Pan American Production Co. v. Robichaux

8 So. 2d 635, 200 La. 666, 1942 La. LEXIS 1229
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 25, 1942
DocketNo. 36456.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 8 So. 2d 635 (Pan American Production Co. v. Robichaux) 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
Pan American Production Co. v. Robichaux, 8 So. 2d 635, 200 La. 666, 1942 La. LEXIS 1229 (La. 1942).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Plaintiff, the Pan American Production Company, is the owner of two mineral leases, one granted by E. J. Robichaux and the other by Henry Ecuer. The leases cover separate tracts of land, one owned by Robichaux and the other by Ecuer, each tract containing approximately 29 acres, the two tracts being adjacent. The plaintiff drilled wells which produced oil, and, due to a dispute between Robichaux and Ecuer as to the proper location of the dividing line between their properties, confusion arose as to whether these oil wells were drilled on the property of Robichaux or on that of Ecuer.

The Pan American Production Company owes to someone the proceeds of a one-eighth royalty interest in the oil produced. As to such proceeds, it is a mere stakeholder and brought the present concursus proceeding, making both Robichaux and Ecuer, as well as all others who may own royalty interests, parties to the suit, praying that the amount in its hands be deposited in court to be paid to the royalty owners as their respective interests might appear. The only interest that plaintiff has in the outcome of the suit is to see that the fund deposited is paid to the proper parties. The issue as to title of the land from which the oil was produced was raised by the answers filed by Robichaux and Ecuer. Robichaux in his answer alleged that he owned the land on which the wells were drilled. Ecuer in his answer denied Robichaux’s allegations and asserted that he owned the land. Therefore, the only issue involved is between Robichaux and Ecuer as to the ownership of the land.

The record shows that in 1915 four individuals — E. J. Robichaux, one of the defendants in this case; his father, Justilien Robichaux; George T. Veeder; and John Veeder — purchased from Walter J. Suthon a large tract of land extending from Bayou Teche to- Grand Lake, the tract being bounded on the north by property then owned by Mrs. Mossy, this Mossy tract being known later on as the “Alleman tract”. The tract purchased was described as being bounded on the south by the property owned by Harry L. Laws.

In 1923 the two Robichauxs and the two Veeders partitioned the property which they had purchased, by which partition the northern portion of the land, extending from the bayou to the lake and bounded on the north by the Mossy or Alleman tract, was .allotted to the two Robichaux. The southern portion of the tract was allotted to the two Veeders; so that, after the partition between the Robichaux and the Vee *670 ders, the land owned by the Robichauxs was bounded on the north by the Mossy or Alleman tract and on the south by the tract allotted to the Veeders.

In October, 1927, the two Robichauxs partitioned their tract between themselves in equal parts. The partition deed recites that E. J. Robichaux was allotted the north half of the property, his tract being bounded on the north by the Mossy or Alleman tract, and that Justilien Robichaux was allotted the south half of the tract; so that the tract allotted to E. J. Robichaux was bounded on the south by the tract allotted to Justilien Robichaux, and the tract allotted to Justilien Robichaux was bounded on the north by the tract allotted to E. J. Robichaux and on the south by the land owned by the Veeders. The partition deed executed by the Robichauxs correctly described the property to be divided, reciting that the north half was set apart to E. J. Robichaux and the south half to Justilien Robichaux. Immediately following the execution of this partition deed, Justilien Robichaux sold the part of the property set apart to him to Henry Ecuer, one of the defendants in this case.

In the partition deed between E. J. Robichaux and Justilien Robichaux, it was stated that the tract set apart to each contained 172.43. But the total acreage involved in this suit is only 58.12 acres, which is that part of the two tracts situated in Section 25. Thus the land in Section 25, owned in common and in indivisión by the two Robichauxs after the partition with the two Veeders, was a tract of 58.12 acres, bounded on the north by the Alleman tract and on the south by the tract set apart to the two Veeders.

Attached to the act of partition between the two Robichauxs is a plat prepared by O. O. Gutekunst, a surveyor, showing the dividing line between the two tracts. E. J. Robichaux and Henry Ecuer were present when this dividing line was established. The act of partition was passed, and the dividing line established, more than 10 years prior to the date on which the present suit was filed.

Now, as to this dividing line established between the two properties by the surveyor, the trial judge correctly said:

“There can be no dispute that the surveyor, O. O. Gutekunst, erred in locating the division line between the two properties on the ground. Not only was error committed in that respect but likewise there was error in the location of said line on the plat. The instrument of partition, however, is not erroneous in describing the respective titles of the parties. The said surveyor acknowledged his error as a witness. The explanation of his error is that he located the land on the ground and on the plat by starting from a post that had been shown to him as the common comer to Sections 24 and 25, T. 13, S.R. 9 E., and Sections 19 and 30, T. 13, S.R. 10 E. He frankly admits that he made no effort to establish the common corner to the' above mentioned sections by government field notes. Shortly previous to the trial of this case this surveyor, in company with other surveyors, located this common corner and it was definitely shown to be 470 ft. north of the point that he assumed to be the cor *672 ner when the division line and the plat was made to serve as a basis for the partition.”

It clearly appears, therefore, that this partition line was located by the surveyor 470 feet south of where it should have been located, the result being that, according to the survey, the 29-acre tract set apart to E. J. Robichaux was not bounded on the north by the Alleman tract as it should have been, but was 470 feet too far south.

According to the description of the land as shown by the act of partition between the two Robichauxs, the strip of land set apart to each was only about 470 feet wide from north to south, so that, according to the survey made by the surveyor and the dividing line between the two small tracts established by him, the dividing line, as shown by the surveyor’s plat, was within a few feet of the true southern boundary line of the 58-acre tract allotted to the two Robichauxs in their partition with the Veeders and within a few feet of the northern boundary line of the property set apart to the Veeders in that partition. Thus, as a result of the .surveyor’s mistake, the strip of land shown on his plat-as property allotted to Justilien Robichaux, and which Ecuer acquired, actually belonged to the Veeders.

E. J. Robichaux claims that, following' the survey and the establishment of the dividing line by the surveyor Gutekunst, he-took possession of all the land north of the dividing line up to the Alleman tract, and that, by the prescription of 10 years acquirendi causa, he has acquired, and now owns, the land which Ecuer is claiming.

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Bluebook (online)
8 So. 2d 635, 200 La. 666, 1942 La. LEXIS 1229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pan-american-production-co-v-robichaux-la-1942.