Tile opinion of tlie Court was delivered by
Roché, J.The facts are as follows :
At a, sale for partition of a tract of land hitherto owned in indivisión by relator an dtho father of the respondents Lapeyiollerie, the parties hereto purchased two contiguous parcels of the land thus partitioned. With a view to establish proper boundaries between their respective estates they employed a competent surveyor, who found an excess of land beyond the quantity called for by their respective titles. That excess, which was a strip of land twenty feet in width, was awarded by the surveyor to the contiguous owners in proportion to their respective quantity of land as shown by their titles.
On the refusal of the relator, Livet, to accept tlie surveyor’s plan, suit was brought against him for the purpose of obtaining a judicial enforcement of the boundaries as settled by tlie surveyor. The trial in tlie District Court resulted in a judgment against plaintiffs, who thereupon took an appeal to the Court of Appeals.
In that court the relator herein, who was the appellee there, moved for a dismissal of the appeal on the ground that the jurisdiction of the cause belonged to the Supreme Court. His motion was overruled and the judgment appealed from was reversed.
In due .course execution was issued on tlie judgment of the Court of Appeals. Hence this application for a writ of prohibition, under the provisions of Article 853 of tlie Code of Practice. Tlie question of jurisdiction depends upon the determination of the precise matter in dispute between the parties to the original suit.
The counsel of both parties are ill accord that the action was one of boundary, and the record shows that tlie strip of land which the plaintiffs claimed under the surveyor’s report, and which tlie defendant refused to yield, was of the value of three hundred dollars. Relator’s contention is that the test of jurisdiction is the value of the two contiguous estates, which in this case- is shown to exceed two thousand dollars, and not in the value of tlie narrow stiip of land which may be the bone of contention between the parties; and Ms main reliance is on Articles 824 and 825 of the Civil Code, which assimilates the action *266of boundary to the action of partition. Hence he argues that, as in the action of partition the value of the whole estate1 is the tost of jurisdiction, so in an action of boundary the value of the two contiguous estates is the criterion of jurisdiction.
Under the two articles referred to, there arc only two features in common between the two actions. They are both derived from the same source; the principle that no one is bound to live in indivisión with another (Art. 824), and neither can be met by the plea of prescription. (Art. 825.) But in all other respects they are essentially and materially different.
The case in hand is a fair illustration of the, correctness of this proposition, and of the fallacy of relator’s contention. Before the partition sale the two estates were held in indivisión between Livet and the Lapeyrolleries. For the purpose of the partition the whole property was under the control of the court, and at the partition sale each estate went to the respective purchasers. When the owners, proceeded to establish their boundaries, which act was a necessary result of the partition, and when they differed as to the proper boundary, and went into court a second time, their respective titles which had been settled by the partition sale, were not before the court for its action, for there was no contest touching them. But the only matter submitted to the court for adjudication was the settlement of the boundary line which was to separate the two contiguous estates, or to determine what proportion of the surplus land discovered by the survey, was to accrue to each of the contiguous estates. Each of the purchasers at the partition sale was then and is yet in possession of all the land which his title calls for, hence the value of either or of both of the contiguous estates has ceased to be a factor in the litigation. Hence it follows that the only matter in dispute before the District Court, and on appeal therefrom, was that portion of the' twenty feet surplus land which the plaintiff claimed, and which is shown not to exceed three hundred dollars in value.
If it be true, as intimated by relator’s counsel, that the suit partook more of the nature of an action of partition than that of boundary, the property to be partitioned would be the strip of land twenty feet in width, and he does not even pretend that its value exceeds the jurisdiction of the Court of Api>eals. Hence that horn of the dilemma does not favor him. But if it be the action of boundary, on which point we entertain no doubt, the test of jurisdiction is in the value of the tract •of land included between the contested boundary lines.
*267'Fliis question came up in tlie case of Lombard vs. Belanger, 35 Ann. 311, and we there held, as we do now, that “the value of that portion of the adjacent estates wluoli would be involved by selecting either of the. contested lines as the true boundary line between the. two estates is the. real matter in dispute” in the action of boundary.
These considerations lead to the conclusion that the Court of Appeals did not err in maintaining their jurisdiction of the cause, and that therefore there is no ground for the writ of prohibition herein prayed for. It is therefore ordered that the alternative writ of prohibition issued herein be recalled and set aside, and that relator’s application be dismissed at his costs.