This is a petitory action. Plaintiff claims in virtue of a sheriff’s sale, of date the 21st September, 1840, made under executory process, in the suit of The Consolidated Association of the Planters of Louisiana v. Robert J. Walker, to foreclose a mortgage, granted by James Bowie, on the 15th June 1829, and assumed by Walker, the vendee of Bowie.
Defendants allege title in themselves by purchase from Adam Beatty, whom they call in warranty. Beatty calls in warranty his vendor A. A. Laforest. Laforest appears and defends the suit upon a title derived from Robert J. Walker, from whom Laforest purchased, on the 11th day of February 1853, “ all the right, title and interest of the said Robert J. Walker, to that tract of land confirmed in the name of Joseph Felice, containing about one league square, or eighty arpents front by forty deep on each side, including about six thousand four hundred arpents, situate on both sides of Bayou Dularge, sometimes called Bayou Buffalo, in the parish of Terrebonne and State of Louisiana.”
It is thus seen that both parties in this suit hold under the same author, Robert J. Walker. The defendants have alleged various grounds of nullity in the proceedings resulting in the sheriff’s sale under which plaintiff claims; but we see no reason to change the opinion which we expressed of the validity of that sale, in a suit of the warrantor, Laforest, against the present plaintiff, reported in 12th Annual 148.
In fact, the argument of this ease has turned principally upon the question of location of the land mortgaged by Bowie in 1829 to the Consolidated Bank, and seized and sold in 1840, as aforesaid.
Walker’s title to the land,sold by the sheriff vested in plaintiff’s vendor by that sale. The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to judgment, provided the land occupied by the defendants is covered by his title.
The description of the land in the Act of mortgage, is as follows:
“ A plantation, situated in the parish of Terrebonne, measuring seventy-five arpents on Bayou Boeuf, alias Bayou Du Large, on the left bank of said bayou, by forty arpents in depth; and fifty arpents front on the same bayou, on the right bank, by the same depth of forty arpents, bounded above by other lands belonging to said Bowie, and below by Mr. Edmund Hogan,' on the left bank, and by Mr. William Hargrove, on the right bank of the said Bayou; of which plantation there is now only a small number of arpents in cultivation, the greater part being in standing wood aud wild cane.”
James Bowie, when he granted this mortgage, was the holder, by purchase from the confirmees of two confirmations adjoining each other, on the Bayou Boeuf or Du Large; and which together formed a continuous front of one hundred and sixty arpents, by forty arpents in depth, on both sides of the said *115Bayou. The upper of them is known as the “ Gabon ” confirmation ; and the lower as the “ Felice ” confirmation.
Previously to his mortgage to the Bank, Bowie had carved the following portions out of the large body of land contained in the Gabon and Felice confirmations :
1st. 1827, April 12. By sale to William Hargrove, twenty-jive arpents front on the right bank of the Bayou, by forty arpents in-depth, to be taken from the lower side of the Gabon confirmation. .:
2d. 1828, November 26th. By sale to Thomas Love, twelve and a half arpents front on both sides of the Bayou, by the whole depth, to be taken off the upper half of the Gabon confirmation.
3d. 1828, November 26th. By sale to Thomas Hurst, five arpents front on the right bank of the Bayou, with the depth of the location, bounded above by the land sold on the same day to Thomas Love.
4th. 1828, December 22. To Edmund Hogan, five arpents front on each side of the Bayou, with forty in depth, bounded above by lands of James Bowie and below by vacant lands.
From the description in the conveyance to Hogan, taken in connection with the previous conveyances, it would seem that the proper location of the Hogan land, was at the lower extremity (by the course of the Bayou,) of the Felice confirmation ; and the evidence shows that Hogan and those claiming under him have occupied land thus located.
The three first named of these alienations of land by Bowie previous to the date of the mortgage, were therefore in the Gabon confirmation ; and the fourth, in the Felice confirmation ; and the interest of Bowie in the two confirmations united, at the date of the mortgage, would seem to have been as follows :
On the right bank, forty-two arpents and a half front, bounded by Thomas Hurst above, and by William Hargrove below ; and seventy-five arpents front, bounded by William Hargrove above, and by Edmund Hogan below.
On the left bank of the Bayou, one hundred and forty-two arpents and a half front, bounded by Thomas Love above, and by Edmund Hogan below.
The quantity of the land on the right bank in the Gabon confirmation was therefore less than the front called for by the mortgage by seven and a half arpents; but this portion of the land on the right bank is bounded below by Hargrove, and therefore agrees better with the calls of the mortgages than the land on the same side of the Bayou in the Felice confirmation. Besides, the land is described in the mortgage, as a plantation. But the only improvements upon the land of Bowie at that time, were at the north end, or in the Gabon tract. On the left side of the Bayou Boeuf, after the date of the mortgage, sold to John G. Banks twelve and a half arpents front, adjoining the land previously sold to Love at the upper or north end of the Gabon confirmation. This sale removed Bowie’s plantation to a distance of twenty-five arpents from the northern line of the confirmation. In order to give the quantity of seventy-five arpents on this side of the Bayou called for by the mortgage, it is, therefore, necessary to include twenty arpents of the front of the Felice confirmation, on the left or east side of the Bayou, to be taken off the northern extremity of the said confirmation, We are inclined to adhere to our decision in the former case (12 An.), that the tract mortgaged should be' taken from the northern end of Bowie’s land, rather than from the southern end adjoining Hogan’s line, for the reasons given in Laforest v. Barrow, and for the further reason, that the other location would *116sweep all the land held by all the defendants on that side of the Bayou : there being exactly seventy-five arpents in the Felice confirmation,’ north of Hogan’s line.
The counsel of plaintiff has incorrectly styled the sale of the sheriff to plaintiff, a sale per aversionem. The description of the land above given, has not the features of a sale of that kind. O. C. 2471.
Neither can the plaintiff be allowed, as contended by his counsel, to seek for the complement of his, quantity of land on the right bank of the Bayou, by overleaping the Hargrove tract, and taking- land below as well as above that tract. This would be directly contrary to the calls of his title, which gives William Hargrove’s line as the lower boundary, on the right bank of the Bayou, of the land mortgaged by James Bowie to the bank.
It is, therefore, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be avoided and reversed, as to the defendants, James F. Miller Nicholas Fhipps, and William F. Gray : — That the plaintiff, Robert R. Barrow recover of the said James S. Miller and Nicholas Fhipps, a tract of land having a front of twelve and a half arpents front on the left or east bank of the Bayou Dularge, by a depth of forty arpents, described in the petition, and occupied by said Miller and Fhipps — together with two-sixteenths of the costs of the District Court; that the said Miller and Phipps have judgment over their warrantor, Adam Beatty, rescinding and annulling the sale of the land from which said Miller and Phipps are evicted by this judgment; that said Miller and Phipps recover of said Adam Beatty, three hundred dollars, being the one-half of the instalment of interest on their purchase price, due and paid the 1st January 1856, and the 1st January 1857, together with their costs: That the plaintiff, Robert R. Barrow,- recover of William F. Gray, a tract of land described in the petition, and occupied by the said Gray, having a front of seven and a half arpents front on the left or east side of-the Bayou Du Large, by a depth of forty arpents — together with one-sixteenth of the costs of the District Court; that the said William F. Gray have judgment over against his warrantor, Adam Beatty, annulling and rescinding the sale to him by the said Beatty, of the portion of land from which said Gray is evicted by this judgment; that said Gray, moreover, recover from said Beatty, one hundred and eighty dollars, being fifteen-fiftieth of the interest on the purchase price of land, due and paid by said Gray to said Beatty on the 1st January 1856, and the 1st January 1857, and also the costs by said Gray herein expended ; that said Adam Beatty have judgment over against his warrantor Antoine A. Laforest, for the sum of twelve hundred and fifty dollars, being the one-eighth of the purchase price of the sale by said Laforest to said Beatty, of .the Felice confirmation — together with the said Beatty’s costs under this judgment; that as regards the defendants, Hubernille Arcenaux, Lange Frement, Jean Baptiste Boudreau, Clairville Guidry, Joseph B. Durey, A. E. Porche, Andre Brien, B. F. Haines, Maxilian Hebert, Joseph Marcellin Leblanc, Joseph Doudet, Joachim Bodreau; and C. Florentin Michel, the judgment of the District Court upon the verdict of the jury be affirmed ; that the plaintiff, Robert R. Barrow, pay thirteen-sixteenths of the costs of the District Court; and that, the costs of the appeal be paid, one-half by the appellant, and one-half by Antoine A. Laforest, the last warrantor and appellee. It is lastly decreed, that the question of improvements made by the defendants, Miller, Fhipps and Gray, upon the land from which they are evicted by this judgment, be reserved for further adjudication.