Thompson v. Frazier

184 So. 2d 283
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 1966
DocketNo. 6462
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 184 So. 2d 283 (Thompson v. Frazier) 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
Thompson v. Frazier, 184 So. 2d 283 (La. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

BAILES, Judge.

This is a petitory action in which plaintiff is seeking to be decreed the owner of a tract of land in Livingston Parish containing about .58 acre. From a judgment of the lower court recognizing plaintiff to be the owner of this property, the defendant appealed.

After this appeal was granted the plaintiff died, and by proper motion his widow and heirs moved to be substituted as parties plaintiff. The motion was granted, and thereby the plaintiffs now are plaintiff’s widow, Mrs. Richard W. Thompson, and his children, Lem Thompson, Minnie Thompson Cogley, Adeline Thompson Rogers, Delia Thompson Scott, and Jessie James Thompson, Sr. These parties will hereinafter be referred to collective!y as plaintiff.

The property, title to which is in dispute, is situated in Pleadright Section 40, Township 6 South, Range 6 East, Livingston Parish, Louisiana, more fully described as follows:

Commencing at Richard Thompson’s southwest corner on east margin of Albany South Highway at a distance of one-half acre southerly from southwest corner of Albany school tract of 2 acres and measure along said Thompson’s line N. 78 degrees 55 minutes east 374 feet to corner of Mrs. O. Frazier’s lot, thence south 11 degrees 05 minutes east 160 feet to old surveyed line of South Albany subdivision; thence with same North 79 degrees 10 minutes west 399 feet to margin of Albany South Highway; thence along same North 5 degrees west 14 feet to point of beginning, all as per survey by C. M. Moore, C. E. & Surveyor, as per plat dated June 23, 1960.

Plaintiff alleges he acquired title to subject property above described by purchase from the children and heirs at law of Bolivar E. Thompson 1 by deed dated and filed for record July 18, 1960, as entry No. 36,447 of the records of Livingston Parish, Louisiana. Whatever right these vendors had in [284]*284the property was acquired by inheritance from their father under a judgment of possession rendered in the matter of the Succession of Bolivar E. Thompson, No. 887 on the docket of the 21st Judicial District Court in and for Livingston Parish. In this judgment the vendors in the said deed to Richard W. Thompson were recognized, ex parte, as owners of certain property described as follows.

“A certain piece or parcel of land situated in the northeast comer of Headright Section 40 Township Six S R 6 East and bounded north by G.H.A. Thomas, East by Little Natal-bany, South and West by vendor, containing 20 acres, more or less, and being part of same property acquired by this vendor from N. M. Foster by act passed before W. J. Settoon, Not. Pub., on 22nd day of October 1895 and recorded in Book No. 8 pages 217 and 218.2
“Being the property acquired by decedent in Book 14 page 194, less the following sales and conveyances made by decedent, viz (COB and page numbers omitted. These are twenty in number)”

The' title of plaintiff is deraigned as follows :

1. Martha K. Knoves and W. C. Knoves sold to N. M. Foster by deed dated September 13, 1893, recorded in COB 7 entry No. 2764,- the following property:

“One Hundred acres more or less being a portion of Headright of Section 40 in Township Six, South of Range Six East in the Greensburg Land District, known as the Nancy Settoon tract, the said land being situated in the Parish of Livingston in said State.”

2. N. M. Foster sold to James King by deed dated October 22, 1895, recorded in COB 8, page 217 the identical property by the same description as set forth next here-inabove.

3. James A. King sold to Bolivar Thompson by deed dated June 10, 1904, recorded in COB 14, page 394, the next here-inabove described property, however under the identical description as is shown in the judgment of possession set out supra.

4. By act of partition between Bolivar Thompson and his wife, Mrs. Sarah Jane White (from whom he was separated by judgment of court) dated October 10, 1917, recorded in COB 32, page 74, Mrs. Sarah Jane White acquired the following described property:

“(1) Twenty acres of land, more or less, in the northeast corner of Head-right Forty, T. 6, S. R. 6 E, bounded North by G. H. A. Thomas, East by Little Natalbany, South and West by J. A. King, acquired by Boliver E. Thompson from J. A. King, as per deed in Book 14, page 394.
* * £ * * *
“Less and accepting from the above land firstly described, the following: * * *
“And less One acre, more or less, in Headright Section 40, T. 6 S., bounded on the North by School Tract of land, East by B. E. Thompson, South by Mike Bartish, West by Public Road, known as Greenburg and Springfield road, being t/z acre North and South and two acres in length East and West, sold by Boliver E. Thompson to F. L. Faust, per deed of record in Book 28, page 291.”

5. Mrs. Sarah Jane White sold to Bolivar E. Thompson by deed dated October 10, 1917, the identical property which she acquired in the act of partition next herein-above described.

With the property acquired by Thompson described as located in the northeast comer [285]*285of Headright Section 40, it is apparent and certain the north line and the east line of the twenty acres are fixed by the north and east lines of said Section 40. Consequently the two lines of uncertain location are the west and south lines. It is further apparent from a reading of the description by which Thompson acquired the twenty acres of land from James A. King there is no wáy to determine from the description itself the exact location of the twenty acres. In this connection Mr. C. M. Moore, Civil Engineer and Registered Surveyor who surveyed the twenty acres and made a plat thereof for Thompson in 1935 testified it was impossible for him to take the description of the twenty acres as contained in the deed by which Thompson acquired it and locate it on the ground.

It should be noted although the west and south lines, insofar as the description provided, are uncertain of determination, no evidence was introduced by plaintiff to explain the description.

The property, the title of which is here under consideration, was triangular in shape as late as 1954, however because of a widening of the road contiguous to this property the west point of the triangle was cut-off thus creating a west line of fourteen feet in length.

It appears to us the property acquired this configuration because of the uncertainty of the south line of the Thompson property. From a point on the east margin of the public road, which road is the west boundary of the tract acquired by Thompson from King3, the same as or identical to the southwest corner of the one (1) acre tract of land acquired by Fitzhugh L. Faust from Thompson by deed dated October 21, 1914, recorded COB 28, page 291 of the records of Livingston Parish, Thompson established, according to the evidence before us, a south boundary to his twenty acre tract. On this line he built a wire fence, the re-inains of which' J. C. Kerstens, Civil Engineer who surveyed this property on March 19, 1962, found to still exist. The traverse of this line running from the point above described is North 78 degrees 55 minutes East.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cheramie v. Cheramie
380 So. 2d 166 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Voisin v. Luke
341 So. 2d 6 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 So. 2d 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-frazier-lactapp-1966.