Simmons v. Miller

170 So. 521
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 1936
DocketNo. 1639.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 170 So. 521 (Simmons v. Miller) 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
Simmons v. Miller, 170 So. 521 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This suit has, for its principal and primary object, the re-establishment and relocation of what plaintiff contends was, and is, the correct boundary line between his property and that of the defendant which, he alleges was once marked by a fence which the defendant removed, thus attempting to destroy and obliterate the true dividing line between 'the two properties. Plaintiff also alleges that the defendant, by establishing his fence some 75 feet east of the said boundary line, encroached on his property to that extent, and in addition thereto removed a house therefrom, for all of which he claims damages for rent, and in the alternative for the value of the building, and finally for attorney’s fees in the sum of.$150 for the prosecution of this suit.

In order to support his claim that the old fence site is the true line, plaintiff relies on what he alleges was an agreement establishing it as such, which, he ayers, was entered into years before, between one Sylvester Ealy, a former owner of the defendant’s tract, and Joseph T. Stevens, who patented and formerly owned his tract.

The defendant, in answer to plaintiff’s petition, denied practically all the allegations ■ therein made and especially denied the existence of any boundary line between ' his property and that of plaintiff other than the section line between lot No. 1 of section 24 and the northern portion of section 3, township 8 south, range 3 east, in which the properties were respectively situated. Defendant then reconvened, and, alleging that his title included all land up to the section' line referred to, and that .the house claimed by the plaintiff stood on that portion of the property at the time he purchased it and therefore passed with the land as an immovable by destination, prayed that he be decreed the own.er of his property and quieted in the possession thereof, and also *523 that he recover the sum of $150 as attorney’s fees in order to defend this suit.

The learned district judge handed down written reasons for judgment which indicate his careful consideration of the issues involved in the lower court as well as the facts adduced from the testimony. He reached the conclusion that plaintiff had failed to establish his case by the necessary preponderance of testimony and, accordingly, he dismissed the demand as in case of nonsuit. Plaintiff 'appealed, and in this court has filed alternative pleas of 10, 20, and 30 years’ prescription, based on the fact, as alleged in his pleading, of the existence of the old boundary fence for a period of more than 30 years, and the possession as owners of his authors in title of the land up to that boundary.

We deem it proper to take up, first, the issue as presented in the lower court, of plaintiff’s right to have what he contends was the fixed boundary line between the two properties resurveyed and relocated, after which we will discuss the pleas of prescription filed in this court.

As under our law no one is compelled to hold property in indivisión with his co-owner, so also no one is obliged to leave undetermined the boundary line between his property and that of his neighbor. C.C. art. 824. This right to have the boundary line established exists not only in those cases where the two properties have never been separated, but also in those in which it appears that the line had formerly been fixed, but is no longer to be seen. C.C. art. 823. Article 832 further provides that “the fixing new boundaries, or the investigation of old ones, may be made extra judicially and by mutual consent, if the parties are of full age.” In this case, the defendant having refused to join plaintiff in his demand, the latter has resorted to this judicial investigation of what he contends is an old line, once established, with the view of having it replaced or relocated. But it is apparent, from a reading of the articles of the Code mentioned, that the party who is attempting to exercise the right which plaintiff claims thereunder must be able to show that the line ’ he relies on had formerly been fixed, either judicially or extra judicially, by mutual consent. Plaintiff here makes no pretense that the line he contends for had been judicially fixed, so he had to stand on the agreement which he alleges was entered into years before between two former owners of the contiguous estates.-

With these propositions now laid down, what do we find to be the facts in this case?

First, on looking into the titles by which the parties claim their respective properties, we note that plaintiff himself recites a description in his petition, copied from his deed, which he reads as follows:

“A certain tract or parcel of land, with all the buildings and improvements thereon, situated in the Parish of Ascension, State of Louisiana, and being a portion of Lot 1, Section 24, Township 8, South, Range 3 East, east of the River and St. Helena Meridian in Louisiana, and bounded on the west by lands of Jake Miller, on the north and east by the Amite River, and on the south by Petit Brusle, and containing 30 acres, more or less.”

Plaintiff traces his title, to the property, through several vendors, to Joseph T. Stephens, who patented the same from the United States government on December 30, 1902. Stephens patented lots 1 and 3 of section 24. He sold the portion of lot 1 which now forms plaintiff’s title to Edward Roddy on July 29, 1918, under the same description as herein copied, with the exception of the boundaries, and that description is carried in all subsequent transfers, including an adjudication to the Federal Land Bank in a foreclosure proceeding and a sale from the bank to another party.

The defendant’s property is described in his deed as follows:

“A certain tract or parcel of land, together with the buildings and improvements thereon, containing approximately 23 acres, located' in the ninth ward of the Parish of Ascension on what is known as the Gonzales-Port Vincent Highway, and constituting the northern portion of Section 3, Township 8 South, Range 3 East, being all of the high land in that Section; said tract being bounded on the north by the Amite River, on the south by the swamp land of said Section belonging to De Hass-Eby Lumber Co., on the east by section 24, and on the west by Section 4 of said Township and Range.”

The defendant acquired from the heirs of Sylvester Ealy, who had purchased the entire section 3, containing 123.05 acres, from W. H. Merrit, on April 24, 1886, and had subsequently sold all except the 23 acres of highland, conveyed in. the *524 plaintiff’s deed, to De Hass-Eby Lumber Company. In all transactions involving these particular 23 acres the land is invariably referred to as highland and as being the northern portion of section 3.

It is to be observed from these descriptions that the property of each of the parties, according to their respective titles, is situated in a different section and that the description of plaintiff calls for the property of the defendant, Jake J. Miller, which is in section 3, as its eastern boundary and that of the defendant calls for section 24, in the northern part of which is plaintiff’s property, as its western boundary. That can mean only that, according to their respective _ titles, the section line between sections 3 and 24 is the dividing line of the two properties.

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Bluebook (online)
170 So. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-miller-lactapp-1936.