Richard v. City of New Orleans

197 So. 594, 195 La. 898, 1940 La. LEXIS 1127
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 28, 1940
DocketNo. 35538.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 197 So. 594 (Richard v. City of New Orleans) 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
Richard v. City of New Orleans, 197 So. 594, 195 La. 898, 1940 La. LEXIS 1127 (La. 1940).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This is an action for slander of title. The property in dispute is a strip of land situated in the Third District of the City of New Orleans, measuring 140 feet (French measure) in width and extending between parallel lines a distance of approximately 2,000 feet. The strip of land was formerly used by the Pontchartrain Railroad Company as a right of way, extending from Florida Avenue along Elysian Fields Avenue, in the' direction of Lake Pontchartrain, to the Howe-Martin line, as is more fully described in the pleadings.

The original plaintiffs, fifty-one in number, are the heirs of Nicholas Noel Destrehan, and the defendant is the City of New Orleans. The Wesson Oil & Snowdrift Co., Inc., and the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, as parties in interest, intervened and joined the defendant in resisting plaintiffs’ demands.

The City of New Orleans filed an exception of no right or cause of action and also an answer and reconventional demand, denying plaintiffs’ claim of title and possession, asserting title in itself, and praying that it be recognized as the owner of the property in dispute.

After the trial of the case in the district court, the trial judge rendered a judgment on the main demand in favor of the defendant and the interveners, maintaining the exception of no right or cause of action, and dismissing plaintiffs’ suit. The trial judge also rendered judgment in favor of the defendant and the interveners on the reconventional demand decreeing that the title to the property in dispute is vested in the City of New Orleans. Plaintiffs are appealing from the judgment.

The strip of land in dispute was a part .of a larger tract of land originally owned by Bernard Marigny whose property, . known as the Marigny Plantation, extended on both sides of Elysian Fields Avenue. Marigny laid out the Faubourg Marigny and the New Faubourg Marigny. He dug a canal on the site of what is now the neutral ground on Elysian Fields Avenue. This canal extended from the public road (now Levee Street), adjacent to the Mississippi River, to a point on Florida Walk (now Florida Avenue); thence, in the form of an elbow, the canal extended to Bayou St. John. From recitals in acts of sale executed by Marigny, he apparently contemplated that “Canal Marigny” would be connected eventually with the Mississippi River.

In 1826, Marigny sold to Nicholas Noel Destrehan that portion of the Marigny Plantation which remained after the creation of the two faubourgs. The land in dispute was included in this sale. After *906 his purchase, Destrehan caused the property to be subdivided into a new faubourg according to a plan made by Joseph Pilie, surveyor, dated June 7, 1828. The new faubourg was named “Faubourg Franklin,” and the plan of the faubourg made by Pilie was formally deposited by Nicholas Noel Destrehan in the office of Charles Janin, notary public, on June 22, 1830.

The Pontchartrain Railroad Company (Compagnie du Chemin a Coulisse de Pontchartrain) was incorporated by a special legislative act, approved January 20, 1830. On June 24, 1830, by act before Charles Janin, notary public, Destrehan granted the newly organized railroad company a right of way through his property. The company also obtained from other land owners grants of land necessary for its right of way. The Marigny Canal lying in the center of Elysian Fields Avenue was filled in. The railroad tracks were laid along Elysian Fields Avenue from a point near the Mississippi River to the village of Milneburg on the shore of Lake Pontchartrain. This railroad, which was the second railroad constructed in the United States, was in continuous operation for a period of approximately 100 years, or until June 3, 1935. On that date the property ceased to be used for railroad purposes. When that occurred, the heirs of Nicholas Noel Destrehan sued the railroad company in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, and obtained a judgment in their favor decreeing that the property in question, in accordance with the terms of the grant by Destrehan, reverted to the heirs. This judgment was rendered on June 18, 1935, and signed on June 24, 1935. The City of New Orleans and the interveners were not parties to the proceeding in which the judgment was obtained.

The City of New Orleans and the interveners assert that the strip of land in dispute, for more than 100 years, has been dedicated as a public street and that the City has the right and duty to open Elysian Fields Avenue through the strip of land without plaintiffs’ consent. Plaintiffs’ contention, on the other hand, is that Elysian Fields Avenue did not extend beyond the elbow of the Marigny Canal at Florida Walk. The trial judge upheld the contention of the defendant and interveners and dismissed plaintiffs’ suit.

It will be helpful, in disposing of the contentions of the parties, to briefly review the history of the property in dispute and the various transactions tending to establish the nature of its ownership as public or private property.

In the year 1805, Bernard Marigny laid out the front portion of his plantation as a suburb, styled “Old Faubourg Marigny,” according to a plan of Joseph Pilie, Surveyor, dated March 16, 1806. This suburb extended from the river to what is known today as St. Claude Street. The principal street in this suburb was called the “Promenade des Champs Elysees,” measuring one hundred and fifty feet, French measure, in width.

By a second plan of subdivision, made by Joseph Pilie, Surveyor, dated September 18, 1809, Marigny subdivided another por *908 tion of his plantation which he called “New Faubourg Marigny,” extending from St. Claude Street on both sides of the Promenade des Champs Elysees for a distance of nine squares to what is known today as Johnson Street. The Promenade des Champs Elysees was continued through the new faubourg with the same width of one hundred and fifty feet, French measure.

On both plans of subdivision there was located in the middle of the Promenade des Champs Elysees a canal, known as the “Marigny Canal,” having a width of fifty feet, French measure, extending from the river in a northerly direction towards the lake to a point where the canal changed direction from north to northwest, at the intersection of what today is known as Florida Walk and Elysian Fields Avenue.

On the plans “Old Faubourg Marigny” and “New Faubourg Marigny,” on either side of the canal, Bernard Marigny laid out and dedicated to public use two stréets, promenades or walking avenues, each fifty feet, French measure, in width, which, with the canal in the middle, gave a total width of one hundred and fifty feet, French. measure, to the Promenade des Champs Elysees.

The distance of one hundred and fifty feet, French measure, is equivalent to one hundred and fifty-nine feet, ten inches and three lines, American measure, which is the width plaintiffs seek to give to the property in dispute by the plan of Edgar Pilie, dated December 1, 1909, and offered in evidence by plaintiffs in this case, although that width is not the full width of the- property in dispute, which is one hundred seventy-two feet, French measure, or one hundred eighty-six feet, six inches and one line, American measure.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 594, 195 La. 898, 1940 La. LEXIS 1127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-v-city-of-new-orleans-la-1940.