Campbell v. Bennett

11 So. 2d 31
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1942
DocketNo. 6563.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 So. 2d 31 (Campbell v. Bennett) 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
Campbell v. Bennett, 11 So. 2d 31 (La. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Plaintiffs alleged they were the owners of Lot 15 of Block 101, McEnery part of the Lee Avenue Addition to the City of Monroe, Louisiana, together with a servitude or easement consisting of an 8-foot strip along, over and across a strip eight feet wide along the southern boundary of Lot 16 of Block 101 of the same Addition to be used as a driveway and means of ingress and egress. Lot 15 above described lies south of and adjacent to Lot 16 and Lot 16 is owned by the defendant herein.

The 8-foot strip above referred to lies between the residences of plaintiffs and defendant and has for many years been used by the owners of each lot as a driveway leading to the respective garages located on the two lots. When it nears the garage, the driveway forks, one prong leading to the garage situated on Lot 15 and the other prong to the garage on Lot 16. The garage of the defendant on Lot 16 is across the 8-foot strip and was so located long before the servitude was granted plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs contend in this suit that the defendant's garage, being located as it is, is an encroachment upon the 8-foot strip upon which they own a servitude. They also contend that defendant has built up the driveway and the rear of his lot and the 8-foot strip at his garage so as to cause them damage from standing water after each rain. They also complain that they cannot turn their car around because of the driveway being built up and because defendant's garage deprives them of the back fifty feet of the servitude they own on the 8-foot strip and therefore they are forced to back out from their garage.

Plaintiffs prayed for an injunction restraining the defendant from raising the driveway by adding gravel and dirt to it, also prayed that defendant be ordered to remove all the surplus dirt, sand, gravel, etc., which he has placed on the rear fifty feet of this servitude and to lower it to its former grade level. They further prayed that defendant be ordered to remove his garage.

Defendant denies that he is interfering in any manner with plaintiffs' use of the servitude acquired by them over the eight feet of his property and in reconvention alleged that the eaves of plaintiffs' garage project and extend approximately one foot over and onto the property owned by him. He prayed for a mandatory injunction ordering plaintiffs to remove said overhanging eaves. He further alleged that plaintiffs had placed stones and rocks over and onto his property and prayed for a mandatory injunction ordering the stones and rocks so placed by plaintiffs removed.

The lower court rendered judgment rejecting plaintiffs' demands and gave judgment in reconvention to defendant ordering the eaves of plaintiffs' garage removed from over defendant's property and the stones and rocks removed from defendant's property as prayed for by him. It gave the following written reasons for judgment:

"The Court has listened to the various witnesses who have testified in this case and, having heard these witnesses for the first time in their various statements, not being personally acquainted with the parties, is forcibly struck by the facts, as shown throughout the testimony, that this is a case where neighbors have fallen out and that a great deal of feeling exists in this matter.

"There are several points at issue in this case. First, the question of the 8-foot driveway, referred to in the testimony as an easement. That is the point before the Court as to just what right each party has in the 8-foot strip and what encroachment has been made thereon and what is the present legal situation thereto as affecting the owners of both lots. Another question raised in this case is the question of drainage. And the third question, going with the question of drainage, is the question of drip of rainfall from the various roofs.

"The two lots in question are set out in detail in the plats filed by both plaintiffs and defendant, the plat filed by the defendant giving the various elevations of the properties.

"The Court is informed from this evidence, as well as from the testimony of the witnesses, that these lots both front on Lover's Lane, and that they are a portion of Lot 15 and Lot 16 of Square 101 of McEnery's part of Lee Avenue Addition to Monroe, Louisiana.

"Lover's Lane is that street in the southern part of Monroe which runs north and south from South Grand Street approximately along the east bank of the Ouachita River, until the southern City limits of Monroe are reached. The street immediately *Page 33 east of Lover's lane and the street back of the lots in question is Richmond Street. Richmond Street runs approximately north and south at that point.

"The Court states these facts at this time for this reason:

"That it is a known fact in Louisiana, which the Court can take judicial cognizance of in the absence of special proof to the contrary, that in Louisiana, as a rule, the high point of lands in given localities is the river bank and that the land slopes away or falls as it extends back from the bank of the river. This is due to the actual character of the Louisiana soil, practically all of which east of the Ouachita River in North Louisiana, especially a great part thereof, has been built up by overflows of the various rivers and streams. Thus, in the absence of any special proof, it would be natural to suppose that these two lots in question would drain from west to east, as they are situated very near the east bank of the Ouachita River, and, as a general rule, all drainage is from south to north or north to south, to follow the general principle, then the drainage would be down the River or in a southern direction. However, there is some very specific testimony offered in this case by Mr. Volk and other witnesses. Mr. Volk, the surveyor, says that he took the levels which existed under the south side of the house on Lot 16 and under the northeast corner of the house on Lot 15, occupied by Mrs. Campbell; these two points selected, as shown by his map, being approximately on a line north and south, and that the readings were as follows, as shown on the map and as testified to by Mr. Volk:

"Under the residence on Lot 16 elevation 100.03; under the Campbell residence, at the point designated, elevation 99.48. Thus we would have two readings, which would not be affected by the dirt piled in both yards, as testified to by the various witnesses, and these readings would bear out the general supposition that in that locality the drainage would be down the river or from north to south. However, there is not very much difference in the elevation of the two lots and there is no testimony in the record to show where the original natural drainage was, for the reason that all of the witnesses testified that when they first moved on these lots there was an 8-foot driveway and the runways therefrom constructed to the Campbell garage were in existence and at that time graveled but not to the depth which they are at present. The testimony, the Court thinks, clearly shows that the natural drainage of this property would be to the east.

"To return to the 8-foot driveway — Mrs. Campbell, who refers to this as an easement, when asked by the Court relative to the question of putting a drainage ditch along the boundary between the 8-foot driveway and her northern line, stated that she thought the drainage ditch should be in the middle of the 8-foot strip as she had as much right to the ownership of the strip as the defendant. The Court finds that not only is there a great deal of feeling existing between the litigants but they are under a misapprehension as to their rights. Mrs.

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Related

Kaffie v. Pioneer Bank & Trust Company
184 So. 2d 595 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
11 So. 2d 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-bennett-lactapp-1942.