Sanders v. Williams

434 So. 2d 172, 1983 La. App. LEXIS 8892
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 1983
DocketNo. 82-767
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 434 So. 2d 172 (Sanders v. Williams) 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
Sanders v. Williams, 434 So. 2d 172, 1983 La. App. LEXIS 8892 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

STOKER, Judge.

Plaintiffs, the Sanders heirs,1 brought this petitory action against defendant, M.D. Williams, alleging ownership of a certain tract of land located in Sabine Parish, Louisiana, occupied by defendant. Plaintiffs also sought damages in the amount of $23,-342, which includes $10,000 for depreciation in value of the property due to defendant’s use of it, $15,000 for mental anguish due to defendant’s alleged trespass, and $342 for a survey done at plaintiffs’ cost to establish the boundary between the properties owned by the parties.

After trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs declaring them to be the owners of the property in dispute based on a boundary line set by Mr. Jimmy R. Anyan, registered surveyor, and awarding them $342 for the cost of the survey. The trial court dismissed plaintiffs’ claims for the additional $25,000 in damages for lack of proof.

Defendant appeals, making the following single assignment of error:

“The trial court erred in holding that the southern boundary of the plaintiffs’ property had been accurately located by the survey conducted by Mr. Jimmy Ray An-yan.”

Although plaintiffs denominated their petition as a petitory action, resolution of the case ultimately rests not upon title alone, but upon title, prescription and the establishment of the boundary between plaintiffs’ and defendant’s properties. It is argued that insofar as title is concerned, defendant’s property lies to the south of plaintiffs’ property. In his initial answer, in addition to a general denial, defendant asserted the defense of thirty years prescription. Paragraphs ten, eleven, and twelve of defendant’s answer read as follows:

“10.
“The lands occupied by your defendant lie to the South of the Plaintiffs’ lands and the two parcels are separated by a barbed wire fence between them, and this fence has been recognized as the boundary between the said estates for a period far in excess of thirty years.
“11.
“Defendant and his authors in title have possessed up to the wire fence, aforesaid, physically occupying the lands south of same for a period of thirty years by residing thereon, operating a mill thereon, storing materials thereon, which acts are illustrative only, and nonexclusive.
“12.
“Based on the foregoing allegations, defendant pleads the prescription of thirty years under Revised Civil Code Article 796 and its predecessor, Article 852.”

Through an amended petition, the Sanders allege in the alternative that they acquired ownership of the property described in their petition by acquisitive prescription of ten and thirty years. Although the defendants claim that they acquired the property in question by acquisitive prescription by possessing up to a barbed wire fence (which they assert was the boundary fence) [174]*174for a period in excess of thirty years, we find this not to be so. The evidence shows that there was no visible boundary between the parties, or at least there was no boundary marking the south limits of plaintiffs’ tract. In the end, the trial court fixed the boundary according to a survey established by plaintiffs’ surveyor, Jimmy R. Anyan, as shown on a plat received in evidence as plaintiffs’ exhibit P-3.

Defendant has apparently abandoned his initial defense of thirty years acquisitive prescription based on the allegation that the fence north of his house has been the established boundary for over thirty years. Defendant as appellant in this appeal resists the claims of plaintiffs on the ground that the boundary line established by Surveyor Jimmy R. Anyan is not valid. Defendant’s complaint rests on two arguments. The first is that plaintiffs’ surveyor started his survey at a point erroneously assumed to be the southeast corner of the government land section in question. Defendant’s second argument is that the east-west line established by Mr. Anyan as the south boundary of plaintiffs’ property is not accurate. Actually, the second argument is largely based on the first, that is, the failure to start at the true point representing the southeast corner of the section.

Plaintiffs filed a formal answer to the appeal asking for damages based on frivolous appeal and seeking damages of $25,000 as originally prayed for. Defendant responded with a motion to dismiss the answer to the appeal as not having been timely filed.

For reasons set out below, we dismiss the answer to the appeal and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTS

The disputed tract of land is located in the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of Section 29, Township 10 North, Range 11 West between property owned by the Sanders heirs and Williams. The Sanders property lies north of the Williams property and is described as follows: “... all that part of the North Half of the Southeast Quarter of Southeast Quarter lying East of Texas and Pacific Railroad, all situated in Section 29, Township 10 North, Range 11 West, together with all buildings and improvements situated thereon.” The Williams lot is described primarily by reference to adjoining landowners. The full description is set out in footnote two below.2

Testimony at trial shows that the west half of the tract, where the Williams house is presently located, was possessed by the Sanders family from around 1937 until at least 1967. Nolan Rains testified that he worked at a sawmill on the Sanders property from 1937 until 1947 at which time the mill burned. He also testified that his father built a house around 1940 on the Sanders property with permission and later sold it to the Sanders family when the mill burned. Rains indicated that the mill and the house were just east of where the Wil[175]*175liams house is now. He also testified that the fence, or old fence line, north of the Williams house had not been built when the mill burned in 1947.

Mrs. Claudine Jacobs Bossier testified that she and her husband rented the house built by Rains from the Sanders family from 1953 to 1966. She also indicated that the house was just east of where the Williams house is now. However, she testified that the fence north of the Williams house was in existence when she first moved on to what she believes to be the Sanders property, and that Mr. O.L. Sanders, now deceased, had cows in the area north of the fence.

The testimony of Mr. Rains and Mrs. Bossier is consistent with that of Mr. Fred Sanders, son of Mr. O.L. Sanders and one of the plaintiffs herein. Fred Sanders testified that after Mrs. Bossier and her husband moved out of the rent house, his father sold it in 1967 and had it moved off the property. He stated that the fence north of the house was built in 1949 to form a lane in order to run cows to another section of land owned by his father.

There was also testimony that a post mill was operated on land just southeast of the Sanders rent house and that the land was rented from Williams’ ancestors-in-title. The exact location of this mill was not determined, but it appears to have been at least partially north of the Anyan survey line and may have constituted an encroachment on the Sanders’ property. Other witnesses also indicated that the fence had existed from 30 to 50 years but no definite dates were given other than those mentioned above.

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Bluebook (online)
434 So. 2d 172, 1983 La. App. LEXIS 8892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-williams-lactapp-1983.