CASH POINT PLANTATION EQUESTRIAN v. Shelton

920 So. 2d 974, 2006 WL 167715
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 2006
Docket40,647-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 920 So. 2d 974 (CASH POINT PLANTATION EQUESTRIAN v. Shelton) 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
CASH POINT PLANTATION EQUESTRIAN v. Shelton, 920 So. 2d 974, 2006 WL 167715 (La. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

920 So.2d 974 (2006)

CASH POINT PLANTATION EQUESTRIAN CENTER, INC., Alan Fox and Louise Fox, Plaintiff-Appellants
v.
Terry Clifford SHELTON, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 40,647-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 25, 2006.

*975 Shuey Smith, L.L.C., by Richard E. Hiller, Shreveport, for Appellants.

A.L. Blondeau, Jr., Baton Rouge, for Appellee.

Before GASKINS, DREW and MOORE, JJ.

MOORE, J.

The owners of an enclosed estate in Bossier Parish appeal a judgment rejecting their claim for a right of passage along a road privately owned by Terry Shelton. We affirm.

Procedural Background

In 1999, Cash Point Plantation Equestrian Center, Inc. (through its owners, Alan and Louise Fox, collectively "Cash Point") bought a tract of land (called "Cash Point Tract") in Haughton from the FDIC. Cash Point Tract is an enclosed estate; the act of sale specified "lack of access to and from the Property to a public road." However, a curved road called Riverbend Road starts at the eastern boundary of Cash Point Tract and runs eastward to a public road, Bodcau Station Road.[1]

Riverbend Road is not a public road; it is privately owned by the defendant, Terry Shelton. Shelton urged in brief that he once owned much of the property in the *976 area, including the road, but he gradually sold off the adjacent parcels, always retaining the road itself. Consequently, the only estate he owns is Riverbend Road's roadbed and right-of-way.

Cash Point filed this suit for injunctive relief in October 1999, in essence to compel Shelton to allow Cash Point to use Riverbend Road for access to its horse training facility. Cash Point alleged that earlier owners of the tract had dedicated Riverbend Road to public use in 1982; on the strength of this, the district court granted a TRO. Shelton showed, however, that the dedication had been nullified by a sheriff's sale in 1989, and that the parish had never accepted or maintained the road. In March 2000, the district court dissolved the TRO, denied a preliminary injunction, and ordered Cash Point to pay damages of $1,500 for a wrongful injunction. Two weeks later, Cash Point sold the tract to River Point Racing and Equestrian Center, another corporation owned by Fox. This sale was not recorded until February 2004, and River Point was joined as a party plaintiff in January 2005.

Trial of Cash Point's claim for a right of passage on Riverbend Road took place in January 2005. The matter was submitted on stipulations and documents, including the plat reprinted as Exhibit "A," deeds, instruments, aerial photographs, and the deposition of civil engineer James Mohr. At the beginning of the hearing the court stated there was no south access, as Cash Point Tract lies just to the north of Interstate 20, and west access was obviously too long. The court stated the shortest route to a public road would be north to Espanita Drive, but this was not practicable because the civil engineer testified this route would traverse federally-designated wetlands.

The issue, therefore, was access to the east: either along winding Riverbend Road (color-coded red in the trial exhibits), or by an unpaved straight-line route (color-coded light green) from the east boundary of Cash Point Tract to Bodcau Station Road. The court cited stipulation No. 8: "Riverbend Road is not the shortest easterly route from the Cash Point Tract to the Bodcau Road" (emphasis in original).

Cash Point argued, however, that it would be financially prohibitive to pave the green route. Cash Point also showed that it owned another parcel (Tract "3-E") on the west side of Bodcau Station Road, through which Riverbend Road ran; the distance along Riverbend Road from the east boundary of Cash Point Tract to the west boundary of Tract 3-E was shorter than the green route.

Shelton argued that the engineer did not measure the red and green routes, and the record contained no estimate of the cost to pave the green route. Shelton also argued that under Davis v. Culpepper, 34,736 (La. App. 2 Cir. 2/11/01), 794 So.2d 68, writ denied, 2001-2573 (La.12/14/01), 804 So.2d 646, the court had little discretion to select anything but the shortest route to a public road.

The court found that Cash Point Tract was an enclosed estate and entitled to a right of passage to a public road. The court noted that it was the very court that had been reversed in Davis v. Culpepper, supra; thus it felt constrained to select the shortest route, period. According to the stipulation, Riverbend Road is not the shortest. The court rendered judgment that Shelton owes no right of passage to Cash Point Tract.

Cash Point moved for a new trial, urging that it had recently discovered a "revised plat" showing that Bodcau Station Road lies further to the east than depicted in the original plat. Cash Point also argued that the 1989 revocation of the public dedication *977 of Riverbend Road did not affect the portion of the road that traversed Tract 3-E; thus, from the western boundary of Tract 3-E, it was still a public road and closer to Cash Point Tract along the red route than the proposed green route. The district court denied the motion for new trial.

Cash Point has appealed, raising three assignments of error.

Applicable Law

The right to forced passage is established by La. C.C. art. 689:

The owner of an estate that has no access to a public road may claim a right of passage over neighboring property to the nearest public road. He is bound to indemnify his neighbor for the damage he may occasion.

The location of the passage is regulated by La. C.C. art. 692:

The owner of the enclosed estate may not demand the right of passage anywhere he chooses. The passage generally shall be taken along the shortest route from the enclosed estate to the public road at the location least injurious to the intervening lands.

The general rule of Art. 692 is that the estate providing the shortest route to the nearest public road must provide the right of passage. Davis v. Culpepper, supra, and citations therein. As recognized by the legislature in its use of the word "generally," there are situations that allow the right of passage to be imposed on an estate that does not provide the shortest route. Id. In the absence of exceptional circumstances, however, it is only the estate that provides the shortest access to the nearest public road that will be burdened with the servitude. Id.; Vermilion Parish School Bd. v. Broussard, 263 La. 1104, 270 So.2d 523 (1972); Morgan v. Culpepper, 324 So.2d 598 (La.App. 2 Cir.1975), writs denied, 326 So.2d 377, 378 (1976).

An eminent authority on Louisiana predial servitudes, Professor A.N. Yiannopoulos, summarizes the jurisprudence as follows:

In principle, courts will fix the right of way along the shortest route. Courts are not bound to follow the shortest route, but departure from this standard must be supported by weighty considerations.
The court may grant a longer and more circuitous right of way than that desired by the owner of the enclosed estate in order to minimize any damage to the servient estate, for example, in order to avoid traversing walls or other constructions. Further, the court may grant a longer and less direct right of way than one offered by the owner of the servient estate if the shorter and more direct route involves excessive construction costs or is otherwise impracticable.

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Opinion Number
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
920 So. 2d 974, 2006 WL 167715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cash-point-plantation-equestrian-v-shelton-lactapp-2006.