New Orleans Northeastern R. Co. v. Redmann

27 So. 2d 321, 210 La. 525, 1946 La. LEXIS 812
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 14, 1946
DocketNo. 38145.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 27 So. 2d 321 (New Orleans Northeastern R. Co. v. Redmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Orleans Northeastern R. Co. v. Redmann, 27 So. 2d 321, 210 La. 525, 1946 La. LEXIS 812 (La. 1946).

Opinion

■HAWTHORNE, Justice.

This case is before us on a motion filed by the appellee to dismiss the appeal on the ground that this cause is not within the appellate jurisdiction of this court inasmuch as the amount in dispute or the value of the matter in controversy herein does not exceed $2,000 but upon the record is obviously substantially less than that amount.

Appellee, New Orleans and Northeastern Railroad Company, alleging itself to be the owner of a certain lot of ground situated in the City of New Orleans, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, instituted this action against Mrs. Rose S. Redmann, the owner of record of an adjoining lot, and against Commercial Iron & Metal Company, Inc., and Nathan Lomm, alleged occupants thereof.

Plaintiff alleges that all of the defendants have refused to agree to the fixing of the boundary line between the two lots, and that, according to a su'rvey of the boundary line which petitioner caused to be made, a building and a fence are encroaching on petitioner’s lot, which building and fence were constructed and owned by some one of the defendants, and that certain junk, apparently owned by the defendant, Commercial Iron & Metal Company, Inc., is piled on the property of petitioner without any right, as none of the defendants has any right, title, or interest in said property or any right to occupy the land of petitioner.

Plaintiff further avers that it is necessary that a judicial fixing of the boundary line be made in the manner provided by law. It prays for the appointment of a surveyor by the court to make a survey of the lots in question and for judgment in favor of petitioner and against defendants, decreeing and fixing the boundary line as described therein, and that the defendants be ordered to remove the encroachments from plaintiff’s property.

The Civil District 'Cou'rt appointed a surveyor to survey the boundary line between the lots and to report thereon in writing to the court.

After answers were filed by all defendants, and after trial on the merits, the lower court rendered judgment recognizing plaintiff to be the owner of the property described in its petition and fixing and *530 establishing the boundary line between its lot and the adjacent lot, owned by the defendant, Mrs. Rose S. Redmann, according to the survey made by the surveyor appointed by the court, and further ordering the defendants to remove all encroachments from the lot of ground belonging to plaintiff within 60 days from the date on which the judgment should become executory, and ordering that, in the event of their failure to remove said encroachments from the property of plaintiff within the delay, all such encroachments should be removed by the plaintiff at the expense of the defendants in solido through the issuance of the proper writ. The judgment also ordered and commanded the defendants to refrain from any further trespass or encroachment upon the lot of ground belonging to plaintiff.

From this judgment defendants have appealed to this court, and it is this appeal which appellee seeks to have dismissed by the motion filed herein.

In brief filed in this court, both appellants and appellee concede, and correctly so, that there is no averment as to the value of the matter in controversy anywhere in the pleadings, nor is there any evidence in the record to show that the amount in dispute exceeds $2,000, exclusive of interest, so as to give this court jurisdiction.

This is an action seeking judicial fixing of the boundary between two adjacent lots of ground and judgment ordering the defendants to remove from plaintiff’s property certain encroachments thereon.

The report of the surveyor appointed by the court fixed the boundary line between these two lots, and the defendants offered

no proof that this line was not properly fixed, nor do they contend that this survey is in any way incorrect. The lower court accepted the survey and fixed the boundary in accordance therewith. The record discloses that the boundary as fixed by the judgment of the district court gives to each of the owners of record all property described in their respective deeds, which were filed in evidence. Under this state of facts, there is no issue in this case, as pointed out by the trial judge, as to which property should bear the shortage, as there is no shortage. These facts are conceded by all parties.

The plat of the suryey prepared by the surveyor shows that the structural improvements located on Mrs. Redmann’s lot encroach on plaintiff’s lot a maximum distance of approximately six feet and consist of two structures marked on the plat “sheds”. The record discloses that the lot owned by Mrs. Redmann is being used as a junk or scrap yard, and the judge of the lower court, in addition to ordering defendants to remove the structural encroachments, ordered the removal from plaintiff’s property of certain movable encroachments which apparently consisted of piles of rags *532 and papers, old rubber tires, miscellaneous scrap iron, etc.

Counsel for appellee in support of the motion to dismiss cite authorities to the effect that the test of jurisdiction in an action of boundary is the value, not of ■cither or both of the contiguous estates, but of the property which lies between the contested lines, and that in such action the only matter in dispute is the value of the land included between the two contested boundary lines. The authorities cited.- as well- as numerous other authorities, conclusively show that this is a correct statement of the law in such cases, these authorities being Lombard et al. v. Belanger et al., 35 La.Ann. 311; Hite et al. v. Himel & Tallieu et al., 39 La.Ann. 113, 1 So. 415; Salles et al. v. Jacquet et al., 108 La. 107, 32 So. 411; Beasley v. Glassell, 110 La. 230, 34 So. 424; Gasquet v. Conway et. al., 116 La. 709, 41 So. 44; Beatty v. Sharp, 135 La. 250, 65 So. 232.

Counsel point out that the record discloses that the purchase price of plaintiff’s lot was the sum of $1,900, shown by its deed of acquisition in 1911, and that the defendant, Mrs. Redmann, acquired the adjacent lot by assuming an outstanding mortgage indebtedness of $1,850 in 1932, and contend that, even if this were a petitory action involving the title to the entirety of either property, there would be doubt as to this court’s having jurisdiction, and that, since the judgment of the lower court ordered the removal of structural improvements extending at a maximum only a distance of about six feet on plaintiff’s side of the boundary line as fixed and established by the judgment appealed from, it is obvious that the value of the matter here in controversy could at most be only a small fraction of the value of either of the adjacent properties.

Since there is no controversy in this case as to the boundary line between these two lots as fixed by the judgment of the lower court, the rule that the test of jurisdiction is the value of the property between two contested lines has no application to the facts here involved, and we must look elsewhere to determine the question of jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
27 So. 2d 321, 210 La. 525, 1946 La. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-northeastern-r-co-v-redmann-la-1946.