delivered the opinion of the court.
The petition sets.forth, that a tract of land on the bayou Lafourche, having a front of six arpents and twelve toises, with the ordinary depth, was confirmed to the widow of Fabien Bourg, in conformity to a survey made in 1790, by order of Governor Miro; by which survey it appears that the side lines of the tract closed or converged nearly six degrees. That the widow Bourg, immediately after the confirmation, sold to Baptiste Fabien Bourg two arpents front of the said tract, with the ordinary depth ; that Duhon afterwards purchased from Bourg, and that in 1833, the petitioner became the purchaser of the same at the public sale of the succession of Duhon. The petitioner complains that the defendant, Hymel, who owns the residence of the original tract, has illegally taken possession of a part of his land thus acquired, and he prays that a survey may be ordered, and that he may be adjudged to be the proprietor of eighty superficial arpents, having a front of two by a depth of forty arpents; and he prays the necessary process to put him in possesion and fix his boundaries.
The defendant answered by a general denial and pre-cripdon. The case appeared to have been tried by three successive juries, whose verdicts were uniformly for the defendant, two new trials having been allowed by the court, on the ground that the verdicts were contrary to law and evidence. On the last, however, a judgment having been pronounced, the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
Our first inquiry must be how much land did the plaintiff acquire at the public sale of the estate of Duhon, for if he purchased eighty superficial arpents, he is entitled to recover that -amount, unless the defendant exhibits a better title or sustains his plea of prescription.
where the to be of a piantation two avpents front by fort* ar-verging" the purchaser does not acquire ciaiharpentsPina [ai0alle¿ySraf™,ty arpents. In acüons of ding^Hne ^img established between thp parties, and referred ^¿a/of saieof plaintiff'".m be taken as the ¿rence0to" run-mng ? new more m accord-«nee with ^the c"es, and which ^larger boundary.The description of the tract of land in the proems verbal of sale, which is signed by the plaintiff, is as.follows: “Une habitation de deux arpens de face sur quarante de profon-deur, bornée d’en haut par Gabriel Hymel, et par' en bas par Dr. Williamson, les ligues fermant, etc.” The expression “les< ligues femiant,” by which we understand that the side lines converged or approached each other as they recede from the _ i-, , , . ... front, cannot be'rejected as surplusage, and it necessarily follows, that the plaintiff understood at the time, that he was buying, in fact, less than a superficies of eighty arpen ts. T . , , ’ „ r . , , . . It is true the degree of convergence is not stated, but it is enough that the purchasers did not acquire a parallelogram of two by forty arpen ts. The action, therefore, as. relates to the defendant, is essentially one of homage, and the only difficulty consists in fixing a division line between the parties who appeared to be owners in the different proportions of the same original tract, confirmed to the widow of Fabien Bourg.
It appears that the side lines of the whole tract, as originally surveyed, converged six degrees, and perhaps the most equitable division would be such a line as would give to each party such proportion of the superficies, as each one’s share of the front bears to the whole Font. If the question were res nova, it would appear to us that the line A B on the plat, accompanying tile procos verbal of the surveyor, who acted under ,an order of court, would be the most equitable; but we are bound to inquire how far a long acquiescence, in a line slightly variant from that, to wit: A C, has settled the rights of the parties to this controversy. 01 J
The evidence shows that two boundary posts exist on the line A C, which the defendant insists is the division line; that there is also a lane running back, and dividing the land as claimed by the defendant, and that he, and those under whom he holds, have been in possession about fifteen years, during which period the lane has existed as it now is. J 3 .0 r
How far this was originally a conventional line, we are not informed, but that it had been acquiesced in for many years before the plaintiff purchased, is beyond doubt. That part of the Louisiana Code which treats of the fixing of the *186limits of land, establishes as a principle, that when both parties acquired title (from a common proprietor, the preference shall be given ti him whose title is the most ancient, unless an adverse possession for a time sufficient to establish prescription has produced a difference in the situation of the > parties. Article 843.
So, where a person purchases an indefinite quantity, he can-notclaimbeyond a line which existed long* before hispurchase,and which is referred to in the description and procés verbal of sale.We think, therefore, the jury was warranted in concluding that the plaintiff, having purchased an indefinite quantity, could not claim beyond a line which existed long before his purchase, and that the description of the plantation in the inventory and in the prods verbal of sales, referred to the existing lane and division line, as they had remained for fifteen years.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.