Sessum v. Hemperley

83 So. 2d 546, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 1005
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 1955
DocketNo. 8338
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 So. 2d 546 (Sessum v. Hemperley) 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
Sessum v. Hemperley, 83 So. 2d 546, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 1005 (La. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinions

AYRES, Judge.

This is an action in boundary. Plaintiff is the owner of 30.75 acres situated in the SWJ4 of SEJ4, Section 14, Township 22 North Range 15 West, Caddo Parish, Louisiana. Defendants are the owners of the adjacent lands in the SE14 of SWJ4 of said section. Therefore, plaintiff’s property is bounded on the west by the properties of defendants. This action is brought pursuant to the provisions of LSA-C.C. arts. 823 and 824, providing that where two contiguous estates or tracts of land have never been separated or have never had their boundaries determined, or if the boundaries which have been formerly fixed are no longer visible, each of the owners of said contiguous estates has a right to compel the other to fix the limits of their respective properties. As no one is bound to hold an estate in common, no one is bound to leave undecided the boundary lines which separate his estate from that of his neighbor.

Defendants answered plaintiff’s petition setting forth that the boundary between their lands and plaintiff’s has been established by common consent and a fence dividing said properties was constructed thereon which has been recognized and acquiesced in for more than 30 years and that accordingly where plaintiff and defendants and their authors in title have occupied and possessed their respective properties to the fence line and recognizing it as the boundary line between their properties for more than 30 years, such boundary has been established and a survey was unnecessary and in support of which defendants plead the prescription of 30 years as provided by LSA-C.C. art. 852.

From the judgment approving and ho-mologating the survey as made by the surveyor appointed by the court and fixing the boundary line in accordance therewith coincidental with the north and south center line of the aforesaid-section and condemning the defendants to pay all costs, including a fee of $850 for the surveyor, which was attacked as excessive, exorbitant and unreasonable, and a fee of George E. Dutton, surveyor, as an expert witness in the sum of $50, as a useless and unnecessary item of expense, and a fee of Henry L. Bango, consulting forester, as a witness in the sum of $15, as erroneous as his testimony was inadmissible as not in rebuttal or for the purpose for which the case had been left open, defendants appealed.

The aforesaid fence line, as contended for by the defendants, is located east of the ideal boundary 89.5 feet at the north end and 113 feet at the south end. This disputed area, approximately 900 feet long and comprising slightly more than two acres, lies within the descriptive title of plaintiff and his authors. Thus, defendants are claiming beyond their title in diminution of plaintiff’s title. However, where there is a visible boundary recognized and acquiesced in as such for 30 years or more, to which defendants and their predecessors in title have, in addition to the land described in their title, actually possessed, a plea of prescription of 30 years interposed by the defendants will be sustained in an action of boundary. LSA-C.C. art. 852; Opdenwyer v. Brown, 155 La. 617, 99 So. 482; Henly v. Kask, La.App., 11 So.2d 230.

[549]*549Plaintiff and defendants claim recorded titles emanating from a common author. This property was acquired by George W. Hale in 1860 by patent from the United States Government, and after his death his widow and heirs conveyed it to Jacob R. Hale by deed of October 30, 1894. On January 30, 1903, Jacob R. Hale conveyed to James M. Hawkins the 40 acre tract embracing defendants’ property. Defendant, Mrs. Agnes Hawkins Hemperley, is the daughter of James M. Hawkins, from whom she acquired her property by inheritance and by partition among herself, his widow and the other heirs. Mrs. Ada M. Hawkins Stanberry was also the daughter of James M. Hawkins and in like manner acquired an interest in her father’s estate, which she sold to the defendant, Don C. Hemper-ley, in 1952. Plaintiff acquired his tract in 1940 from A. H. Stanberry, Jr., whose acquisition is dated about 1925.

The evidence discloses that in 1904, following his purchase in 1903 of the property wherein is located defendants’ property, James M. Hawkins erected a fence between his tract and the property of Jacob R. Hale, his brother-in-law, from whom he had acquired his property. H. B. Hawkins, a son of James M. Hawkins, 20 years old at the time and 69 years of age at the time of the trial, testified that he assisted his father in January or February of 1904 in erecting the fence on the boundary line between the two tracts as was fixed by J. M. Hale, a surveyor, who was a brother of Jacob R. Hale. The said Jacob R. Hale was then the owner of plaintiff’s property. Although the fence as erected served as a barrier against hogs and cattle, as there was no effective stock law at the time, yet we are impressed with the testimony that the fence was placed in its precise location for the purpose of serving as a marker or monument of the boundary between the Hawkins and Hale properties; otherwise, the survey would have served no purpose. This fence was constructed of net wire commonly referred to as “hog wire”, with two or three strands of barbed wire above. Hawkins was most positive that it was constructed on the line as surveyed by Hale and was placed there as a boundary line fence between said properties. Moreover, he testified that Piale lived with the Hawkins family and knew of the construction and location of the fence in question.

Allen H. Stanberry, plaintiff’s author in title, who purchased that property in 1925 and occupied it until sold to plaintiff in 1940, acknowledged the existence and location of the fence when he acquired said property when the property was sold to plaintiff. He considered the fence as the boundary between his and defendants’ property and during his occupancy and ownership recognized it as such, which covered a period of 15 years.

Mrs. Marie Hale McCarley, daughter of J. M. Hale, the surveyor, knew of the existence of the fence between said properties for many years.

Mrs. Viola Hoss Holmes, who lived at Hosston near this property for 40 years, during which time she was familiar with the property and knew there was a fence dividing the properties when the Stanberry family lived there, whom she visited on occasions.

Mrs. Verdie Clarice Hale, also a resident of Hosston since 1915, during which time she was also familiar with defendants’ and plaintiff’s properties from having visited with the families, had knowledge of the existence of the fence, which she says did not extend “right to the ditch”, meaning the highway ditch, but extended to the right of way of the road. She testified that she was familiar with this fence for perhaps longer than 35 years.

The testimony of T. M. Hemperley, husband of defendant, Mrs. Agnes Flaw-kins Hemperley, with whom he has lived on defendant’s property since 1937, when the built their home, prior to which they lived only a half a mile to the east, discloses that when he came to Louisiana in 1923 the fence in question was in existence and that it ran south to the road, where it connected with a fence running in a westerly direction along the north side of the highway. The fence was repaired from [550]*550time to time, and that, instead of plaintiff building a fence as contended by him, Hemperley was emphatic that plaintiff merely repaired the pre-existing fence.

John C.

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Related

Kelley v. Stringer
422 So. 2d 189 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1982)
Arledge v. Gleason
113 So. 2d 334 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)
Sessum v. Hemperley
96 So. 2d 832 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
83 So. 2d 546, 1955 La. App. LEXIS 1005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sessum-v-hemperley-lactapp-1955.