Porche v. Martin

177 So. 2d 288
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1965
Docket6430
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 177 So. 2d 288 (Porche v. Martin) 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
Porche v. Martin, 177 So. 2d 288 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

177 So.2d 288 (1965)

Armand O. PORCHE
v.
Theophile W. MARTIN.

No. 6430.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

July 1, 1965.

*289 Bernard L. Knobloch, Thibodaux, for appellant.

Deramee & Deramee, Thibodaux, Lottinger & Lottinger, Houma, for appellee.

Before ELLIS, LOTTINGER, LANDRY, REID and BAILES, JJ.

LANDRY, Judge.

This is a boundary action brought by plaintiff, Armand O. Porche, to establish the line of demarcation between certain lands owned by said plaintiff and adjoining properties belonging to defendant, Theophile Martin, situated in Section 24, Township 16 South, Range 17 East, Lafourche Parish. Plaintiff's petition alleged the bounds of these contiguous estates have never been established and prayed for the appointment of a surveyor to determine the confines of the respective owners. The learned trial court homologated the proces verbal of the surveyor appointed to make the survey and established the boundaries in accordance with the map of survey thereto attached. Defendant has appealed the judgment homologating the proces verbal, dismissing said appellant's plea of prescription, ordering defendant to remove fences encroaching upon plaintiff's property as determined by the survey and casting defendant for all costs, including the expenses of the survey.

Subject properties front on the north side of Bayou Blue which stream runs generally in a northwest-southeasterly direction. However, because of a bend encountered in its meandering, the bayou runs from west to east at the point where it forms the southern boundary of the estates in question. The section and property sidelines are all parallel in this area and run approximately in a Northeasterly direction (North 38 degrees East, to be precise). Due to its sinuosity, the water course crosses subject estates at a rather sharp angle; as a consequence the side property lines of these adjoining estates are not perpendicular to their front lines.

Plaintiff's property was acquired by deed describing same as follows:

A certain tract of land situated in the Parish of Lafourche, on the left bank of Bayou Blue, measuring ONE arpent front on Bayou Blue by a depth of Ten arpents; bounded in front by said Bayou Blue, above by lands of Thaddeus and Katherine Toups, and below and in the rear by lands of Albert Porche and others, formerly, now Theophile Martin; together with all the improvements thereon and all the rights and privileges thereto belonging or in anywise appertaining.

Appellant's abutting property, which lies partly in Section 24 and partly in Section 25, is described thusly:

A certain tract of land, situated in the Parish of Lafourche, Louisiana, lying on the left descending bank of the Bayou Blue, at about 11½ miles below Thibodaux, bounded in front by the said Bayou Blue, above by the land of Frank Porche, or assigns, below by the land formerly of Octave Breaux and for a distance of 30 arpents by the land of Mrs. Eugene Cadiere, formerly and in the rear by the land of E. P. Lefort, the lower arpent front having a depth of ten arpents and the next three arpents front having a depth of forty arpents and the next one arpent front having a depth of thirty arpents, commencing at a distance of ten arpents from said Bayou; the whole having the equivalent of a tract of land measuring a front of four arpents with a depth of forty-arpents.
Together with all the buildings and improvements thereon and all rights, *290 ways, privileges and servitudes thereunto belonging, or in any wise appertaining.

From the foregoing description it will be noted that the upper or westernmost arpent of defendant's estate commences at the rear or northern boundary of plaintiff's property and by said width extends northerly therefrom a distance of thirty arpents. In addition appellant owns three arpents front on Bayou Blue by a depth of forty arpents which tract adjoins the East boundary of plaintiff's lands for the first ten arpents extending northerly from the Bayou. Defendant's property also includes an additional arpent front by a depth of ten arpents abutting his three arpent by forty arpent tract on the east.

Extended northerly, plaintiff's west or upper boundary forms the western boundary of defendant's property. Both estates are bounded on the West by property of Thaddeus and Katherine Toups whose lands front on the Bayou and extend northerly to the forty arpent line. The boundaries sought to be established in this litigation are the rear or northern line and the lower or eastern line of plaintiff's lands, both of which are common boundaries between these adjoining landowners.

Appellant's exception of prescription, based on alleged thirty year possession to a visible boundary, was tried separately during the course of which a number of witnesses were called to testify regarding possession exercised by the contestants and the existence of certain alleged boundary markers. In so proceeding the learned district court was eminently correct. See LSA-C.C. Article 852; Sessum v. Hemperley, 233 La. 444, 96 So.2d 832.

The record reveals subject estates were formerly owned by a single proprietor, Julien Theodore Porche, who, on May 6, 1942, sold the property now owned by plaintiff to one Thomas J. Porche, who, in turn, transferred it to appellee on April 10, 1957. On August 19, 1943, appellant acquired his property from said Julien Theodore Porche who was therefore the common ancestor in title of both litigants. From the foregoing, it readily appears subject properties were held in common ownership within thirty years of institution of this boundary action.

It is settled jurisprudence that to establish a boundary pursuant to a plea of prescription based on the provisions of LSA-C.C. Article 852, there must be thirty years adverse possession to a visible boundary. Sessum v. Hemperley, 233 La. 444, 96 So.2d 832.

Where two tracts of land have a common owner, there can be no adverse possession because an owner cannot prescribe against himself. Jones v. Dyer, La. App., 71 So.2d 648; LSA-C.C. Article 3514.

From the record it is indisputable that the common owner, Julien Theodore Porche, treated subject properties as one estate and, through himself and certain tenants, farmed the properties as a single unit with no markers, boundaries or other distinguishable or visible monuments or topographical features delineating the tracts now owned separately by appellant and appellee.

Notwithstanding defendant's failure to establish either of the essential elements of thirty years possession or possession to visible boundaries, as regards the lines common to plaintiff and defendant, appellant nevertheless contends the reference line from which appellee's one arpent front should be measured along Bayou Blue, should be fixed along a line of certain markers which the former common owner, Julien Theodore Porche set to establish the western boundaries of plaintiff's lands and the western boundary of the rear thirty arpents of defendant's property and to which alleged markers said former owner possessed while owning said estates in common. In this regard the record shows that while he owned the properties in *291 question, Julien Theodore Porche placed certain stobs or markers along the western or upper limits of his said lands from Bayou Blue to the rear thereof in the vicinity of the forty arpent line and possessed to said established boundary.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 2d 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porche-v-martin-lactapp-1965.