161 So. 19 | La. | 1935
This is a suit for partition of a tract of land having an area of 192 acres in Iberia parish. The plaintiff has a fifth interest in the land; one of the three defendants has three-tenths interest; and each of the two others has a fourth interest. The plaintiff alleged that the land could not be divided in kind without diminution of its value, and prayed for a partition by licitation. The defendants denied that the property could not be divided in kind without diminution of its value, and insisted that the court should order it divided in kind. The judge, after considering the report of two experts whom he appointed to investigate and advise upon the feasibility of dividing the property in kind, and having heard evidence from both sides on the subject, decided that the property could not be divided in kind without diminution of its value, and ordered it sold at public auction, for a division of the proceeds among the co-owners in the proportion of their interests in the property. The defendants have appealed from the decision. The only question is whether the joint ownership should be dissolved by a division of the land in kind or by a public sale of the land and a division of the price; and that question depends upon whether the land can be divided in kind without diminution of its value.
The defendants introduced in evidence on the trial of the case a map of the land, and suggested a plan of division which would give to each one of the coproprietors *60
his proportion in both area and value, approximately if not exactly, and suggested that, if there should be any differences in value, they would be only slight differences which might be compensated in money. That proposition is unavailing, because the plaintiff and the defendants do not agree, and cannot be compelled to agree, upon any particular part of the land to be alloted to the plaintiff for the one-fifth interest in the whole tract. Where a judicial partition of land is to be made by dividing it in kind, it must be divided into lots, of equal or nearly equal value, and the lots must be drawn by chance, and not selected, by the coproprietors. Hence the number of lots must be the lowest common multiple that will allow such a drawing of lots. Grouchy v. Williams,
The judgment is affirmed.