Cancienne v. Lafourche Parish Police Jury

423 So. 2d 662, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 8073
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 12, 1982
Docket15043
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 423 So. 2d 662 (Cancienne v. Lafourche Parish Police Jury) 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
Cancienne v. Lafourche Parish Police Jury, 423 So. 2d 662, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 8073 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

423 So.2d 662 (1982)

Reid J. CANCIENNE, et al.
v.
LAFOURCHE PARISH POLICE JURY, et al.

No. 15043.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 12, 1982.
Rehearing Denied December 16, 1982.

*663 Jerald P. Block, Thibodaux, for plaintiffs-appellants Reid Cancienne, Quentin D. Falgout, Henry Scavone, Louis J. Scavone, and Guy P. Zeringue.

Jerome J. Barbera, III, Thibodaux, for defendant-appellee Lafourche Parish Police Jury.

Eugene Gouaux, and Ashley Bruce Simpson, Lockport, for defendant-appellant Town of Lockport.

Before LOTTINGER, COLE and CARTER, JJ.

CARTER, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Reid J. Cancienne, Quentin D. Falgout, Henry Scavone, Louis J. Scavone, and Guy P. Zeringue, filed suit against the Lafourche Parish Police Jury and the Town of Lockport seeking a judgment declaring their right to terminate the defendants' use of a road on plaintiffs' land and declaring their right to cause the defendants to remove a pumping station located on part of plaintiffs' property. Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment in favor of the police jury and the Town of Lockport.

*664 Plaintiffs are the owners of a certain tract of land situated in the Parish of Lafourche. Plaintiffs acquired the property from Lakeside Farms, Inc. on August 23, 1978. This tract of land is completely surrounded by water, bounded on the east by the Forty Arpent Canal, on the south by the Tom Foret Canal, and on the west and north by the old Intracoastal Waterway (Company canal). In 1975, the Lafourche Parish Police Jury, in conjunction with the Town of Lockport, constructed a pumping station at the intersection of Tom Foret Canal and Forty Arpent Canal. Since plaintiffs own to the mid-line of the canal, subject to a servitude for public use, the pumping station rests partially on plaintiffs' property. The pumping station located at the intersection of Tom Foret Canal and Forty Arpent Canal is a public facility that is owned by the Lafourche Parish Police Jury and operated by the Town of Lockport. Mr. Emile J. Toups acquired the property in 1943 and continued to own same until he incorporated Lakeside Farms, Inc. in 1966. Lakeside Farms, Inc. was created as a family corporation. The property was conveyed to Lakeside Farms and it was the owner until the sale to the present plaintiffs on August 23, 1978.

Although at some previous time the property had been farmed, at the time that Mr. Toups acquired the property, it was a lake and under water. A ring levee system that had previously existed surrounding the property had been washed in by boat traffic. In 1963, Mr. Toups fixed the levee system, pumped the property dry, and commenced to use the property for cattle grazing and farming operations. In 1972, Mr. Toups entered into an agreement with the Town of Lockport to allow the town to use a portion of the property as a garbage landfill, giving the town the right of access to the then existing drainage pumps on Forty Arpent Canal. Prior to 1972, the Town of Lockport had access to the then pumping station, not through Mr. Toups's property, but through the property of C.M. Comeaux. Apparently, some time in 1975 the location of the pumps was changed to their present location at the intersection of Forty Arpent Canal and Tom Foret Canal.

In 1975, after the pumps had been relocated, Mr. Toups gave the Town of Lockport and the police jury access to the pumps and the right to use the Vacherie Street gate providing they kept it locked so that the general public could not go on the levee at any time. The gate was owned by Mr. Toups and maintained by the Town of Lockport. Mr. Toups further granted permission to the Town of Lockport and the police jury to use the road providing access to the pumping station. Apparently, a portion of this same road was used by the Town of Lockport as access to the garbage dump. Mr. Toups testified that he only gave the police jury and the Town of Lockport permission to go to and from the pumps, to build the pumps, to bring material back there, and to operate the pumps. He readily recognized that the location of the pumps at the intersection of Tom Foret Canal and Forty Arpent Canal was partially on property that he owned (owning half of the Tom Foret Canal). Mr. Toups testified as follows:

"Q. Was it your intention that if you wanted to later on change your mind, to have them remove it, that they would be required to remove those pumps?
A. I don't think I would have ever gotten to that point, to make them remove the pump, because, to a certain extent, the pump was helping us quite a bit in maintaining and lowering the water level in the Forty Arpent Canal, which bounded our levee."

Mr. Toups further characterized the roadway leading from the Vacherie Street gate to the pump site as a dirt road where "the ground was hard enough that you could drive on it." Mr. Toups stressed many times in his testimony that he only gave permission to go to and from the pumps, to construct the pumps and to operate the pumps with the understanding that all parties would pass through the gate on Vacherie Street only and it would be kept under lock and key.

*665 On August 23, 1978, Lakeside Farms, Inc., the wholly-owned family corporation of Emile F. Toups, transferred to the present plaintiffs all of the property constituting Lakeside Farms, Inc., subject to numerous "restrictions and reservations", including the following:

"II. Verbal permission given to the Lafourche Parish Police Jury and to the Town of Lockport for access to the pumping station located on the Tom Foret Canal."

Obviously, sometime thereafter a dispute arose between the present owners and the governing bodies over the use of the land that the pumps were situated on and the use of the access road through the Vacherie Street gate, which resulted in the present suit for declaratory judgment being filed on May 22, 1980 (approximately twenty-one months after plaintiffs acquired the property).

In this suit for declaratory judgment, plaintiffs seek to have declared that they have the right to terminate access to and from the pumping station by the police jury and the Town of Lockport, and further seek to have decreed that they have the right to cause the aforesaid defendants to remove the pumping station from any portion of their property.

The trial court found that plaintiffs' ancestor in title, Lakeside Farms, Inc., had granted verbal permission and acquiesced in the use of the road and in the construction, maintenance and operation of the pumping station on the property in question in 1975, and further found that defendants had used the road for access to the pumping station without objection or opposition from either the plaintiffs or their ancestors in title until the suit was filed on May 22, 1980. Thus, he reasoned that under the facts of this case, there was consent and acquiescence both prior to the decision in Lake[1] and subsequent to the enactment of La.R.S. 19:14 and that both the St. Julien Doctrine and La.R.S. 19:14 were applicable to the resolution of their dispute. He held that the defendants have acquired a servitude of passage over the road for access to the pumping station and a servitude of use over that portion of the plaintiff's property on which the pumping station is situated under both of the above. Plaintiffs have perfected this appeal seeking reversal of the decision on four grounds.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
1. The trial court erred in applying the St. Julien

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Bluebook (online)
423 So. 2d 662, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 8073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cancienne-v-lafourche-parish-police-jury-lactapp-1982.