
    5279.
    (Court of Appeal, Parish of Orleans).
    JOSEPH HASEMAN vs. ANNA ZARDE.
    In a petitory action, it is the market or intrinsic value of the property in dispute that determines the Court’s jurisdiction, and .not any special value which plaintiff may place upon it, by virtue of the particular circumstances of the case.
    Appeal from the Civil District Court, Division “E.”
    O. S. Livaudais, for plaintiff and appellant.
    Henriques & Duchamp, for defendant and appellee.
    E. J. Meral, attorney.
   GODCHAUX, J.

This-hase was before us on a prior occasion, and on a motion to dismiss the appeal was remanded to the. lower Court for the sole purpose of determining the value of the property in dispute (Haseman vs. Zarde, 8 Court of Appeal, p. 310). The testimony adduced on the remand of the case is now before us, and it ■discloses that -the market or intrinsic- value of the strip of land in controversy, based upon the selling price of similar property in that locality, is in the neighborhood of $60.00. It is contended, however, that the property, has a value peculiar to- the appellant, exceeding the s'uni of $150..00, by-reason of the fact that without this strip the shutters or blinds of the house located on' appellant’s property cannot be opened to their fullest extent; and by reason of the further fact that the loss of this stiip will reduce appellant’s property to an unmarketable width of twenty-seven feet.

November 20, 1911,

The latest expression of our Supreme Court upon this subject is to the effect that for jurisdictional purposes the market value alone of the property in dispute is to be considered, and not any special value which plaintiff may place upon it, by virtue of the peculiar circumstances of the ease,

Gasquet vs. Conway, 116 La., 709.

It does not appear that the matter in controversy is within our appellate jurisdiction, and, accordingly, the appeal is dismissed.

Appeal dismissed.

(Note. — The original opinion remanding this case appears in Yol. 8, page 310.)  