Oliver v. Milliken & Farwell, Inc.

290 So. 2d 738
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 1974
Docket9710
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 290 So. 2d 738 (Oliver v. Milliken & Farwell, 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.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Milliken & Farwell, Inc., 290 So. 2d 738 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

290 So.2d 738 (1974)

Daniel A. OLIVER
v.
MILLIKEN & FARWELL, INC., et al.

No. 9710.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

February 11, 1974.
Rehearing Denied March 22, 1974.
Writs Refused May 17, 1974.

*739 Ashton L. Stewart, of Laycock, Stewart & Preis, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.

John Pat Little, of Guste, Barnett & Little, New Orleans, Victor A. Sachse, III, of Breazeale, Sachse & Wilson, Baton Rouge, for defendant, Milliken & Farwell, Inc., appellee.

R. Gordon Kean, Jr., of Sanders, Miller, Downing & Kean, Baton Rouge, for defendant, Ashland Plantation, Inc., appellee.

Paul G. Borron, Jr., and Paul G. Borron, III, of Borron & Delahaye, Plaquemine, for defendant, appellee Devall Co., Inc.

Joseph W. Cole, Jr., of Cole & Claiborne, Port Allen, for defendant, appellee, Kean Mineral Interests & Miss.

Philip N. Pecquet, Port Allen, for defendant, Ticac, appellee.

Gordon M. White, of White & May, Baton Rouge, for defendant, Willie H. Davis, appellee.

*740 Gerald L. Walter, Jr., and Byron R. Kantrow, of Kantrow, Spaht, Weaver & Walter, Baton Rouge, for defendant, Joan Bereson and others (Seidenbach), appellee.

Felicien Y. Lozes, Rouchell, Lozes & Brown, New Orleans, for defendant, Mrs. Hermina M. Farwell (Curator ad hoc) and Felicien Y. Lozes, individually.

Before LOTTINGER, BLANCHE and CRAIN, JJ.

CRAIN, Judge.

The matter before us involves the division among riparian owners of a certain alluvial deposit commonly known as "Solitude Point" containing approximately 3,500 acres and located on the West Bank of the Mississippi River in the Parish of West Baton Rouge. This area is shown on the plat attached to this opinion. The plaintiff-appellant, Daniel A. Oliver, owner of "Batture Plantation" initiated the litigation naming Milliken and Farwell, Inc. owner of Clarkland and Smithfield Plantations as defendant. Devall Company, Inc., owner of Oak Grove Plantation which adjoins Solitude Point, intervened as did Ashland Plantation, Inc. also a riparian owner. The plaintiff then named additional parties as defendants who also owned property adjacent to Solitude Point.

Each party amended its petition to allege acquisitive prescription of various portions of Solitude Point. The matter was tried and judgment was rendered on September 1, 1972. A motion for partial new trial was subsequently granted by the trial court limited to the method of fixing the division lines across the alluvion, and a new decision was rendered on the motion amending the original judgment on May 31, 1973. From this judgment, the plaintiff appealed. Also appeals were taken from the original judgment by several riparian owners based on the trial court's adverse decision on their claims regarding acquisitive prescription.

Prior to rendering a decision regarding the division of the alluvion according to law, the trial court was called upon to decide several pleas of acquisitive prescription of portions of the alluvion urged by the various riparian owners. Regarding the claim of Milliken-Farwell, the trial court after reviewing the evidence stated:

"Defendant, Milliken & Farwell, was the only landowner who effectually attempted to substantiate its existing boundary position with affirmative evidence. . . . Milliken & Farwell, Inc., contends . . . that the boundary between it and plaintiff, Daniel A. Oliver, is a blazed and hacked line which is a projection across the batture of the line between Sections 7 & 8, T-6-S, R-12-E, which has established a boundary because of long continued recognition by the parties and/or their ancestors in title. It pleads prescription of ten, twenty and thirty years.
The Court's duty here is to examine the evidence of possession within the hacked line which is also the northern and southern boundary, respectively, established by title. It must be conceded there was no formal fixing of boundaries between the parties; consequently, the usual possession required by the Code and the jurisprudence will determine this issue. . . .
Milliken & Farwell commences its documentary possession with a timber deed dated November 18, 1926, marked `M&F 1,' whereby timber was sold to Schwing Lumber and Shingle Company, Limited, under the following description:
'All the timber of whatsoever kind and nature, lying, standing and being on a certain tract of land, situated in the Parish of West Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana, and described as the SE ¼ of section 34 in Township 6 South of Range 11 E., containing 160.14 acres, and also the cottonwood and willow timber on the entire batture in front of *741 the Smithfield Plantation, having a frontage of a mile or more on the Mississippi River, located in T. 6S. R. 12 E., in the Parish of West Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana.'
Milliken & Farwell follows this offering with 24 successive offerings in an effort to show the blazed, hacked line as the northern boundary of its batture.
For example, `M&F 1' (cited above contains a timber sale of the cottonwood and willow timber on the entire batture in front of Smithfield Plantation, having a frontage of a mile or more on the Mississippi River. This description, above, does not alleviate the batture problem presented for judgment. The remainder of the documentary offerings do not meet the 30 year requirement, nor does the evidence of physical possession.
For example, `M&F 8' conveys, as does the Schwing deed, all the batture which lies between the levee fronting the Mississippi River and the `said river,' `being the batture formed in front of said plantation.' Again, that is the very question we are attempting to decide: Wherein lies the batture? See `M&F 9' for the same indistinct description.
The ancient deeds reciting `all the batture in front of said plantations' do not mention the hacked, blazed line, nor can they be used to establish ownership of batture which has formed successively and imperceptibly to these plantations through these years as we must adhere to the ruling which requires that the subject of apportionment is the entire alluvial deposit as it existed at the time this action was instituted without respect to the time element of formation.
Defendant cites Art. 826 of the Civil Code to define a boundary as trees, as hedges, ditches, walls or inclosures in an effort to substantiate the blazed, hacked line as the boundary between Smithfield and Oliver. This article, however, must be read in conjunction with the other articles of Title V entitled `Of Fixing the Limits and of Surveying of Lands.' This article defines certain physical features which may be used as a boundary, but a legal boundary must meet the other requirements in Title V, such as the action of boundary, the judicial fixing, the extra-judicial fixing, the prescription necessary to establish ownership of the land within the confines of the boundary. When the trees and hedges have been so established, they become the boundary line. As was said in Sessum v. Hemperly, 233 La. 444, 96 So.2d 832, 843:

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Related

Riverlands Fleeting Corp. v. Milliken & Farwell, Inc.
515 So. 2d 512 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1987)
River Lands Fleeting Corp. v. Ashland Plantation, Inc.
385 So. 2d 424 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
Oliver v. Milliken & Farwell, Inc.
361 So. 2d 1248 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1978)
Messina v. Michael
324 So. 2d 837 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1976)
Oliver v. Milliken & Farwell, Inc.
294 So. 2d 549 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)

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