Case Name: Mrs. Kennedy v. Municipality No. Two
Court: Louisiana Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Louisiana
Decision Date: 1855-01
Citations: 10 La. Ann. 54
Docket Number: 
Parties: Mrs. Kennedy v. Municipality No. Two.
Judges: 
Reporter: Louisiana Annual Reports
Volume: 10
Pages: 54–56

Head Matter:
Mrs. Kennedy v. Municipality No. Two.
By the Act of 80th April, 1858, every riparian proprietor within the limits of corporate towns in this State, is authorized to sue the corporation for the occupation of so much of the batture in front of his property as may not be necessary for public use.
The property of plaintiff was designated by the following metes and bounds: “ One hundred and eighty feet, French measure, front on the river Mississippi, and extending back and forming the like front on the New Levee street, bounded on the upper side by a street which is the prolongation of Suzette street, and on the lower side by the property now or lately belonging to the succession of JTrbain GritiennvU, in front by the river Mississippi, and in the rear by said New Levee street, together with the privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging or in any wise appertaining.” Held: This discretion conveys, by right of accretion, the alluvial deposits opposite the lot conveyed. Civil Code, 501.
The case of Mv/nicvpality No. 2 v. The Orleme Cotton Tress, 18 Louisiana Reports, 287, affirmed.
The possession of the batture by the city is for the purpose of administration,-is not inconsistent with a right of ownership in the riparian proprietor, and can not form the basis of an adverse title on which the city could maintain a plea of prescription to an action brought by such proprietor.
from the Second District Court of New Orleans, Lea, J.
Elmore & King, for plaintiff.
Livingston, for defendant and appellant.

Opinion:
Buchanan, J.
The plaintiff claimed in her original petition to be put in possession of a certain extent of batture in front of her property situated in the faubourg Delord, on the ground that the said extent of batture was not required for the use of the public, but was susceptible of private occupation and improvement. By a supplemental petition, she claimed that the corporation should be condemned to fill up certain excavations alleged to have been made in the batture herein claimed by plaintiff. The answer of the Municipality was a general denial. Pending this issue, Municipality No. Two merged in "the city of New Orleans," by the consolidation Act of 1852; and the new corporation, being made party defendant, filed an answer, claiming title to the batture in question, as locus publicm, and also by the prescriptions of ten, twenty and thirty years. There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the possession of the extent of batture claimed by her, and rejecting her demand for the filling up of the same at the expense of the city. The latter has appealed.
No question has been made, in the pleadings nor in the argument, of the right of an individual to bring such an action as the present one, in the year 1851, the date of the institution of this suit. This point might have caused some embarassment, for the cases of Packwood v. Walden, 7 New Series, and that of Henderson v. The Oity of Hew Orleans, in 5 Louisiana, are not altogether reconciliable with each other; but the Act of the Legislature of the 30th April, 1853, has relieved the cause of any difficulty on that score. By that Act, every riparian proprietor, within the limits of corporate towns in this State, is authorized to sue the corporation for the occupation of so much of the batture in front of his property as may not be necessary for public use; and the question of how much of the land is required for public use, is by that statute submitted to the arbitrament of the courts. It only remains, therefore, to determine, whether the plaintiff is entitled to the remedy given by the Act of 1853.
The first point made by appellant, is, that plaintiff has not shown herself to be a riparian proprietor, entitled to the alluvion formed by the deposits of the river.
The title of plaintiff has the following metes and bounds: " One hundred and eighty feet, French measure, front on the river Mississippi, and extending back and forming the like front on the New Levee street, bounded on the upper side by a street which is the prolongation of Suzette street, and on the lower side by the property now or lately belonging to the succession of Urbain Gaiennié, in front by the river Mississippi, and in the rear by the said New Levee street, together with the privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging or in any wise appertaining." This description clearly conveys, by right of accretion, the alluvial deposits opposite the lot conveyed. Civil Code, Art, 501. Morgan v. Livingston, 6 Mart., 216. Municipality No. Two v. Orleans Cotton Press, 18 L. R., 240.
The next point made by defendants, namely, that the batture is locuspublicus, and belongs to the city by destination, is a renewal of the pretentions set forth by the city in the case just quoted, of Municipality No. Two v. Orleans Cotton Press; and which were overruled, after the fullest argument, and the most mature consideration. See 18th L. R., 237. As to the claim by prescription, it results very clearly from the authorities above invoked, that the possession of the locus in guo by the city, was a possession simply for purposes of administration, not at all inconsistent with a right of ownership in the riparian proprietor, and destined in its nature, to terminate upon the happening of a certain contingency. Such a possession cannot be pleaded against the riparian proprietor, as the basis of an adverse title in the city. This suit is very different from a petitory action. The plaintiff does not sue the defendant as an usurper or trespasser. On the contrary, while asserting title in herself, she recognizes the legality of the possession and administration of the propertj7, which defendant has held to the present time, but claims that such possession should now cease, by reason .of the cessation of the condition on which alone it existed, to wit: its being necessary for public uses: and that the possession should be reunited to the naked ownership.
Upon the merits, the weight of evidence preponderates decidedly in favor of the plaintiff. It is established by proof, that a space of more than six hundred feet intervenes between the houses on Front street and low water mark. And none of the witnesses say that so much as half that space is necessary for the public use. The demand of the plaintiff to reclaim and possess for her own advantage, two hundred and forty foot, in breadth, of the batture in front of her property, appears to be reasonable and even moderate, under these circumstances.
As respects the claim on the part of the plaintiff, to have the excavations of the batture filled up at the expense of the city, we find nothing in the evidence which justifies the conclusion that the corporation has made any other excavation than such as it had a right to make, in taking earth for the construction of embankments, levees and wharves for the public use on the batture.
Judgment affirmed, w-ith costs.