Broomfield v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.

623 So. 2d 1376, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2862, 1993 WL 366786
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 22, 1993
DocketNo. 25112-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 623 So. 2d 1376 (Broomfield v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.) 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
Broomfield v. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 623 So. 2d 1376, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2862, 1993 WL 366786 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

NORRIS, Judge.

Louisiana Power and Light (“LP & L”) appeals a judgment denying its reconventional demand for injunctive relief and declaring that its powerline servitude on the Broom-fields’ property was lost by 10 years of non-use. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual background

The property in question sits on the east side of U.S. Highway 167 near Dodson in Winn Parish. The highway right-of-way extends 50’ each way from the centerline of the road. The record does not say when it was built, but a barbed wire fence now stands on the east boundary of the highway right-of-way.

By eight separate instruments executed in 1955, LP & L acquired its powerline servitude from the then-owners of the property. Three of the instruments specified that the servitude would be 16' wide, measured from the edge of the highway right-of-way, and would run parallel with and adjacent to the east side of the highway. These three instruments also granted LP & L the right to construct, operate and maintain electric transmission lines, including poles, wires and other appurtenances, and “to trim and cut trees and other growth so as to keep the wires cleared upon, over and across” the property. The other five instruments did not state the width of the servitude, but at the hearing for preliminary injunction Mr. W.R. Roberts Jr., LP & L’s senior right-of-way agent, testified that the original servitude was 16'. Supp., 4. These five instruments also gave LP & L the right to trim not only foliage on the servitude itself but “to cut any [1377]*1377trees that in failing would reach the wires.” In accord with these instruments, LP & L installed an 8 Kv transmission line. The poles supporting this line sat a foot or two to the east.of the highway right-of-way, inside the fence and on the subject property.

By five separate instruments dated 1956, 1959 and 1967, Mr. and Mrs. Broomfield' bought the property. Mrs. Broomfield testified that when they did so, the transmission line and poles were inside the fence. In May 1968 the Broomfields applied to LP & L for electric service. To provide this LP & L added a pole, which it refers to as a “dual purpose” pole, along the powerline. This pole diverted a service line across the ser-vient estate to the Broomfields’ house and also helped to hold up the transmission line.

In 1972, to service a plant north on Hwy. 167, LP & L decided to upgrade its transmission line to 13 Kv. According to Mr. Roberts, this required an extra 15' of servitude to maintain line clearance from the trees. LP & L asked the property owners along the highway to grant this, and all agreed except the Broomfields, with whom LP & L could not come to terms. LP & L installed the new line, but moved its existing transmission poles a few feet to the west, in front of the Broomfields’ property. After this, the transmission line and all its supporting poles have stood outside the fence and off the servitude area. The service pole, however, remains inside the fence, without holding up the transmission line. It supports only the service line to the Broomfields’ house. Since 1972, no transmission line has passed over, or transmission pole stood upon, the servitude area.

The only point of genuine dispute at trial was what the parties did over the next 16 years. The Broomfields planted a large stand of pine trees several feet back from the fence. See the photos, Ex. LP & L-7 in globo. These obviously grew and the limbs would tend to reach the transmission line. Mr. Roberts testified that his men inspected the entire line once or twice a year and never found, until January 1988, that the trees posed any danger to the line. R.p. 55. Mrs. Broomfield, however, testified that LP & L did nothing, and it was her husband who trimmed the branches and cleared the brush periodically to protect the line. R.p. 49.

After the freeze of January 1988, LP & L sent a crew to trim pine branches along the line. Although the Broomfields protested, the crew trimmed branches from several of their trees. Mrs. Broomfield claimed that 38 trees were thus “damaged,” though LP & L’s timber expert, Mr. Merlin Smith, counted that only 26 trees were trimmed. LP & L’s maintenance foreman, Mr. Jerry Smith, admitted that the crew trimmed the entire 16' servitude plus a little beyond. R.p. 57. Mrs. Broomfield called the sheriff when LP & L showed up to do some more trimming. Mr. Broomfield had a heart attack and died about two weeks later.

Procedural history

Mrs. Broomfield and her children filed suit in January 1989 seeking damages for the trimmed trees. LP & L reconvened, seeking an injunction to keep the Broomfields from interfering with their tree trimming, or a declaratory judgment to interpret the 1955 servitude agreements. In March 1989, after a hearing, the trial court granted LP & L a preliminary injunction, but allowed it to cut only “directly above and west of the Broom-field fence and around the service pole.” R.p. 17. LP & L then moved for a partial summary judgment to declare that it could trim and cut the entire 16' servitude area. Summary judgment was not pursued; trial on the merits was held in February 1991.

By written reasons the trial court took up the reconvention first. The court quoted the 1955 servitude agreements; these granted LP & L the right to construct “transmission lines, including poles, wires and other appurtenances.” However, the' court found that poles are really just an accessory to the right to transmit electric power. Hanks v. Gulf States Util., 253 La. 946, 221 So.2d 249, 251 (1969). The court found that the one service pole on the servitude area of the Broomfields’ property since 1972 did not amount to use of the servitude for 10 years. La.C.C. art. 753. The court also rejected any application of the doctrine of St. Julien v. Morgan La. & Texas R., 35 La.Ann. 924 (1883), because LP & L did not prove the [1378]*1378requisite occupation of the Broomfields’ property. Finally, the court dismissed the Broomfields’ principal claim, finding inadequate proof of damages.

Strictly speaking, the judgment only rejects LP & L’s claim for injunctive relief and declaratory judgment (as well as the Broom-fields’ claim for damages), but in effect it declares the servitude lost to nonuse. LP & L has appealed.

Applicable law

A predial servitude is defined as a charge on a servient estate for the benefit of a dominant estate. La.C.C. art. 646.1 A predial servitude is extinguished by nonuse for 10 years. La.C.C. art. 753. Under current law, a powerline servitude is defined as an “affirmative servitude” as it gives the owner of the dominant estate the right to do a certain thing, transmit electricity, on the servient estate. La.C.C. art. 706. For an affirmative servitude, prescription of nonuse begins to run from the date of its last use. La.C.C. art. 754. Under prior law, a power-line servitude was classified as a “discontinuous servitude,” as it required an act of man to be exercised. La.C.C. art. 727 (1870); Lake v. Louisiana Power & Light, 330 So.2d 914 (La.1976). The nonuse of a discontinuous servitude began “from the day they ceased to be used.” La.C.C. art. 790 (1870).

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Bluebook (online)
623 So. 2d 1376, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2862, 1993 WL 366786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broomfield-v-louisiana-power-light-co-lactapp-1993.