Burgess-Blanchard v. Sciacca

819 So. 2d 352, 2001 La.App. 4 Cir. 0891, 2002 La. App. LEXIS 565, 2002 WL 341608
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 2002
DocketNo. 2001-CA-0891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 819 So. 2d 352 (Burgess-Blanchard v. Sciacca) 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
Burgess-Blanchard v. Sciacca, 819 So. 2d 352, 2001 La.App. 4 Cir. 0891, 2002 La. App. LEXIS 565, 2002 WL 341608 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinions

| ¶ KIRBY, Judge.

This is an action for a permanent injunction against defendant’s interference with the plaintiffs alleged right to use an alley that was designated as separate from the other three lots in the act of subdivision. Plaintiffs appeal the judgment of the trial court that granted defendant the right to use the alley. On appeal we find that the trial court erred in not giving meaning to the term common alley found in the act of subdivision of the property. Therefore, we reverse.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

Three properties in a subdivision abut a common alley. In 1999 one of the three property owners unilaterally claimed the common alley as her own, and obstructed [353]*353her neighbors’ use of the alley. Her actions triggered the other property owners to bring this lawsuit.

The parties to the suit are the current owners of three lots, located on the corner of Pleasant and Prytania Streets in New Orleans’ Garden District. Robin and Terrence Blanchard (the Blanchards) have co-owned 3225 Prytania Street |2(Lot A) since 1995, and Robert Martinez (Martinez) has owned 1521 Pleasant Street (Lot C) since 1990. The defendant, Heydie K. Sciacca (Sciacca), purchased 3219-21 Prytania Street (Lot B), a four-plex apartment property in 1996. An alley separates the Blanchards’ and Martinez’s properties (between Lot A and Lot C). The alley begins at Pleasant Street and travels the length of Lot A and a portion of Lot C, and ends at the rear of Lot B. The alley is designated as a common alley in the original 1886 subdivision documents, and in each neighbor’s chain of title.

Beginning in 1996, Sciacca (Lot B) began erecting gates and fences enclosing the alley and limiting her neighbors’ access. In 1999, after a dispute between the owners, Sciacca completely fenced off the alley, making it inaccessible to the Blanch-ards (Lot A) and Martinez (Lot C). Sciac-ca also parked her cars in the alley, without her neighbors’ permission, obstructing their use of the property. Sciacca also took other actions in violation of the neighbors’ property rights, all of which are the subject of this lawsuit.

THE ORIGINAL SUBDIVISION AND CREATION OF THE COMMON ALLEY

In May 1886 Crescent Insurance Company (Crescent), the original owner of the undivided parcel, subdivided the parcel into three lots 1. The Crescent corporate resolution provided in part:

|sThat the portion of ground belonging to this Company, situated and forming the corner of Prytania & Pleasant Streets, in the .... [illegible] .... bounded by Prytania, Pleasant[,] St. Charles and Harmony Streets, be subdivided into three portions of ground, one, there forming the corner of Prytania and Pleasant Streets, and measuring 60 feet front on Prytania Street by 144 feet in depth and front on Pleasant Street [Lot A], with an alley in its rear ten feet and opening on Pleasant Street, common to it and the other portions of ground; another measuring 60 feet front on Prytania Street by 144 in depth, with the use of the aforesaid alley [Lot B]; and another measuring 60 feet front on Pleasant Street by 120 in depth, with the use of said alley.

Crescent’s surveyor, J.F. Braun, confirmed this plan of subdivision in his May 25, 1886, survey (hereinafter the Braun Survey), which depicted all of Lots A, B, and C. In June and July 1886 Crescent sold the three subdivided lots of the parcel, designating as Lots A, B, and C. Crescent did not sell a fourth lot measuring 10 by 60 feet, but designated this lot as a common alley for the benefit of the owners of Lots A, B, and C, whose properties abutted the alley.

Crescent initially sold the subdivided lots via the following acts:

Lot A to Eureka Homestead Society, on July 15,1886: the legal description provided that Lot A is bounded in the rear by an alley ten feet wide, opening on Pleasant Street and common to said lot and others....

Lot B to James Anderson, on June 5, 1886: the legal description provided that the lot was being sold ... .with the use of an alley, ten feet wide, opening on Pleas[354]*354ant Street, common to the said lot and others delineated on said [Braun Survey] sketch....

Lot C to John W. Kearney, June 5,1886, also describing the alley as common to Lot

C.

\tTHE LOTS’ CHAINS OF TITLE

Numerous subsequent acts of sale and surveys of the three lots contained language consistent with the original descriptions. Lot B (currently owned by Sciacca). includes several transactions where Sciac-ca’s predecessors-in-title acknowledged the equivalent servitude rights of Lots A and C to the common alley. These public record acknowledgments included transactions occurring in 1960 and 1986. Even when Sciacca purchased Lot B in 1996, the deed of sale referred to the Braun Survey depicting Lots A, B, and C, and described the alley as common to it and others, delineated on said sketch.

Also in Lot B’s chain of title is the 1960 affidavit of Sciacca’s predecessor-in-title, Charles Heuer Succession representative Francis P. Burns. To facilitate the 1960 auction sale of Lot B, Burns gave an affidavit (the Burns affidavit) and stated:

That, commencing with said act of sale, on June 6, 1886, the right to use said common alley by lots ABC has continued uninterruptedly up to the present date.

LOT OWNERS’ USE OF THE ALLEY

There is proof in the record that the three lot owners made use of the alley up to the date of the 1960 Burns’ Affidavit, and afterwards, even though it appears that the majority of the use was by the owners of Lot B.

The house on Lot C sits very close to the alley and has an entryway within three feet of the alley boundary. Mildred Baldwin, the daughter of prior Lot C owner Mildred Lemann, submitted two affidavits. One prompted by the defense attorneys, and the latter by plaintiffs’ attorneys. Naturally, the result was two conflicting affidavits. The first was drafted by the defense attorneys and stated that [ B“no use whatsoever was made of the alley.” The second, and latter affidavit, stated that Ms. Lemann received deliveries at the alley side door during the time that she lived there. Mr. Martinez (who purchased Lot C from Lemann’s Estate) gave testimony that, from that time until Sciacca closed off the alley in late 1999, he made regular and unchallenged use of the common alleyway.

Likewise, there was testimony that Robin and Terence Blanchard (Lot A), as well as their predecessors-in-title, maintained their fence and property. In the record there is also deposition testimony that Lot A’s owners placed a pool drainage pipe under the alley.

It is not contested that Ms. Sciacca has a right to use the alley. In fact she and her predecessors in title have made numerous uses of the alley. Although Ms. Sciacca may have used the alley to park her car, the alley does not provide her a right of passage pursuant to La. Civ.Code art. 689,2 because her property is not enclosed within the meaning of that article since she has access from Prytania Street.

Beginning soon after Ms. Sciacca purchased Lot B in March 1996, she began enclosing the common alley to restrict access by her neighbors, the Blanchards and Martinez.

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819 So. 2d 352, 2001 La.App. 4 Cir. 0891, 2002 La. App. LEXIS 565, 2002 WL 341608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-blanchard-v-sciacca-lactapp-2002.