Ronaldson v. Vicknair

185 So. 52
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1938
DocketNo. 1902.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 So. 52 (Ronaldson v. Vicknair) 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
Ronaldson v. Vicknair, 185 So. 52 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Le BLANC, Judge.

This is a suit by which the plaintiffs sought to obtain an injunction against the defendant to restrain and prohibit him from interfering with their or their agents’ or tenants’ right to use an alleged servitude of right of passage over his property. An exception of no cause of action filed by the defendant was referred to the merits and after issue was joined by the answer, the case was submitted on both the exception and the merits. In the meantime defendant also filed a plea of prescription of ten years liberandi causa for non user of the servitude. The district judge overruled the exception of no cause of action and the plea of prescription and on the merits rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs granting the injunctive relief as prayed for by them. The defendant has appealed.

The plaintiffs are Mrs. Eugenia G. Ron-aldson, born Gurley, widow of Henry Y. Ronaldson, Walker Y. Ronaldson and Gordon M. Ronaldson. They alleged themselves to be the owners of the south half of a certain tract of land containing two hundred and twelve acres more or less, situated in the Tenth Ward of the Parish of East Baton Rouge, with certain given boundaries,' and being designated on a plat made by L. Q. Huey, Civil Engineer, by the numeral “4”, which plat is annexed to and made part of their petition. They alleged that they acquired the property from the Succession of Henry Y. Ronaldson and set out the chain of title by which he owned it under certain deeds dating as far back as January 15, 1904, at which time, the whole tract belonged in indivisión to one William M. Woodward, their author in title, and one Adolph Bourke. On the date mentioned they alleged that as will appear from an act of partition, a certified copy of which is annexed to their petition, the said William*M. Woodward and Adolph Bourke entered into an act of' amicable partition by the terms of which the tract of land was to be divided by a line running east and west thus making two separate tracts, and that Adolph Bourke was to have and did accept as his portion, the northern half thereof and the said William M. Woodward, the southern half. The plat prepared by L. Q. Huey, C. E., and which is annexed to the petition of the plaintiffs is a reflection of the partition of. the said tract of land on which, as already stated he has designated the Woodward tract as Tract “4”, and he also designated the Bourke tract which is now owned by defendant as Tract “3”.

In the act of partition just referred to, there is contained the following stipulation :

*55 “It being distinctly agreed and understood that the said W. M. Woodward, his heirs and assigns, that the said W. M. Woodward, is to have a perpetual right of way across the lands of the said Bourke hereinabove described, to the French Town Road.”

There is evidently unnecessary repetition of the words “that the said W. M. Woodward” which however does not detract from the meaning and the intention of the clause and we might state _ here that no point is made of that, the same not being mentioned at all by counsel on either side.

The plaintiffs alleged that as appears in the deed itself granting this perpetual right of way, the place for the exercise thereof was not fixed but they averred that on information and belief it was fixed along the route designated by the letters A, B, C and D on the map made by L. Q. Huey which places it on the western end of the Bourke property, crossing the same in a somewhat semi-diagonal line. It appears from the said map' that it did not reach the P'rench Town Road within the limits of the Bourke property but extended over the line into another tract designated thereon as No. “2” which formerly belonged to Mrs. A. Landry, and now to the plaintiffs herein.

They averred furthey that the servitude of right of way as thus outlined and agreed to by the said William M. Woodward and Adolph Bourke for the use and benefit of the property acquired by Woodward in the act of partition, was used continuously by him, his successors in title, his assigns or agents and by petitioners themselves, their author in title and their agents and tenants, continuously and without interruption from January IS, 1904, until about the year 1917. They then set out that during the year 1917 the servitude as established became burdensome to the said Adolph Bourke, because the same passed in front of his home, and, by agreement between him and Henry Y. Ron-aldson who had then become the owner of the-property they now own and which was entitled to the said servitude, the same was changed and fixed along the route designated by the letters E, F, G and H on the Huey map, and which according to the said map indicates a route further west than the former alleged route, running almost straight across tract No. “3” to the line of tract No. “2” from whence it continues over said tract No. “2” to the French Town Road. They alleged further that since the year 1917 when the place of exercising the servitude was changed as just referred to, their author in title, his tenants and agents, and they themselves as well as their agents and tenants, have used the same continuously and without interruption and were continuously in possession thereof until January 8, 1938.

Plaintiffs averred that since the year 1917 and for a long time prior thereto they and their author in title rented that portion of the tract of land west of Draughn Creek to tenants and the same was cultivated and farmed each year and that the said right of way was always used, as it was absolutely necessary for it to be so used, in order to farm the property as the eastern portion thereof was not accessible to the public road by wagon, truck or other vehicle. They averred that for the year 1938 and prior thereto they had rented the property to Adam Walsh who cultivated and planted crops thereon and made use of the servitude of right of way in carrying on his farming operations, but that on January 8, 1938, the defendant herein, claiming to be the owner of the property formerly belonging to Adolph Bourke and over which the servitude had been and was being exercised, refused them or their tenant, the said Adam Walsh, the use of the same, erected a barrier across both ends and threatened to use force if necessary to prevent them from using it. They set out unavailing amicable efforts to have the defendant recognize their right and prayed for a rule against him to have him show cause why the injunction sought by them should not issue.

The answer filed on behalf of the defendant after the exception of no cause of action had been referred to the merits, admitted the present ownership of the two tracts of land as partitioned between Bourke and Woodward and that the act of partition contained the stipulation hereinabove quoted, but it denied that a servitude of passage was ever legally established over the defendant’s property because there was no route or location given, no.width thereof or description specified and as the same could not and can not be identified it was and is an absolute nullity. The answer further set out that the defendant acquired the Bourke property in March 1926 by a deed transla-tive of property, in good faith, and without reference to any servitude; that he immediately fenced the property, has been in the actual, open and undisturbed possession thereof for more than ten years and there *56 fore if any such servitude ás claimed by the plaintiffs ever existed, it was lost by the prescription of ten years acquirandi causa.

.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hospital Service District No. 2 v. Community Bank of Lafourche
790 So. 2d 688 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2001)
J. C. Trahan, Drilling Contractor, Inc. v. Younger
169 So. 2d 15 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 So. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronaldson-v-vicknair-lactapp-1938.