Mestayer v. Cities Service Development Company

136 So. 2d 513, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1638
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1961
Docket333
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 136 So. 2d 513 (Mestayer v. Cities Service Development Company) 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
Mestayer v. Cities Service Development Company, 136 So. 2d 513, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1638 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

136 So.2d 513 (1961)

Stanley MESTAYER et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
CITIES SERVICE DEVELOPMENT COMPANY et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 333.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

November 29, 1961.
Rehearings Denied January 31, 1962.
Certiorari Denied March 27, 1962.

*514 Henican, James & Cleveland, Kalford K. Miazza, Mestayer & Simon, by C. Ellis Henican, New Orleans, for plaintiffs.

Julius B. Nachman, Alexandria, for Mrs. Mildred B. Carpenter and the Heirs of C. M. Carpenter.

Anderson, Hall, Raggio & Farrar, by Richard A. Anderson, Lake Charles, for Sun Oil Co.

Landry, Watkins, Cousin & Bonin, by Jack J. Cousin, New Iberia, for the Duhe-Sealy Group of defendants.

Armentor & Resweber, by Minos H. Armentor, New Iberia, for the Heirs of Albert Mestayer.

Bailey & Mouton, by George J. Bailey, Lafayette, for Cities Service Production Co. and others.

Helm, Simon, Caffery & Duhe, by Lawrence P. Simon, New Iberia, for Texaco, Inc.

Voorhies, Labbe, Voorhies, Fontenot & Leonard, by Bennett J. Voorhies, Lafayette, for Walter Delahoussaye & Emma Delahoussaye Doerle.

Eugene D. Broussard, Newton T. Pharr, New Iberia, Curators for certain absentee defendants.

Edmund McIlhenny, New Orleans, for Myrthe Celeste Schwartz, and others, appellees.

F. Xavier Mouton, Lafayette, for Irsi Dugas Buszek, and other appellees.

Henry A. Mentz, Jr., Hammond, for Kenneth Reid Dupuy, appellee.

Alvin J. Liska, John P. Yuratich, New Orleans, for Mabel Mestayer, appellee.

En Banc.

TATE, Judge.

This petitory action was filed in 1955. The plaintiffs are descendants of, or assigns of descendants of, Francois and Ida Mestayer, husband and wife, who died in 1872 and 1883 respectively. By this suit the plaintiffs claim title to 114.56 acres, contending that this relatively small strip of a large tract formerly owned by the estate of Ida Mestayer was never sold in her succession or by her heirs.

Made defendants are the present possessors of the land claimed, including various mineral lessees. Certain other Mestayer co-heirs or their successors in title, alleged to be co-owners with plaintiffs but who did not join with the latter in their demand, *515 are also joined as nominal defendants. A mineral lessee of many of the Mestayer heirs intervened in the suit, praying that its lessors' interest be recognized, subject to intervenor's mineral lease.

The trial court held that the plaintiffs have no title to the property claimed by this suit because an 1888 administrator's sale was intended to and did convey to various purchasers all of the remaining land formerly owned by Francois and Ida Mestayer, including the 114 acres which the plaintiffs seek to recover by this action. The court consequently dismissed the plaintiffs' suit, and they appeal to this court. The intervenor appealed, as also did certain of the defendants as to certain rulings.

The principal issue of this litigation involves the proper construction of the descriptions of land sold at an administrator's sale of November 3, 1888 in the succession proceedings of the Ida Mestayer estate. Aside from a small separated 33-acre tract, the succession realty sold at the sale consisted of a large contiguous tract of prairie and woodland, which was sold by lots "as per plan of survey of same made by D. T. Peebles, Surveyor, and hereto annexed for reference." The survey referred to is not, however, found recorded in the conveyance records, and a substantial controversy of this appeal is whether the "Peebles Plat" (Exhibit SCCM-36), recorded in 1916 in the miscellaneous records of the Clerk of Court's office, is the actual map referred to in the proces verbal of the administrator's sale.

Briefly, the plaintiffs contend that, in conjunction with the Peebles Plat, the lot descriptions should be interpreted so that the acreage or quantity call controls, and thus as conveying only the specified number of arpents. (According to the testimony, an arpent is approximately six-sevenths of an acre). As a result, it is alleged, not included in the land sold in 1888 was the eastern strip of the estate's large tract, to which strip the plaintiffs claim title by this action.

The Sun Oil-Carpenter-Cities Service-Mestayer ("SCCM") group of defendants (who possess the northern approximate half of the land claimed by the plaintiffs) contend, however, that a proper interpretation of the deed, including the Peebles Plat, is that it is a per aversionem sale conveying all the land within certain bounds reflected by the administrator's deed, which included all the remaining land owned by the estate. Thus there is no residue to which the plaintiffs have title. The District Court essentially agreed with the SCCM group's interpretation of the administrator's sale.

Yet a third construction of the deed is advanced by, respectively, the Duhe-Sealy group of defendants (who possess the southern half of the land plaintiffs claim by this suit), by Texaco (intervening as mineral lessee of many of the Mestayer heirs), and also by the plaintiffs alternatively to their principal contention. By this third construction, the Peebles Plat is regarded as an unauthenticated sketch of only part of the property conveyed, and the calls of the descriptions in the deed are regarded as so conflicting and irreconcilable that only the practical construction given the conveyances by the purchasers over the past decades can furnish the proper rule for the interpretation of what was actually conveyed by the descriptions of each lot.

I. The Mestayer Estate Lands.

To understand more fully the contentions of the various parties, it will be necessary first to summarize what the record shows to be the extent and general location of the Mestayer estate property prior to the 1888 administrator's sale.

In an 1883 succession inventory the land which included the forty lots later sold was described as follows:

"One Sugar Plantation at Fausse Pointe, in this Parish, containing about two thousand five hundred arpents, with all improvements thereon, situated and belonging, bounded as follows: North by Charles Mestayer and X. Louviere, South by Joseph Loreau, or *516 assigns, and Heirs of A. Gondran, and East by Fausse Pointe Lake"

On January 21, 1888, the Mestayer heirs sold to E. A. Pharr the eastern part of this plantation, the land conveyed being described as follows:

"That certain tract of Swamp Land lying and being situated in the parish of Iberia in this State at a place commonly called Fausse Pointe, bordering on that part of Grand Lake known as Lake Dauterive and containing in superficial area Nine Hundred and Thirty-07/100 (930 07/100) acres the whole bounded as follows to-wit: On the North by Charles Mestayer & others, on the South by John D. Broussard, on the East by Lake Fausse Pointe, and on the West by Estate of Ida Mestayer's lands, more fully described by a plat of survey of the said Swamp Land made by Dudley Peebles, Surveyor, on the ____ day of June, A. D., 1887 and making part of these presents."

The plat here referred to is actually attached in the conveyance records to the Pharr deed. From a more detailed subsequent description by section numbers of the property sold to Pharr, the western boundary of this Pharr tract is shown to be 70.92 chains east of an established section line; and all parties admit the correctness of the "Pharr line" as so located.

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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 2d 513, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mestayer-v-cities-service-development-company-lactapp-1961.