Rood v. Duncan

2 Teiss. 153, 1905 La. App. LEXIS 23
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1905
DocketNo. 3611
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Teiss. 153 (Rood v. Duncan) 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
Rood v. Duncan, 2 Teiss. 153, 1905 La. App. LEXIS 23 (La. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

Plaintiff and defendant are adjoining proprietors owning two certain properties, situated in the City of New Or-lens, between which, beginning at a given point on the front line of the properties and running back to a distance of about 15 feet, the defendant had erected a small iron fence; to compel the removal of which, on the ground that it encroached on his property three feet, the plaintiff brought his suit.

Plaintiffs contention, to quote from the brief of his counsel, is: that both these properties belonged to a common author; that he had erected buildings and fences, and established boundaries thereon, and that the words “more or less” contained in the respective titles of plaintiff and .defendants were intended to cover, and did cover, any inaccuracies that might arise in the stated measurements, and were inserted in said acts in conformity to the destination du pere cle famille made by their common author, Lynd; and that, as a matter of fact, there was really more ground enclosed in the actual, physical and visible boundaries of his said property as established by said Lynd, common author, than as contained in the specific measurements stated in said act of sale to him, and that by the operation of the doctrine of destination du pere du famille, as well as the express precautionary clause of “more or less’ inserted in said act of sale, he was entitled to all the ground contained within said physical, tangible and visible boundaries, and that any encroachment thereon was an infringement of his rights; and that the defendant, Duncan, in erecting the iron fence described in the petition, failed to confine himself [155]*155to the boundaries as established and fixed by their said common author, and had actually constructed same on the property of plaintiff.

Per conira, the defendant urges that the fence is built immediately on the dividing line of the respective properties as established by the titles thereto, and in strict conformity to a plan and sketch, clearly and definitely fixing and marking the boundaries of the properties, annexed to and made part of the act of sale to plaintiff’s immediate author; that there does not exist, and never have existed, any destination du pere du famille, affecting said property, than that established by the respective sales to defendant and to the author of plaintiff, and that by said sales the specific frontage of plaintiff’s property was designated, fixed and established at the point where the fence-is built.

There was judgment for the defendant and plaintiff appeals.

The evidence shows that the respective properties of the parties to the suit were carved out of what was originally four certain town lots, situated in what was once the City of Lafayette, in the Parish of Jefferson, but now a part of the City of New Orleans, and which lots were owned by different persons until 1849, when they passed to a common owner; and that they continued to remain in common ownership, through different parties, until 1894. At this time one of the then common owners of the entire property acquired from the others, a particular portion of the property. retaining, however, her joint ownership in the remainder. Thenceforward common ownership ceased.

The title to the property, traced back to the first period of common ownership, is as follows:

On the 9th of February, 1848, Louis. Cavalier sold to widow Jean Baptiste Poree two lots of ground, situated in the City of Lafayette, in the square bounded by St. Marie (now St. Mary), Jersey or St, Elizabeth, (now Annunciation), Felicity and Laurel, according to a plan of Henry Grant, City Surveyor, etc., each lot measuring 27 feet 9 inches front on Jersey Street (Annuncia-[156]*156fíon St.) by 128 feet 1 inch and x line in depth,

On the 3rd of April, 1849, Mrs. Widow Jean Baptiste Poree acquired by purchase from James P. Ferret, two certain lots ot ground adjoining the above property acquired by her from Cavalier, and described on a plan of Henry Moellhauser, as Nos. 6 and 7, "each lot measuring 25 feet 3 inches front on Elizabeth Street (Annunciation St.), by a following depth: Lot No. 6, 128 feet 3 inches and 3. lines on the side next to Felicity Street, by 24 feet in width in the rear; Lot No. 7, 128 feet 3inches and x line on side next to St. Mary Street, and 128 feet 3 inches and 1 line on the division line of lot No. 6, and 24 feet in width in the rear.

Mrs. Poree thus became the owner of the four above described, lots’ and so remained until her death, when, on the 2nd of November, 1861, they were acquired at her succession sale by one John Hall. ’

Hall then sold them to William Lynd on the 20th of June, 1866, when, on the 6th of December, 1872, William Lynd havipg in the meanwhile died, his surviving widow and heirs were sent into possession of the property as owners. On the 24th of August, 1894, the widow of William Lynd, by act of donation intervivos, and in which all the heirs joined to ratify and confirm the same, widow Lynd conveyed to her daughter Elizabeth Lot No. 6 and a portion of Lot No. 7, both comprehended in the Moellhauser plan and secondly above described as the two lots acquired on the 3rd of April, 1849, by Mrs. Poree from J. P'. Ferret. The portion thus conveyed being declared in the act of donation as measuring “39 feet 6 inches front on Annunciation Street, by 128 feet, 3 inches and 3 lines in depth on the side nearest Felicity street; 128 feet, 3 inches and 2 lines in depth on the other side line, and about -38 feet 6 inches in width on the rear line." By this act of donation the entire four lots, which, together gave a frontage of 106 feet, were thus subdivided into 2 lots or tracts, one having a frontage of 39.6 feet carved out of the two lots acquired under the Moellhauser plan aforesaid, and which two lots [157]*157originally had a frontage of 50.6 feet; and a second lot, or trad, comprising the two lots under the Grant Plan and first above described as having been acquired by Mrs. Poree on the 9th ot February, 1848, from Louis Cavalier; thus giving that tract a frontage of 66 feet 6 inches, which included the 55 feet 6 inches of the two lots under the Grant plan and the remaining ix feet left over from the two Moellhauser tracts.

As thus subdivided by the common owners and as thus respectively held, that is to say, to the extent of 39 feet 6 inches front by Elizabeth Lynd individually, and 66 feet 6 inches by her brothers and sisters and her mother jointly, the property remained: until the 18th of June, 1902, when all the Lynds made another designation of the frontage for the two lots, or tracts, into which the whole four lots were divided. They desired to give to the tract nearest St. Mary street, which up to this time, as just stated, a frontage of 66 feet 6 inches was given, an additional frontage of 3 feet, which was to be accomplished by subtracting from Elizabeth’s tract, which had been donated to her by her mother, 3 feet, thus reducing it to 36 feet 6 inches. All parties consenting thereto, they advertised the two subdivisions thus made for sale at public auction, designating and describing one tract or lot as containing 36 feet front by 128 feet in depth and the other as containing 69 feet front by 128 feet depth; the auctioneer proclaiming the fact at the time that the increase by 3 feet of the frontage of tire one lot, which we shall hereafter refer to as lot A. was to be made by taking same from lot B, (by which the other lot will be called), so that the purchaser of lot B would acquire but 36 feet, which was all that was designated as the front measurement of that lot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Teiss. 153, 1905 La. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rood-v-duncan-lactapp-1905.