Atkins v. Six C Properties, L.L.C.

55 So. 3d 120, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1508, 2010 WL 4336101
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 2010
Docket45,682-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 So. 3d 120 (Atkins v. Six C Properties, L.L.C.) 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
Atkins v. Six C Properties, L.L.C., 55 So. 3d 120, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1508, 2010 WL 4336101 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

CARAWAY, J.

hThe plaintiff owns a 10-acre rural tract of land completely surrounded by the property of defendant. When the defendant erected an 8-foot fence surrounding plaintiffs property, plaintiff instituted suit seeking to have the fence declared a nuisance and requiring its removal. The trial judge ruled in favor of plaintiff on the issue of nuisance and ordered the fence removed. This appeal by defendant ensued. For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court’s finding of nuisance. Nevertheless, we remand the case since the trial court’s ruling did not completely adjudicate the landowners’ boundary and access issues also raised by the evidence.

Facts

In 2002, Robert Michael Atkins (“Atkins”) purchased an approximately 10-acre rural tract of land in Winn Parish, described as the South Half of the North Half of the Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 11, Township 11 North, Range 1 West. The land not only had sentimental value to Atkins as family property, but also served as a recreational tract for deer and wild hog hunting. All of the property surrounding Atkins’ tract of land is owned by Six C Properties, L.L.C. (“Six C”), which owned between 30,000 and 40,000 acres of land. Atkins had access to his property by a private road owned by Six C located on Six C property near the eastern end of the Atkins property.

Approximately four years after Atkins purchased the tract, Six C erected an 8-foot fence to surround 27,000 acres of its land including the Atkins tract. The fence completely surrounded the entirety of Atkins’ property, but had two gates on the eastern side of Atkins’ 12property along the road. When conflict over this fence arose, Atkins obtained the following survey:

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The survey indicated that the Six C fence encroached on a portion of the eastern side of the Atkins tract. The survey also reflected that the access road was located a short distance from the western boundary of Atkins’ tract and thus required Atkins to traverse Six C property in order to gain access to the road. On August 2, 2007, Atkins instituted a petition for possession, damages, treble damages, termination of nuisance and trespass. Atkins prayed for judgment recognizing his right to possess that portion of the tract Isover which the fence allegedly encroached and damages for removal of trees thereon by Six C, alleging that “he and his ancestors in title have had possession of the immovable property in question for more than thirty (30) years.” Six C filed a reconventional demand seeking the fair market value of trees removed, cut, destroyed or damaged “on the property of the Answering Defendant” or from that portion of its property between the Atkins tract and the road, treble damages under La. R.S. 3:4278.1 and attorney’s fees.

Prior to trial, the parties stipulated to Atkins’ ownership of the tract, Six C’s ownership of the entirety of the property surrounding the tract and that Atkins’ tract was surrounded completely by the 8-foot fence with a gate at the front of the *124 property. At trial, Atkins’ surveyor testified to the correctness of the survey. He testified that part of the Six C fence encroached on the Atkins tract.

Atkins testified that he purchased the tract in 2002 because he wanted to keep it in his family and for hunting because it was a “hot spot” for deer. Atkins’ grandfather bought the tract in the forties or fifties and it had sentimental value to Atkins. Atkins had spent some of his childhood on the tract with his uncle and had visited the property on an annual basis. Atkins testified that the hunting was good on the property because it was an old ridge, and there was a good food source for the deer. He stated, however, that the property lost its hunting value since the erection of the fence because of the lack of access by the deer to the property. According to Atkins, there’s “no hunting to it.” The deer enter the tract through the gates, |4which were “half the time” closed but could not figure out how to get out through the gates. Atkins identified two photographs which depicted dead deer which had been trapped inside his property and killed by coyotes. Atkins stated that it would be impossible to hunt deer with dogs on the 10-acre tract.

Atkins also testified that the fence forced him to travel thirteen miles to get to his property on the west side instead of two-and-one-half miles from the east. He claimed that this was because the “main outside” fence “cut me off from the old ridge road that I used to go to the property on.” Atkins testified that he only learned of the fence after its construction.

Atkins testified that when he was a teenager he had a conversation with his uncle regarding the “rear” boundary of the tract of land. He recalled that his uncle told him that a timber company began cutting trees “off the back and moved the line to the front.” Atkins testified that his survey moved the eastern boundary back to “where it was when [he was] a kid,” but that for fifty years the property line for this piece of property was basically where the fence was placed by Six C.

An expert forester, Mike Albritton, testified for Atkins regarding the market value of the timber on Atkins’ lot. In his opinion, Albritton estimated that the value of the timber removed from one-quarter acres of Atkins’ land was $500.00.

Steve Gleason, a forester for Six C, was called to testify by both parties. Gleason testified that no survey of the property was done before Six C erected the fence and that the best use of the Six C property was for | r,forestry. Gleason testified that the Six C property had been used by timber leasing companies over the years and that the property had been used for timber production in excess of forty or fifty years. Gleason testified that part of his duties as forester was consideration of wildlife on the property. Gleason stated that hogs had damaged Six C’s property. Gleason also testified that the fence was put up due to liability concerns, trespass and timber management. Gleason knew of many occasions of trespass on the property which raised fire concerns. Gleason agreed that the fence around the Atkins property made it virtually useless for deer hunting. He also admitted that he would not lease the property for deer hunting. Gleason estimated that the value of the fifty stumps removed by Atkins from the front of his property that belonged to Six C was in the $500.00 range.

Finally, Terry Carr, who worked for one of the Six C owners, testified that he managed the wildlife on Six C’s property and took care of the roads. Carr discussed a “game pen” covering 1200 acres of Six C’s property for which Six C has obtained a deer farm permit. The 1200 acres did not involve the area around the Atkins proper *125 ty. Carr testified that Six C obtained a permit for the deer with the Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission which inspects the operations. The Louisiana Department of Agriculture issued the permits for the fencing of the 1200 acres.

After hearing all of the testimony and considering the evidence presented by both sides, the trial court adopted the survey submitted by Atkins and ruled that Six C’s fence encroached on the eastern side of Atkins’ property and disturbed his possession of the land.

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55 So. 3d 120, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1508, 2010 WL 4336101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkins-v-six-c-properties-llc-lactapp-2010.