956. In the course of constructing the fence in accordance with the Tycer survey defendant or his employees cut wires and removed posts of an existing fence erected by plaintiffs and allegedly built the new fence on property claimed by plaintiffs. The temporary restraining order issued by the trial court prevented defendant’s completion of the fence which remains unfinished pending the outcome of this litigation.

On the day fixed for argument of this matter on appeal, plaintiffs filed in this court a plea of prescription in bar of defendant’s reconventional demand for establishment of a boundary between the properties. Said plea of prescription is predicated upon Article 853, LSA-R.C.C., which in effect provides that an action to set aside or rectify a boundary previously established, prescribes in ten years. In support of the plea of prescription plaintiffs rely upon an agreement dated March 21, 1882, between C. W. Amacker, plaintiffs’ author in title, and Wm. Acy, Jr., defendant’s author in title, wherein Amacker and Acy as owners of the South one-half and the North one-half, respectively of Section 55, T. 4 S., R. 6 E., fixed the dividing line between their properties. The line established by Amacker and Acy commenced at a point 51.51 chains South of the Northeast corner of the Section and 48.51 chains North of its Southeast corner and from thence proceeded North 84.5 degrees West to the point of intersection with the Tickfaw River, dividing the section into two equal halves. In addition, the document describes and locates certain monuments placed on the line. There was, however, no formal survey of the line and no proces verbal by a licensed surveyor.

Under ordinary circumstances plaintiffs’ filing of a plea of prescription in this court would necessitate remand of the case in order to permit the taking of evidence in connection therewith. Article 2163, LSA-C.C.P. Since, however, the record before us indicates (for reasons hereinafter made manifest) plaintiffs’ said plea of prescription is clearly without merit, we are prompted, in the interest of avoiding unnecessary litigation and delay, to dispose of the issue at this time.

The record in the instant case reflects that the boundary established by Amacker and Acy was not fixed according to the mandatory requirements of Articles 834 to 838, inclusive, of our LSA-Civil Code, in that there was no survey by a registered surveyor and no proces verbal of a survey. Under such circumstances, plaintiffs’ plea of ten years prescription under Article 853, LSA-R.C.C. is without merit. Ford v. Pantallion, La.App., 20 So.2d 574; Pan American Production Co. v. Robichaux, 200 La. 666, 8 So.2d 635; Owens v. T. Miller & Sons Building Supply Co., La.App., 101 So.2d 773; Hester v. Smith, La.App., 72 So.2d 549; Jones v. Dyer, La.App., 71 So.2d 648; Rock v. Varuso, La.App., 61 So.2d 741; Arabie v. Terrebonne, La.App., 69 So.2d 516.

We shall next consider the propriety of the action of the trial court in fixing the boundary between the properties of the litigants at bar.

There can be little doubt of defendant’s right to request by way of recon-ventional demand that the boundary be fixed between these contiguous estates. Our law expressly provides that either of the owners of contiguous estates has the absolute right to have the boundary judicially determined where the boundary has never been established according to law or when bounds formerly fixed are no longer to be seen. LSA-R.C.C. Articles 823, 824. So important is this right that it has been declared imprescriptible. Article 825, LSA-R.C.C.

[767]*767It appears from the record that prior to institution of the present suit, defendant engaged the services of W. A. Tycer, licensed surveyor, to run the line and establish the proper location of the boundary. Before commencing his survey Tycer consulted plaintiff McDaniel and was shown by McDaniel a marker which McDaniel considered and Tycer accepted as the Southeast comer of defendant’s property. Using this corner as a point of commencement Tycer ran the line westerly to the Tickfaw River along a bearing North 84 degrees Fifteen minutes West (a variation of one-fourth of a degree from the bearing mentioned in the previously mentioned Amacker-Acy agreement). It appears that the marker and bearing employed by Tycer coincide with those established by C. M. Moore, Civil Engineer, in 1922, when he made an amicable partition survey of the lands lying south of the boundary line in dispute herein. Upon completion of the Tycer survey, defendant herein offered to furnish materials for construction of a boundary fence along the line fixed by Tycer provided plaintiff McDaniel would erect the fence.

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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 2d 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniels-v-miller-lactapp-1961.