Sattler v. Pellichino

71 So. 2d 689, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 684
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 22, 1954
Docket3812
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 71 So. 2d 689 (Sattler v. Pellichino) 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
Sattler v. Pellichino, 71 So. 2d 689, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 684 (La. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

71 So.2d 689 (1954)

SATTLER
v.
PELLICHINO.

No. 3812.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 22, 1954.
Rehearing Denied April 26, 1954.

*690 Henry A. Mentz, Jr., Hammond, for appellant.

W. S. Rownd, Reid & Reid, Hammond, for appellee.

ELLIS, Judge.

Plaintiff filed a suit which as a result of a motion to elect and a supplemental petition, became a petitory action. While the defendant filed a general denial he also plead the prescription of 30 years under Articles 3499 and 852 of the LSA-Civil Code. The issues were narrowed down to the pleas of prescription, both of which were sustained by the judgment of the District Court, resulting in the dismissal of plaintiff's suit from which he has appealed.

The defendant purchased in July 1944 ten acres of land which lies to the west of and contiguous to the 10 acres purchased by the plaintiff in April, 1951 and it is conceded by counsel on both sides that the sole question in dispute is the common boundary between the two pieces of property.

The property in dispute measured approximately 70 feet by 36 feet, the entire length of the ten acres, and, it is conceded, lies wholly within the title bounds of plaintiff and therefore beyond the title limits of the defendant.

In approximately 1912 the property described in the defendant's deed was purchased by one Byers who built a house and a barn within the bounds of the disputed strip, and also a fence along the alleged east line of the disputed strip. Byers cultivated *691 a portion of the disputed strip as well as some of the land included within the limits of his title, all of which is shown by evidences of old rows, although the testimony further reveals that in 1952 on the date of the trial the trees and timber on the property were 30 years old or older. In 1919 the father of the defendant purchased the property described in defendant's deed and it is shown that he at least planted one crop of cotton on the land, cultivating approximately 2/3 of the disputed strip and leaving a wide turn row or space between the fence and the end of the cultivated portion. It is further shown that the entire property was fenced as it had been under Byers. It is shown that the fence along the disputed line was constructed of barbed wire but as to how many strands, the proof is indefinite. It is also shown that a new fence was constructed by the defendant after the survey and purchase by the plaintiff, and all of defendant's witnesses testified that the new fence was on the exact line of the old fence, and it strikes us that some of them must have had awfully good memories as they had been away from the property from 30 to 40 years, and the new fence is described as very irregular and erratic and running from tree to tree "like a snake".

The defendant's family lived in the house, according to defendant's older brother, about four or five years, when the house and the barn burned and they moved off of the property. This brother estimated that they had left the property about 30 years ago which would fix the time as approximately 1922. Most of the testimony on this point is indefinite, and to illustrate the defendant describes himself as being approximately two years of age when he first remembered the farming of this property and at the time of the trial he was 39. If he was referring to the cotton crop raised after his father purchased it in 1919 he was of course, approximately six years old.

After the Pellichino family moved nothing was done in the way of maintenance to the fence and it rotted down, and it was shown on the date of the trial in 1952 by the testimony of counsel for plaintiff as a result of an inspection made by the trial judge along with counsel for plaintiff and defendants that there was found in the northeast corner of the Pellichino fence a tree about 30 years old with three strands of very old barbed wire imbedded within the tree, and following this fence in a southerly direction was found three more trees of an estimated 40 years of age, which had remains of barbed wire imbedded in them, and four trees with evidence of an old blaze mark. In other words, upon close inspection four trees were found with old barbed wire imbedded very deeply in them. As to the blazes, the only evidence of any survey is one made by C. M. Moore subdividing lands belonging to the Cate Estate, which sold the 10 acres to the plaintiff. The blazes found were not made by Moore as his line is 70 to 36 feet further east. Moore testified that in 1923 he subdivided the Cate lands in this area into five acre lots and also laid off roads or streets and at that time he doesn't remember any fence and if he had he would very likely have reported it to his employer. He again surveyed the property for the plaintiff in May 1951, and after the survey and purchase by the plaintiff the defendants came in and built a new fence as described. According to Moore's testimony, he did not place any fence on the plat of his survey of 1951 as the new fence had not been then constructed and he did not notice any encroachments or overlapping of any fence. After the boundary dispute arose and the new fence was built by the defendant, Moore returned to the property and made a close examination and found some barbed wire imbedded in two pine trees along the 660 foot boundary line and also a barbed wire imbedded in an oak tree which was out of line and not on the new fence. He also found the old signs of cultivation which extended 2/3 of the way within the disputed area and he estimated that the cultivation had taken place 20 or 30 years previous.

The plaintiff in 1945 inspected this property with a view to purchasing and at that time saw one pine tree with a piece of barbed wire imbedded in it. He described this piece of wire as being approximately *692 two feet in length. While some of defendant's witnesses as well as the defendant himself gave testimony that there was as many as 30 or 40 trees with five strands of barbed wire hanging out of them, there is no doubt but that it is definitely shown that there were only four trees scattered along the 660 foot line and that the most number of strands seen was three, evidence of a three wire fence, and on the date of the trial and on the dates upon which the witnesses inspected the property, the old wire was broken off close to the trees.

The defendants contend that after they moved from the property, while the fence was not maintained but allowed to rot, they and members of their family raked straw off of the disputed strip as the entire property out there was shown to have grown up in pine trees which, even in the cultivated area, were estimated to be 30 years old or older. On the other hand, it was shown that the Cate Estate sold the straw on the property purchased by the plaintiff, and while it is contended by counsel for defendant that the purchasers or those in charge of selling the straw recognized this old fence line by not raking any straw from across it, it appears that what these witnesses meant was that there was a fence on the north and on the south of the property purchased by the plaintiff and that they did not cross these lines, for they repeatedly testified that there was no fence separating plaintiff's and defendant's properties. It must be remembered also that these witnesses are rather difficult to understand and probably did not clearly understand themselves as they were of Italian descent and possibly understood their language better than English.

In 1939 an inspection of this property was made by Mr. J. M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 So. 2d 689, 1954 La. App. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sattler-v-pellichino-lactapp-1954.