Caffery Alexander v. Michael Rene Maddox

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 2007
DocketCA-0006-1087
StatusUnknown

This text of Caffery Alexander v. Michael Rene Maddox (Caffery Alexander v. Michael Rene Maddox) 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
Caffery Alexander v. Michael Rene Maddox, (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

06-1087

CAFFERY ALEXANDER

VERSUS

MICHAEL RENE MADDOX, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. MARTIN, NO. 66857 HONORABLE KEITH RAYNE JULES COMEAUX, DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Sylvia R. Cooks, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Alfred Frem Boustany, II P. O. Box 4626 Lafayette, LA 70502 Telephone: (337) 261-0225 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellant - Caffery Alexander

Stanford B. Gauthier, II 1405 West Pinhook Road - Suite 105 Lafayette, LA 70503 Telephone: (337) 234-0099 COUNSEL FOR: Defendants/Appellees - Michael Rene Maddox and Paul Fred Champagne Thibodeaux, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, Caffery Alexander (Mr. Alexander), appeals the judgment of

the trial court awarding tracts of land to the defendants, Michael Rene Maddox (Mr.

Maddox) and Paul Fred Champagne (Mr. Champagne), because Mr. Champagne and

Mr. Maddox and their ancestors had open, uninterrupted possession of the land within

visible boundaries for thirty years or more, thereby satisfying all of the legal

requirements for acquisitive prescription. For the following reasons, we affirm the

judgment of the trial court.

I.

ISSUE

Mr. Alexander presents three questions for review by this Court:

1. Did the district court commit manifest error by awarding specific tracts of land to Mr. Champagne and Mr. Maddox, finding that they had met all of the elements required to acquire immovable property by acquisitive prescription?

2. Did the trial court commit manifest error in choosing the plat of surveyor Mohammad Borazjani to set the boundaries between the two parties?

3. Did the trial court commit manifest error by ruling that Mr. Alexander had not met the elements required to reacquire the property in question by way of acquisitive prescription of ten years?

II.

FACTS

Mr. Alexander and Mr. Maddox own neighboring tracts of land in St.

Martin Parish. Their dispute involves a tract of land that lies on the boundary

between their two properties. Mr. Champagne, his ancestors, and relatives own the land next to Mr.

Alexander’s property. Mr. Champagne’s father first purchased their property in 1933,

and he and his descendants have continuously occupied and used the land since that

date. When Mr. Champagne’s father purchased the land, he began a dairy farm

business there. The cattle were allowed to roam on the land. Mr. Champagne asserts

that early on in the business he, his father, and his uncles built a fence around the land

in part to keep the cattle from roaming off of their property and from getting into the

adjacent coulee. It was also built, he stated, to stake out the boundary of their

property. The fence was made with posts and barbed wire and also used existing

trees as supports. The disputed tract of land was on the Champagne’s side of this

fence.

After the dairy business was shut down, the disputed tract, which was

treated as part of the Champagne’s land, was used by a neighbor for growing

soybeans. The farmer paid Mr. Champagne one-sixth of his crop yield as rent for the

privilege of farming on the Champagne’s land.

In 1970, the Champagnes partitioned their land after the death of their

father. A plat of survey was recorded with the partition documents in the St. Martin

Parish mortgage records. Mr. Champagne’s sister then deeded her portion to her son,

Mr. Maddox. Mr. Champagne managed and cared for Mr. Maddox’s property, and

he used it as if he were the owner. Mr. Champagne lived and worked on the land,

while Mr. Maddox lived elsewhere in the state of Louisiana.

Mr. Alexander bought approximately 72.31 acres of land on April 25,

1977. The parcel was described in the deed of sale, which also made reference to a

plat of survey completed by surveyor Fred Columb. The cash sale deed was recorded

in the official mortgage records of St. Martin Parish on May 19, 1977. However, that

2 plat of survey was not included with the documents submitted into the parish

mortgage records.

In 1988, Mr. Champagne built a crawfish pond and levee on the tract of

land at issue. It adjoins Mr. Alexander’s property, and had been used by the

Champagne’s for decades as part of their cattle and farming operations. Mr.

Alexander believed that part of the crawfish pond and levee were built on his land,

and he asked Mr. Champagne to remove what he believed to be encroachments on his

property. Mr. Champagne researched the issue, and felt that he had built his crawfish

business on land that his family had been using continuously since 1933. He,

therefore, refused to relocate his crawfish business. He asserted that his family

owned the land on which it was located.

Mr. Alexander sued both Mr. Champagne and Mr. Maddox. He

requested the trial court to declare him the owner of the tract of land in question; to

order Mr. Champagne to remove the encroachments onto his land; and, for damages.

Mr. Maddox and Mr. Champagne answered the suit by filing a reconventional

demand, and a peremptory exception based on the law of acquisitive prescription as

they claimed to have had uninterrupted possession of the land as owners within

visible boundaries for more than thirty years.

After trial was held on the matter, during which the trial judge personally

visited the site of the disputed area and the evidence of possession, the district court

issued a judgment granting the exception of acquisitive prescription by more than

thirty years of uninterrupted, visible possession without good title to the land. The

trial judge had at least five different plats of surveys entered into the record by both

parties with which he could set the new boundaries of ownership. The plat of survey

the trial judge chose as his guide was prepared by one of the licensed surveyors, but

3 it was not one that either party had been advocating that the judge use. Mr.

Alexander filed a motion for new trial which was denied. He then timely filed this

appeal.

III.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

In this case we are called upon to review the judgment of the district

court which determined that Mr. Champagne and Mr. Maddox had satisfied all of the

elements required to acquire property to which one does not have clear title by

acquisitive prescription. The judgment of a district court determining whether or not

the elements of acquisitive prescription have been met is a factual determination, and

will not be overturned by a reviewing appellate court absent manifest error. Lowery

v. Hebert, 04-1399, p. 2 (La.App. 3 Cir. 7/20/05), 909 So.2d 648, 651.

IV.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

There is a difference between determining ownership by title, and

determining ownership by acquisitive prescription. The elements of acquisitive

prescription are encoded into law in the following articles of the Louisiana Civil

Code:

Art. 3424. Acquisition of possession

To acquire possession, one must intend to possess as owner and must take corporeal possession of the thing.

Art. 3446. Acquisitive prescription

Acquisitive prescription is a mode of acquiring ownership or other real rights by possession for a period of time.

Art. 3476. Attributes of possession

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Caffery Alexander v. Michael Rene Maddox, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caffery-alexander-v-michael-rene-maddox-lactapp-2007.