Rock Island, A. & L. R. Co. v. Gournay

17 So. 2d 8, 205 La. 125, 1943 La. LEXIS 1125
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 13, 1943
DocketNo. 36974.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 8 (Rock Island, A. & L. R. Co. v. Gournay) 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
Rock Island, A. & L. R. Co. v. Gournay, 17 So. 2d 8, 205 La. 125, 1943 La. LEXIS 1125 (La. 1943).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The plaintiff railroad company claiming as the fee simple owner in possession of a certain strip of land instituted this slander of title action against the heirs of Octave Ardoin and F. C. Fontenot, the mineral lessee of them. The heirs and their other mineral lessee, Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, as intervenor, filed pleadings denying that the plaintiff had a fee simple title to the land, and averring that it had a grant of a right-of-way only, that the heirs were the owners of the fee simple title, subject to plaintiff’s servitude or right-of-way, and that the mineral lease of the intervenor was entered into and recorded prior to Fontenot’s, thus giving the intervenor superior rights over him.

At the beginning of the trial in the lower court, Fontenot’s request to be permitted to withdraw from the suit, free of any costs of court, was acceded to by all of the litigants.

The trial judge held that the instrument signed by Octave Ardoin on July 26, 1906, conveyed to the railroad company a fee simple title to the land and not merely a servitude or right-of-way thereon. The defendants and the intervenor have appealed.

This case was consolidated here with the suits entitled Rock Island, Arkansas & Louisiana Railroad Co. v. Mrs. Dorcile Guillory et al. and Rock Island, Arkansas & Louisiana Railroad Co. v. Jean Batis Guillory et al., 205 La. 154, 17 So.2d 17 and 205 La. 141, 17 So.2d 13, because the identical main issue was also involved therein.

The jurisprudence on the legal issue presented herein is not uniform throughout the United States.

Under Annotation, in 132 A.L.R. p. 149, “Deed to Railroad Company — Fee or Easement", subheading “b — Reference to right-of-way”, we find:

“There are a number of ways in which some reference to a ‘right-of-way’ may appear in a deed to a railroad company which is in the form of a warranty deed and which contains a granting clause referring to a strip, tract, piece, or parcel of land. The instrument may be headed ‘Deed to Right-of-Way;’ the granting clause may be in *129 some such form as T hereby grant and convey for railroad right-of-way the following described strip of land’ or T hereby grant and convey the following described strip to be used for right-of-way purposes;’ or there may be some clause or sentence in the deed which refers to the land conveyed as a ‘right-of-way’. As was pointed out, supra I, the courts are not in agreement as to the weight and effect to be given to such language in a deed which would otherwise be construed as conveying a title in fee. In some cases the view is taken that such language indicates an intention to limit the estate conveyed to a mere easement; in others it is said that such language is merely descriptive of the purpose for which the property is to be used and has no effect upon the quantum of the estate conveyed; and in others the position is taken that such language operates to make the deed ambiguous and so to permit the consideration of extraneous circumstances in arriving at the ■ intention of the parties.” See, also, 84 A.L.R. 271.

It is well-settled in this State that in deciding whether a fee simple title to land has been conveyed or a servitude or right-of-way thereupon has been granted by a deed, the intention of the parties thereto must be determined from the stipulations in the entire instrument, with a view of giving effect to all of the provisions therein contained and thereby avoid neutralizing or ignoring any of them or treating any of them as surplusage. Noel Estate v. Kansas City Southern & G. R. Co. et al., 187 La. 717, 175 So. 468; Hunter Co., Inc., v. Ulrich, 200 La. 536, 8 So.2d 531; Parish of Jefferson v. Texas Co. et al., 192 La. 934, 189 So. 580; Glassell v. Richardson Oil Co. et al., 150 La. 999, 91 So. 431.

In the case of Texas & P. R. Co. v. Ellerbe, 199 La. 489, 6 So.2d 556, 557, this Court said:

“The jurisprudence is well settled that the conveyance of a right of way is to be regarded as a mere servitude and not as a transfer of a fee-simple title of the land unless the deed itself evidences that the parties intended otherwise.
“In Moore Planting Co. v. Morgan’s Louisiana & T. R. & S. S. Co., supra, 126 La. 840, 53 So. 22, 23, we said: ‘A right of way may consist either of the fee, or merely of a right of passage and use, or servitude. Whether the one or the other is meant in any particular instrument must be gathered from the instrument as a whole. As a general rule, only a servitude is meant.’ ”

In Arkansas Improvement Co. et al. v. Kansas City S. R. Co. et al., 189 La. 921, 181 So. 445, 448, in considering the deed together with the extraneous evidence offered under a plea of estoppel to show that a fee simple title had been conveyed and not a mere right-of-way, the Court, in holding that a fee title had passed, stated:

“The courts hold generally that a reference to the land involved as ‘right-of-way’ or ‘for railroad purposes’ does not necessarily indicate that the intent was to convey a mere easement or servitude, *131 but that the intention must be ascertained by construing the instrument as a whole, and that in this connection extrinsic evidence may be considered.”

In Gautreaux et al. v. Harang et al., 190 La. 1060, 183 So. 349, the Court had before it the question of whether or not the provisions of the notarial act of sale created an antichresis. In reaching the conclusion that the parties intended an antichresis, the Court quoted with approval from the case of Rolland’s Heirs v. McCarty, 19 La. 77, where it was said:

“ * * * Now we are not to presume that parties make use of words in their contracts to which they attach no sort of meaning. Some effect is to be given to every word, if possible, or rather we are rarely authorized to reject words or phrases as surplusage.” See, also, Clement v. Dunn, 168 La. 394, 122 So. 122.

The controversial document reads as follows:

“Deed to Right of Way
“State of Louisiana
“Parish of St. Landry.
“I, Octave Ardoin a resident of the above Parish and State, in consideration of the sum of Eighty No/100 Dollars, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and the further consideration of the enhancement in value of my adjoining lands by the construction of the railroad hereinafter mentioned, do hereby grant, convey, sell and deliver unto the Rock Island, Arkansas aud Louisiana Railroad Company, its successors and assigns in perpetuity, a strip of lemd, one hundred (100) feet in width, over and upan the following described land situated in St. Landry Parish, State of Louisiana, to-wit:
“The North half of the Southwest Quarter of Section Thirty-seven (37), Township Three (3) South, Range One (1) West, said right of way hereby conveyed containing 3.81 acres, said land being bounded on the North by E. F. Wesche and on the South by John Bartis Guillory, said strip of land being fifty (SO) feet in width on each side of the center of the main track of said railroad as the same is now located on and across said tract of land,

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17 So. 2d 8, 205 La. 125, 1943 La. LEXIS 1125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-island-a-l-r-co-v-gournay-la-1943.