Simmons v. Toliver
This text of 422 So. 2d 729 (Simmons v. Toliver) 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.
Opinion
S. Neal SIMMONS and Sammye Cooper Simmons, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
D.V. TOLIVER, Defendant-Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*730 Griffing & Humble, George Griffing, Jonesville, for defendant-appellant.
Smith, Taliaferro, Seibert, Boothe & Purvis, V. Russell Purvis, Jonesville, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Before CULPEPPER, DOMENGEAUX and GUIDRY, JJ.
DOMENGEAUX, Judge.
In this suit, plaintiffs seek to have established the boundary line between their property and that of the defendant. The parties own adjoining tracts of land in the northern portion of Catahoula Parish, Louisiana. Following institution of this suit, the trial court appointed James M. Hawkins, Jr., a registered land surveyor, to locate the ideal boundary between the respective properties of the parties. Mr. Hawkins conducted a survey pursuant to the court's order and his "proces verbal of survey" was filed with the court together with a large scale drawing which reflects location of the ideal boundary between the properties of the parties and the topography of the area including fences, roads, etc. Neither of the parties question the accuracy of Hawkins' location of the ideal boundary. However, defendant, by reconventional demand, claims that he acquired a portion of the Simmons' property located east of the ideal boundary line by virtue of the running of thirty years acquisitive prescription. Specifically, defendant claims that his ownership extends east of the ideal boundary to a gravel road or "slide trail" which traverses the Simmons' property in a north-south direction. He alleges that a fence located adjacent to such trail had been maintained by him and his ancestor-in-title, Mose Johnson, for a period in excess of thirty years. In his reconventional demand, defendant claimed further that he was entitled to recover $50,000.00 in damages, with legal interest, to compensate him and his wife for severe emotional distress and suffering. *731 He asserts that the plaintiffs caused this by coming onto his property without his consent and erecting three oversized creosote posts pursuant to a survey conducted for them by Mr. Kenneth McKay, and by arbitrarily refusing to provide the defendant with a copy of the survey plat.
In order to establish the age of the fence and the extent of his possession, the defendant called five witnesses at trial who testified that the fence had been in existence for at least thirty years. The plaintiffs, on the other hand, countered the defendant's position by introducing the testimony of two other witnesses who averred that the fence running along the western edge of the slide trail had been in existence for a period of time not exceeding fifteen to eighteen years.
The trial judge sought to resolve this conflict between the plaintiffs' witnesses and those of the defendant by subsequently adjourning the proceedings to the site of the property in question. He directed that only counsel for both sides would be allowed to accompany him when he went to make his inspection.
At this point, the trial transcript no longer reflects the transactions that took place outside of the courtroom. In order to rectify this situation, the plaintiffs made a motion to correct and supplement the record. The defendant was ordered to show cause why such motion should not be granted on August 2, 1982. During the court proceedings which took place on that date, the trial judge supplied a Per Curiam which detailed his own recollections of the transactions which occurred outside of the courtroom.
In the trial judge's Per Curiam, he stated that after his inspection, it was apparent to him that the fence referred to by the defendant's witnesses was not as old as they had testified it was. His inspection also revealed that part of the wire on the fence had been attached to two trees, which had actually grown over the wire strands through the years.
The judge thereby suggested to the attorneys that an expert be chosen to come and examine the trees in order to determine the exact date that the wires had been attached to them. He asked the attorneys for suggestions concerning the availability of a local expert in the forestry field. On December 2, 1981, counsel for the defendant responded to the judge's request, supplying him with the names of two persons that the defendant deemed satisfactory to examine the trees.
Subsequently, arrangements were made for Mr. Merlin Smith, one of the two persons recommended by defense counsel, to visit the disputed property on January 12, 1982, and examine the two trees. In his Per Curiam, the trial judge stated that neither the plaintiffs' attorney nor the defendant's counsel objected to the procedure. On January 21st, the judge and the attorneys met with Mr. Smith. Smith cut out portions of the two trees in which the fence wire was imbedded, and took them to his office for examination. The next day, Smith furnished a report containing his findings to the trial judge, and copies of the report were immediately forwarded to the attorneys. In the judge's Per Curiam, he states that after this, he contacted both attorneys advising them of their right to cross-examine Mr. Smith in open court after he formally presented his report, which according to the judge, both parties waived.
Subsequently, the trial court rendered its decision, concluding that the defendants had not possessed for a period of thirty years up to the fence located adjacent to the gravel road or "slide trail". The court determined that the boundary should be set some distance east of the ideal boundary line, as established by Hawkins, placing the boundary between the respective properties of the parties as follows:
"It is therefore my opinion that the boundary of the properties should be fixed on the southeast corner at the point where the old net wire fence virtually intersects the new barb wire fence.[[1]] *732 The boundary should then proceed in a northerly direction along the old net wire fence as shown on the plat and a projection thereof toward a connection with the old net wire fence on the east side of the cemetery to a point where it intersects the true line, as indicated on the survey. From that point, the boundary should follow the ideal line until it intersects the center line of Louisiana Highway 915."
Furthermore, the trial court dismissed defendant's claim for damages. From this judgment the defendant devolutively appealed. Plaintiff has neither appealed nor answered the appeal.
The defendant alleges that the trial judge erred in making two post-trial inspections of the disputed property in order to determine where the boundary should be set. Furthermore, he claims that the court was in error in retaining the services of Merlin B. Smith to assist in determining where the boundary was to be set, when Smith had not been called as a witness by either side, was never sworn in, and was not subject to cross-examination. In addition, he asserts that the court erred in admitting the letter of Merlin Smith dated January 22, 1982, into the record. He also argues that the court was mistaken in deciding the case based on post-trial data improperly developed by an outside consultant at the site of the disputed tract of land.
We are unable to agree with the defendant's arguments. The Code of Civil Procedure specifically grants trial judges the power to appoint experts. La.C.C.P. Article 192 states:
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422 So. 2d 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-toliver-lactapp-1982.