Altemus v. Boudreaux

184 So. 3d 142, 15 La.App. 3 Cir. 725, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 2669, 2015 WL 9311657
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 2015
DocketNo. 15-725
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 184 So. 3d 142 (Altemus v. Boudreaux) 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
Altemus v. Boudreaux, 184 So. 3d 142, 15 La.App. 3 Cir. 725, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 2669, 2015 WL 9311657 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

■ hHelene Jeanne Boudreaux, Faye Gui-dry Hebert, Shelby Guilbeau, and Michael Kidder, D/B/A Kidder Corporation, (collectively “Appellants”) appeal a trial court judgment granting Harvey Altemus a predial servitude of passage across Appellants’ property and declining to , award damages. Mr. Altemus owns property in St. Martin Parish that is bordered by a public borrow canal on one side but is otherwise surrounded by land of others. Since 1974, Mr.- Altemus has accessed his property by using a thirty-foot-wide wood trail (“the wood trail”) that crosses property now owned by Appellants. That use ended when Appellants. erected a fence across the wood trail and put up “No Trespassing*’ signs.

Mr. Altemus filed a petition for a declaratory judgment to establish a right of passage over Appellants’ property and property belonging to the State of Louisiana (“the State”) and Michael and Phyllis Marks (“Marks”). Before trial, Mr. Al-temus signed Joint Stipulation and Consent Judgment agreements (“Consent [144]*144Judgments”) with the State and Marks giving him permission to use the wood trail where it crossed their property. Evidence of the Consent Judgments was introduced after the trial court denied Appellants’ Motion in Limine and Motion to Strike (“Motion”).

After a trial on the merits, the trial court granted Mr. Altemus “a thirty (30") [sic] foot right of way and predial servitude of passage, known as the wood trail” across Appellants’ property. The court declined to award damages to either party. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

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ISSUES

We are entreated to decide:

1. whether the trial court erred in granting Mr. Altemus a predial servitude over Appellants’ property;
2. whether the trial court erred in denying Appellants’ Motion; and
3. whether the trial court erred in declining to award damages to Appellants.

II.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Harvey Altemus is a co-owner in indivi-sión of property in St. Martin Parish known as the Ovide Daigle, Sr., Estate (“the Daigle tract”). The Daigle tract abuts a public borrow canal but is otherwise completely surrounded by land belonging to Appellants, the State, and Marks. The Daigle tract has no direct access to Herman Dupuis Road, the public road nearest to the property, other than via the canal.

Atchafalaya Land Corporation (“Atchaf-alaya”) owned the property before conveying it to Appellants and the State. Beginning in 1974, Mr. Altemus was permitted to park on Marks’s property and access his property via a thirty-foot-wide wood trail that crossed Atchafalaya’s land. In 1998, Mr. Altemus learned of Atchafalaya’s plans to sell or donate the property surrounding the Daigle tract to the State. On May 1, 2000, Mr. Altemus and Atchafalaya executed an “Access Permit” that gave Mr. Al-temus permission to continue using the wood trail to access the Daigle tract. The Access Permit was not recorded in the public records. Atchafalaya then transferred land abutting the Daigle tract to the State. |sAtchafalaya also sold several parcels of the land bordering Herman Dupuis Road to Appellants or their ancestors in title. The sale to Appellant Boudreaux and her ancestors in title included reference to a “30' [sic] Right-of-Way and Servitude of Passage herein specifically and by operation of law reserved by the State of Louisiana as the dominant estate for the use by the general public[.]” The sales to Appellants Kidder Corporation, Guilbeau, and Hebert were made “subject to all easements, servitudes, restrictions, and rights-of-way of record and existing at the time of the execution of this, sale.”

Mr. Altemus continued using the wood trail after the land was transferred. In 2010, Appellant Boudreaux met Mr. Altem-us for the first time on the wood trail and afterward asked the State to cancel the Access Permit. The State complied and sent Mr. Altemus a letter cancelling the permit. Mr. Altemus then discovered that the Access Permit had never been recorded; he recorded it sometime in 2011. After the State cancelled the Access Permit, Appellant Boudreaux put up a fence where the wood trail crossed her property, blocking Mr. Altemus’s access to his property. Appellants Hebert and Guilbeau posted “No Trespassing” signs' on their property, blocking entrance to the wood trail.

[145]*145Mr. Altemus filed his first Petition- for Declaratory Judgment and for Damages (“Petition”) on September 4, 2013, naming Appellants and the' State as defendants and seeking recognition of a “30 foot- apparent servitude” and damages for interference with Mr. Altemus’s use of the servitude, Marks was joined in the suit when Mr. Altemus filed the “Second Supplemental and Amended Petition for Declaratory Judgment, for Damages,' and in the Alternative, for a Right of Passage.” Appellants responded that Mr. Altemus was entitled to neither an enclosed estate servitude nor a servitude by acquisitive prescription, and that the |4Access Permit did not establish a conventional predial servitude. The State and Marks, however, entered into Consent Judgments with Mr. Altemus. In response to those agreements, Appellants filed the Motion,1 which sought to strike the “execution, filing, re-cordation and/or as presentation of evidence” of the Consent Judgments.

After a trial on the merits, the court granted Mr. Altemus a “a thirty (30") [sic] foot right of way and predial servitude of passage, known as the wood trail” across Appellants’ property. In its Reasons for Judgment, the trial court indicated that the Daigle tract was an “enclosed tract” within the purview of La.Civ.Code art. 689 and that the estate had been sold to Appellants “subject to a ■... servitude of passage, thus creating a predial servitude of passage both legal and acquired by title.” Appellants filed a timely appeal, asserting that the trial court erred in granting Mr. Altemus any servitude, denying Appellants’ Motion, and failing to award Appellants damages under La.Civ.Code art. 689.

III.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Granting of a Predial Servitude

Appellants argue that the trial court erred in granting Mr. Altemus a predial servitude over Appellants’ property. Specifically, Appellants contend: 1) Mr. Al-temus’s property did not need passage over Appellants’ property as an enclosed estate because there was suitable alternate access; 2) Mr. Altemus did not | ^obtain a servitude through acquisitive prescription; and 3) Appellants did not acquire their property subject to a conventional predial servitude.

Appellants contend that since Mr. Altemus’s property can be accessed by a public borrow canal, there is no reason to burden Appellants’ property with a servitude. Louisiana Civil Code Article 689 provides that “[t]he owner of an estate that has no access to a public road or utility may claim a right of passage over neighboring property to the nearest public road or utility.” That right of passage “generally shall be taken along the shortest route from the enclosed estate to the public road or utility at the location least injurious to the intervening lands.” La. Civ.Code art.

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184 So. 3d 142, 15 La.App. 3 Cir. 725, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 2669, 2015 WL 9311657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altemus-v-boudreaux-lactapp-2015.