Rhodes v. Collier

41 So. 2d 669, 215 La. 754, 1949 La. LEXIS 991
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 31, 1949
DocketNo. 39009.
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 41 So. 2d 669 (Rhodes v. Collier) 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
Rhodes v. Collier, 41 So. 2d 669, 215 La. 754, 1949 La. LEXIS 991 (La. 1949).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

This is a possessory action. Mrs. Grace M. Rhodes is the owner of lot No. 27 of Ravenswood and Conseulo Plantations, as shoYvn on a map of said plantations made by O. E. Fowler, C.- E. which is recorded in the deed books of Concordia and Tensas Parishes. This lot is composed of a portion of Sections 26 and 27, all of Sections 28 and 29 and the northern portion of Section 30, Township Nine (9) North, Range Ten (10) East. Claiming possession: of the above described tract, Mrs. Rhodes and her mineral lessees, The California ■Company and Carter Oil Company,, instituted this suit alleging that the defendant, Collier, has encroached on the northwest portion of Sections 27, 28 and 29 and that sometime subsequent to April 1st, 1946, he constructed a fence thereon, thereby taking actual corporeal -possession of the land.

Defendant admits the building of the fence but he claims that it is situated on the northwestern boundary of the lands possessed by Mrs. Rhodes in Sections 27, 28 and 29 and he further contends that, at the time the fence was erected and for a long time before and continuously since, he has been in actual corporeal possession of the strip of land northwest of the fence. He denies all other claims of plaintiffs and particularly that they ever had possession of any land northwest of the fence.

The district court, after considering a mass of evidence (nearly 200 pages of ■testimony in addition to a volume of exhibits), found that plaintiffs had not proved their case with reasonable certainty and dismissed the demand. Wherefore this appeal.

The undisputed facts of the case show that the property of Mrs. Rhodes, which was carved out of the original Ravens-wood and Consuelo Plantations, compris *759 ing Sections 27, 28 and 29 of Township 9 North, Range 10 East, is hounded on the northwest by the lands of J. W. Brown and A. C. Ferrington, described in part as “all the fractional section 52 and the South Half of the fractional section 46 except * * * all being in Township 9 North, Range 10 East, containing 526 acres, more or less, known as the Luckett Plantation; * * *»'

Brown and Ferrington acquired the Luckett Plantation from Union Central Life Insurance Company in 1934. On Oc- 1 tober 13th 1945, Collier obtained a deed from Brown and Ferrington covering the following described property, comprising approximately 20 acres:

«* * * alKj ,a strip of land lying . south of Sections 46, and 52, T. 9 N. R. 10 E., and being more particularly described as follows: Begin at a point which ■is South 55 degrees, 30 minutes west and a distance of 1046.6 feet from the corner common to Sections 27, 46 and 47; thence S. 46-15 W. following an old hacked and blazed line part of which is along an old •fence, a distance of 6078 feet, more or less; thence North a distance of 246 feet, more or less; thence N 46-15 E between Sections 28 and 52 a distance of 4190 feet, more or less, thence N. 46-15 E between Sections 28 and 46 a distance of 83 feet, more or less; thence N. 55-30 E. between Sections 27 and 46 a distance of 1553 feet, more or less, to the place of beginning. * * *»

It is perfectly obvious, from the foregoing description, that the property conveyed ;by Ferrington and. Brown to Collier lies south and east of the division line of Sections 46 and 52 and Sections 27, 28 and' 29. Being bounded on the north and west by the division line between the properties comprising the Luckett Plantation and Mrs. Rhodes’ tract, all of the land conveyed to Collier is within the northern portion of Mrs. Rhodes’ property, i. e.r Sections 27, 28 and 29, and the fence built by him on the southern boundary of the-property described in the deed from Brown and Ferrington is situated on her land. Therefore, since Brown and Ferrington admittedly had no title whatever to any land located in Sections 27, 28 and 29, it follows that their deed to Collier conveyed nothing and that his entry upon Mrs., Rhodes’ land and seizure of possession,, was unlawful.

We have mentioned these self-evident-facts at the outset because the district judge denied relief on the ground that the-evidence submitted by plaintiffs did not •establish with certainty the division line-between 27, 28 and 29 and Sections 52,. 53 and 46. The judge thought that because there was a lack of unanimity in the expert evidence of the surveyors testifying-for plaintiffs (that is, because Surveyor J. E. Heard disagreed with the findings of previous surveyors and also because Surveyor J. P. Sessions disagreed with the location of the division line found by *761 Heard), he was required to 'rely on secondary proof (testimony given by various woodcutters and others, who stated that there was an old land line blazed, hacked and marked with relics of fences which had been recognized as a division line of the Ravenswood and Luckett Plantations) to determine whether defendant was disturbing plaintiffs’ possession. And finding that this secondary evidence showed the division lines between Mrs. Rhodes’ property and Brown’s and Ferrington’s tract to be identical with the fence built by defendant, he concluded that plaintiffs did not prove their case.

We think that the judge fell into error in holding that plaintiffs failed to establish with certainty that defendant’s fence was encroaching upon their land, inasmuch as the testimony of plaintiffs’ experts clearly demonstrates that the line on which the fence has been erected by defendant is south of the division line between Sections 27, 28 and 29 and Sections 52, 53 and 46. And their evidence is fully confirmed by Mr. E. E. Scott (Civil Engineer and Surveyor), who made a plat of the lands in question for Brown and Ferrington at the time they purchased Luckett Plantation and who was called by the Court to give testimony. The fact that the surveyors are not in unanimity as to the exact location of the division line between the property of Mrs. Rhodes and ■that of Brown and Ferrington has but little, if any, bearing on plaintiffs’ right to relief inasmuch as all the probative evidence, including the deed under which defendant claims possession, discloses that the fence erected by him is situated on Mrs. Rhodes’ land.

This is not an action in boundary but a possessory action in which plaintiffs were required only to establish possession of the land as owner for more than a year previous to the time of the disturbance; that the disturbance is real and that they have brought their suit within the year in which the disturbance took place. Articles 47 and 49 of the Code of Practice. All of these essentials are present in the case at bar as plaintiffs have proven actual possession 1 of a part of the tract, which extended civilly to all the land included within the boundaries as stated in the title deed of Mrs. Rhodes, Articles 3437 and 3498 of the Civil Code; Leonard v. Garrett, 128 La. 535, 54 So. 984 and cases there cited, and disturbance of that possession by the trespass of Collier in erecting ¡a fence upon the northwest portion of the tract.

Counsel for defendant proclaims that plaintiffs cannot rely on the doctrine of civil possession because they allege in their *763

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Bluebook (online)
41 So. 2d 669, 215 La. 754, 1949 La. LEXIS 991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhodes-v-collier-la-1949.