Polizzi v. Lotz

125 So. 2d 146, 240 La. 734, 1960 La. LEXIS 1069
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 12, 1960
Docket44259
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 125 So. 2d 146 (Polizzi v. Lotz) 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
Polizzi v. Lotz, 125 So. 2d 146, 240 La. 734, 1960 La. LEXIS 1069 (La. 1960).

Opinion

FO.URNET, Chief Justice.

This is a suit to have a boundary line “finally fixed in the manner prescribed by law” between the adjoining properties of plaintiff Mrs. J. L. (Theresa Hammond) Polizzi and the defendants Frederick H. Lotz, Sr., and Miss Edna Louise Lotz, 1 and to compel the defendants to remove the existing fence to a dividing line “as same be found and fixed” by the surveyor to be appointed by the Court; the matter is here on appeal from a judgment of the District Court declaring unconstitutional a certain paragraph of Article 4502 (“Party Fences”) of the New Orleans Building Code “insofar *738 as it provides that a portion of property one and a half inches in width belonging to one neighbor shall be placed on the other side of the partition fence, and in the possession of the adjoining neighbor; ” hence our jurisdiction of this appeal.

The allegations of the petition are that the present partition fence is in need of repair or replacement; that for more than a year prior to filing suit the plaintiff attempted to erect a fence as authorized by Article 4502 of the New Orleans Building Code, that she secured a permit and purchased material, but that defendant Mr. Lotz refused his consent unless the three posts at the rear end of the fence be moved from his to plaintiff’s side (the remaining twelve posts being already on plaintiff’s side), and that since the boundary line has never been established either judicially or by agreement between the owners, a survey is necessary; the prayer is that a surveyor be appointed by the Court and “if such survey should show that the fence is encroaching upon petitioner’s line, there be judgment ordering the defendants to remove to the said boundary line the said fence * * The defendants denied the necessity for fixing the boundary, averring that a fixed and visible division boundary, the wooden fence, had separated the properties of plaintiff and defendants and their authors in title (father and mother) for more than forty years, having been fixed by mutual agreement between prior owners; that said fence had been repaired and replaced as-necessity demanded and always on the same-line, with the exception that some seventeen years before filing of the instant suit the-front portion had been curved slightly onto-defendants’ property from its former location on the boundary line so as to be-stabilized by attachment to an iron post of defendants’ front fence, and also that within the preceding ten years the three posts at the extreme rear of said fence had been placed on defendants’ side, but with the express understanding between plaintiff and defendants’ father that the posts would be removed to their original and still discernible location on plaintiff’s side whenever defendants demanded same, but that such demand was now refused; and defendants specially pleaded the prescription of ten, twenty and thirty years.

The Court-appointed surveyor, Mr. E. L. Eustis, testified that he found the fence almost exactly on the line; that the deviation was so slight as to be almost negligible, consisting of an encroachment at St. Mary Street of two and a half inches upon defendants’ property, dwindling to one inch some twenty-three feet back, and then at a point twenty-nine feet from the front the fence crossed the boundary and encroached one inch on plaintiff’s property but almost immediately got back on the line, and that for the remaining length it followed the line exactly, meeting a shed which formed the common dividing line at the extreme rear *740 of the lots. Mr. Eustis explained that “the property line, as we understand it, from a surveying point of view, is a line which passes between the posts which are approximately on eight foot centers, and the boards which are nailed to these posts;” that in practice the posts abut the line exactly, the boards are nailed flush with the posts, “so one property would have to have the posts and the other property would have to have the boards;” and this he has considered proper placement of the posts and boards with relation to the boundary in all the surveys he has made for the past forty-eight years. It was only after the plaintiff’s case had been completed, and during testimony of the defendant Lotz, that as a result of off-the-record discussion the Trial Judge for the first time became aware of the fact that plaintiff’s counsel was contending the New Orleans Building Code relative to party fences (Art. 4502) requires that the 4" width of the posts and the 1" boards be added, the result divided by two, and the boundary fixed on that medial line with the boards nailed to one side of the posts. Mr. Lotz complained that if the boundary line split the five inches, with the boards nailed to the posts from his side (the posts are already on plaintiff’s side) “she would give up nothing and gain sixteen hundred and sixty-three square inches and •I would be giving up thirty-three hundred 'and thirty;” whereupon the Judge commented : “In other words, the old way was much fairer with the line running between the boards and the posts; because if you push it [the boundary line] over, then it is true, she [plaintiff] would be getting some of his [defendant’s] property. I see what you mean.” He then observed: “Maybe the Ordinance is unconstitutional, by making you give up some of your property to your neighbor.” Counsel for defendants thereupon filed a plea that Article 4502 of the Building Code was not intended to be retroactive in application, and alternatively, that it is unconstitutional as in violation of the due process clauses of the 'State and United States Constitutions, Const, art. 1, §2; U.S.Const. Amend. 14. The judgment of the Court, after approving and homologating the proces verbal of the Surveyor and ordering the boundary line fixed in accordance therewith and with the accompanying sketch, and after overruling (because inappropriate or unsupported) the pleas of prescription, decreed that plaintiff have the right to remove to the boundary line the portion of the fence now encroaching on her property and on defendants’ as shown by the proces verbal and sketch; declared unconstitutional (in language quoted in the first paragraph of this opinion) a portion of Article 4502 of the Building Code; and further decreed “that defendants be enjoined from interfering with plaintiff’s making necessary repairs to and realigning the partition fence in question, provided the boards are placed on the prop *742 erty of defendants, and the posts on the property of plaintiff, with the dividing line passing between the boards and the posts; * * the costs of suit, including the fee of the surveyor, to be borne equally by the parties. From that judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

Article 4502 of the New Orleans Building Code (effective February 1, 1949) which recites that everyone has a right to compel his neighbor to contribute one half the cost of making and repairing “a substantial and suitable party fence,” declares: “A substantial and suitable party fence is considered to be a fence of 1 inch by 12 inches feather edged boards nailed horizontally, 7 boards high across pine posts 4 inches by 6 inches, not more than 8 feet apart, set 3 feet in the ground, with one-half of the total thickness of the fence on each side of the party line.” 2

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 2d 146, 240 La. 734, 1960 La. LEXIS 1069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polizzi-v-lotz-la-1960.