Thibodeaux v. Bonnabel Land Company

131 So. 833, 171 La. 639, 1930 La. LEXIS 1974
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 1, 1930
DocketNo. 29614.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 131 So. 833 (Thibodeaux v. Bonnabel Land Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thibodeaux v. Bonnabel Land Company, 131 So. 833, 171 La. 639, 1930 La. LEXIS 1974 (La. 1930).

Opinion

O’NIELL, C. J.

The plaintiff is claiming certain lands which the defendant, Bonnabel Land Company, claims to have been in possession of, as owner, for many years. The suit may be regarded, therefore, as a petitory action. The lands are described in the plaintiff’s petition as squares 25, 39, 40, 48, 54, 66, and an undivided half of square 55, on a map or plan made by Edgar Pilie, surveyor, on the 26th of October, 1865, of a so-called subdivision, called Bath No. 1, in Jefferson parish; the map or plan being attached to an act of sale made by six of the seven heirs of Henry Bonnabel, deceased, to the coheir, Alfred Bonnabel, on the 11th of November, 1875.

The plaintiff alleged in her petition that the Bonnabel Land Company had sold several lots in the subdivision, formerly called Bath No. 1 (recently re-subdivided and now called Bonnabel place), to several persons named in the petition; and they were made defendants.

*641 The defense urged by the Bonnabel Land Company is a plea of prescription of ten and thirty years. The other defendants set up the same plea, besides calling the Bonnabel Land Company in warranty. The district court sustained the plea of prescription and rejected the plaintiff’s demand. She has appealed from the decision.

The tract of land which is now called Bonnabel place fronts on Metairie road, is about 11 arpents (2.80,3.6 feet) wide, and extends northward to Lake Pontchartrain, a distance of 2% miles. The land belonged originally to Yolant and J. B. La Barre. They sold it to Hypolite de Courval, on the 13th of June, 1836; and he sold a half interest in it to Henry Bonnabel on the 28th of September, 1836. Hypolite de Courval and Henry Bonnabel undertook to make a suburb or residence district of the tract, and, accordingly had a map or plan made of the entire area, by Louis Bringier, surveyor general, on the 13.th of December, 1836. The Bringier map or plan cannot be found; but it is stated in the deeds by which the plaintiff’s author in title, Bene Amous, bought from Hypolite de Courval and Henry Bonnabel that the map or plan was deposited in the office of Joseph Bcnzalcen Marks, notary public, before whom the sales to Arnous were passed. On the Bringier plan, of which the Pilie plan is supposed to be a copy, an avenue, called Bath avenue, was laid off, extending through the center of the tract, from Metairie road to the lake; and the squares were on either side of Bath avenue, and were separated by streets, extending across the tract, and named First street (near the lake), Second street, etc., to Forty-Fourth street, which was crossed diagonally by Metairie road. The plan showed also a street called Canal street, the lines of which were supposed to represent a continuation of Canal street in New Orleans; and the plan showed also dotted lines representing an imaginary continuation of Esplanade street in New Orleans. The lines of Canal street, so called, crossed the subdivision called Bath diagonally, northwest and southeast, about midway between Metairie road and the lake, and the dotted lines representing a continuation of Esplanade street crossed the subdivision in almost the same course, but near the lake shore. Of the squares claimed by the plaintiff in this suit, square 25 was in the north end of the tract, near the lake, on the west side of Bath avenue, and bounded north by Fifth street and south by Sixth street. Bayou Tchoupitoulas, shown on the Pilie map, crossed the northwest corner of the square, flowing northeast to the lake. Square 25 was in the marsh or low prairie land, between the cypress swamp and the lake. The dotted or imaginary lines representing the extension of Esplanade street nipped the northeast corner of square 25. Squares 39 and 40 were in the cypress swamp; square 39 being on the east side of Bath avenue and square 40 on the west side, both squares being bounded on the north by Twelfth street and south by Thirteenth street. Square 48 was also in the swamp, fronting on the west side of Bath avenue, and bounded on the north by Sixteenth street and south by Seventeenth street. Squares 54 and 55 extended from the north side of Canal street, so called, to Nineteenth street; square 54 being bounded west by Yulcan street and east by Neptune street, and square 55 being bounded west by Neptune street and east by Jupiter street. And square 66 was on the south side of Canal street, extending southward to Twenty-Third Street, and bounded west by Vulcan street and east by Neptqne street. These streets which we have referred to were only on paper. There was no evidence Of them on the ground, except that *643 the location of Canal street was known by an appearance of a path through the woods, where the timber was cut out many years ago.

Hypolite de Couryal and Henry Bonnabel sold squares 25 and 55 to Rene Arnous on the 28th of December, 1836, and sold squares 39, 40, and 48 to Arnous on the 20th of July, 1837; and Henry Bonnabel sold squares 54 and 66 to Arnous on the 19th of July, 1837. Arnous sold an undivided half of square 55 to Henry Bonnabel on the 11th of November, 1837. All of these deeds were promptly recorded. In every deed reference was made to the Bringier map or plan for the description and location of the square, and its measurement on the streets which it adjoined.

Rene Arnous died on the 5th of May, 1864, leaving a will, dated the 10th of October, 1863, in which he named his daughter, Eulalie Yirginie Arnous, as his universal legatee; and she was recognized as such and sent into possession of the estate of her father by a judgment of court dated the 9th of June, 1864. The squares 'Claimed by the plaintiff were listed on the inventory of the estate of Rene Arnous. Eulalie Yirginie Arnous died in February, 1909, leaving a will dated the 24th of January, 1904, in which she named Mrs. Eula-lie Fleuriet Thibodeaux as her universal or residuary legatee, ahd which will was probated on the 26th of February, 1909. Mrs. Thibodeaux was recognized as the universal legatee of Eulalie Yirginie Arnous, and sent into possession of her estate by a judgment of court dated the 21st of April, 1909.

The plaintiff’s title, therefore, as far as the records show, is established. Notwithstanding the old maps which are supposed to be copies of the original Bringier map of the so-called town of Bath, of Bath No. 1, do not show the dimensions of the squares, the dimensions and locations were given accurately in the deeds by which Rene Arnous acquired title, and the squares were easily located on the subsequent maps and surveys. For example, in the sale of square 25 to Rene Ar-nous, which was an auction sale, the square was described as being in the town of Bath, parish of Jefferson, and composed of 74 lots; lots 1, 2 and 3 measiiring each 30 feet front on Bath avenue by 116 feet in depth; lot 4 forming the corner of Bath avenue and Fifth street and measuring 30 feet front on Bath avenue and 116 feet on Fifth street; lots 5 to 36, inclusive, measuring each 30 feet front on Fifth street by 120 feet in depth; lot 37 measuring 30 feet front on Fifth street by 120 feet in depth adjoining the land of L’Esprit; lots 38 to 70, inclusive, measuring each 30 feet front on Sixth street by 120 feet in depth; lot 71 forming the corner of Bath avenue and Sixth street, and measuring 30 feet front on Bath avenue by 116 feet on Sixth street; and lots 72, 73 and 74 measuring each 30 feet front on Bath avenue by 116 feet in depth.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 833, 171 La. 639, 1930 La. LEXIS 1974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibodeaux-v-bonnabel-land-company-la-1930.