Alfred Ray Hatch v. Jerry Michael Watkins and the Lamar Companies

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 2024
DocketCA-0024-0042
StatusUnknown

This text of Alfred Ray Hatch v. Jerry Michael Watkins and the Lamar Companies (Alfred Ray Hatch v. Jerry Michael Watkins and the Lamar Companies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred Ray Hatch v. Jerry Michael Watkins and the Lamar Companies, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

24-42

ALFRED RAY HATCH VERSUS JERRY MICHAEL WATKINS AND

THE LAMAR COMPANIES

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APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. C-2019-7972 HONORABLE THOMAS JAMES FREDERICK, DISTRICT JUDGE

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D. KENT SAVOIE JUDGE

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Court composed of Shannon J. Gremillion, D, Kent Savoie, and Van H. Kyzar, Judges. aT ry yh

REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED. Ralph E., Kraft

Bryan E. Lege

Kraft Lege, LLC

600 Jefferson St., Ste. 410

Lafayette, LA 70501

(337) 706-1818

COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Alfred Ray Hatch

Emile Joseph, Jr.

Robert A. Robertson

Allen & Gooch, A Law Corporation

P.O. Box 81129

Lafayette, LA 70598-1129

(337) 291-1310

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Jerry Michael Watkins

Michael D. Hebert

James P. Doherty, II

Jeremy A. Hebert

Daniel J. Gauthier

Becker & Hebert, LLC

201 Rue Beauregard

Lafayette, LA 70508

(337) 233-1987

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: The Lamar Companies SAVOIE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Alfred Ray Hatch (“Hatch”), appeals the trial court’s judgment granting Defendants’ motion for involuntary dismissal and dismissing Hatch’s claims. For the following reasons, we reverse in part and remand for additional proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Hatch owns a 2.47-acre tract of land in Lafayette Parish. Defendant, Michael Jerry Watkins (““Watkins”),! owns a 1.27-acre tract of land contiguous to and east of Hatch’s property. In approximately February 2019, Watkins began a construction project to enlarge a commercial building on his property and expand the parking lot to the west of the building. Specifically, the parking lot was expanded to cover a ditch where drainage culverts had been installed by Watkins in 2015. In May or June of 2019, Hatch made several complaints to the local police department that Watkins and/or construction personnel were impermissibly on his property, and the police requested paperwork showing the property lines.

Hatch had the property surveyed in September 2019. The survey identified the boundary line between the eastern portion of Hatch’s property and the western portion of Watkins’s property. It further indicated that a portion of the parking lot on Wakins’s property encroached onto Hatch’s property. The survey also indicated that the center pole of a billboard structure bisected the boundary line such that a portion of it encroached onto Hatch’s property. Both the encroaching parking lot

and billboard are located in the area where the drainage ditch is.

! Watkins is referred to as “Jerry Michael Watkins” in the Petition; however, at trial, and in other proceedings in this matter, he is identified as Michael Jerry Watkins. The billboard structure was originally constructed in 2006 by Gordon Outdoor Advertising, who had a lease with Watkins.2, The lease granted an easement to Gordon for the construction and use of an outdoor advertising sign on a portion of Wakins’ property, with the “center pole located 10 feet south of the northem most property line and forty five feet west of the eastern most property line.” It further contemplated rent in the amount of $3,000.00 per year.

The Lamar Companies (“Lamar”) acquired the billboard structure from Gordon in 2007. According to Lamar, the structure is approximately thirty-six to forty feet high, with four advertising ‘“‘faces” that are elevated at varying heights. Two of the billboard’s advertising “faces” face north, and the other two face south.

On December 30, 2019, Hatch filed a Petition for Damages against Watkins and Lamar. Hatch alleged that Watkins caused the construction of improvements that encroached onto Hatch’s property, that Wakins allowed construction personnel to use Hatch’s property without permission, and that Watkins “caused or permitted deposits of refuse and construction material to be deposited on and which still remain on Hatch’s property.” Hatch’s petition further alleges that Watkins is liable to Hatch “for damages . . . including, but not limited to the continuing trespass and encroachment.”

Hatch’s petition also alleges that the base of Lamar’s billboard structure “and advertising caisson encroach, without permission, on the Hatch property, and violates the airspace above Hatch’s property.” It further alleges that Lamar is liable to Hatch for “damages . . . including, but not limited to the continuing trespass and

encroachment.”

2 A copy of the lease was submitted into evidence during trial. While Hatch’s petition seeks damages against Watkins and Lamar arising from the alleged encroachments and trespass, it does not seek the removal of the encroachments, seek a determination of the properties’ boundary lines, or otherwise assert a real action contemplated by La.Code Civ.P. arts. 3651-3753.

A two-day bench trial was held beginning September 18, 2023. During trial, the parties stipulated that a 1,140 square-foot area of the parking lot to the west of Watkins’s building encroaches onto the eastern portion of Hatch’s property. Watkins also testified that the parking lot to the west of his building contains between ten and fifteen parking spaces, with four to five of those spaces on the portion of the parking lot that encroaches onto Hatch’s property. Hatch testified that he did not give Watkins permission to utilize any portion of his property for the parking lot or otherwise.

The parties also stipulated that Lamar’s billboard has an above ground encroachment onto Hatch’s property of 206.33 square feet, which includes a 1.95 square foot portion of the billboard’s base, or pole. Lamar continues to use the structure and sell advertising space to its clients. Hatch testified that he does not have a lease agreement with Lamar and has not otherwise given Lamar permission to utilize any portion of his property.

Following Hatch’s presentation of his case at trial, Watkins and Lamar asserted a joint motion for involuntary dismissal, which the trial court ultimately granted. In its oral reasons for ruling, the trial court noted the parties’ stipulation regarding the encroaching parking lot and billboard structure onto Hatch’s property; however, it ultimately concluded that Hatch failed to prove that the presence of the encroachments constituted a trespass. The trial court also concluded that Hatch

failed to prove damages arising from the construction personnel’s alleged use and storage of construction materials on his property during Watkins’s construction project and also that Hatch “failed to prove damages caused by the agreed upon encroachment.”

Hatch appeals and asserts the following as assignments of error:

A. The [trial] [cJourt committed legal error in holding that there was an encroachment but no trespass where there was an undisputed unlawful physical invasion of the Hatch Property by both the Lamar Companies and Michael Jerry Watkins.

B. The [trial] [cJourt committed legal error in finding no trespass thereby pretermitting a ruling on damages for trespass.

C. The [trial] [c]ourt committed legal error and/or abused its discretion in granting Defendants’, The Lamar Companies and Miachel Jerry Watkins, Motion in Limine regarding Plaintiff's ability to present evidence of a loss of revenue as an element of damages for trespass.

D. The [trial] [c]ourt committed manifest error in granting Defendants’, the Lamar Companies and Michael Jerry Watkins, Motion for Involuntary Dismissal.

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