Clause v. Broussard

146 So. 2d 828
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1962
Docket675
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 146 So. 2d 828 (Clause v. Broussard) 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
Clause v. Broussard, 146 So. 2d 828 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

146 So.2d 828 (1962)

Willie O. CLAUSE, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
Consuelo BROUSSARD and Grover Rees, Defendants and Appellants.

No. 675.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

November 15, 1962.
Rehearing Denied December 10, 1962.

*829 Willis & Willis, By Earl H. Willis, St. Martinville, for defendant-appellant.

Domengeaux & Wright, By Bob F. Wright, Lafayette, for appellee.

Before TATE, SAVOY and HOOD, Judges.

HOOD, Judge.

Plaintiff, Willie O. Clause, seeks a judgment against defendants, Consuelo Broussard and Grover Rees, decreeing plaintiff to be the owner of a servitude of passage over a strip of land in the Town of Breaux Bridge, ordering defendants to remove a fence which they had constructed on that property, ordering them to desist from otherwise obstructing plaintiff's use of the servitude, and condemning defendants to pay damages for alleged trespasses on the land affected by that servitude. After trial of the case on its merits, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, granting him all of the relief which he sought, except that his demand for damages was rejected. Defendants have appealed from that judgment, and plaintiff has answered the appeal praying that the judgment be amended to award a portion of the damages originally sought by him, and further demanding that this Court condemn defendants to pay an additional sum as damages for taking a frivolous appeal.

The evidence establishes that by deed dated February 14, 1959, plaintiff purchased from the defendants the fee title to an irregular shaped lot or parcel of land located in the Town of Breaux Bridge, having a frontage of 70 feet on Bridge Street and a depth of 185.9 feet along the southwestern line of said lot. This deed also contains the following provision:

"In addition to the foregoing, and for the same consideration hereinafter mentioned, the vendors sell, transfer and deliver to the vendees, as aforesaid, a servitude of passage, in perpetuity to the extent which may be necessary for access to or exit from the hereinabove described property, over and across that parcel of ground having a frontage of forty (40) feet along Bridge Street and extending along the southwestern line of and for the entire depth of said hereinabove described property, as is fully shown on that plat of survey by Colomb and Laurent, Surveyors and Engineer, dated February 9, 1959, attached hereto and made part hereof."

The plat of survey which is attached to this deed shows the exact dimensions and *830 location of the lot or parcel of land which was conveyed in fee to plaintiff, and it also shows the dimensions and location of the 40-foot strip of land which is affected by the servitude. This strip of land is shown on the plat as lying adjacent to the post office property and as having a frontage of 40 feet on Bridge Street and a depth of 185.9 feet, extending back the entire depth of the southwestern line of the lot which was conveyed in fee.

Immediately prior to the execution of the deed, the plaintiff had entered into a contract with the United States Government, under the terms of which plaintiff agreed to construct a post office building on the above mentioned lot of ground and to lease that structure to the Government for a specified number of years. The Government had previously obtained an option to buy this particular tract of land and the above described servitude of passage from the defendants, and it had assigned that option to plaintiff at or about the time the contract to build the post office building was entered into. Plaintiff was exercising his rights under this option in buying the lot and servitude from defendants.

On the day this act of sale was executed, a question apparently arose between plaintiff and defendants relating to this servitude, and to settle this question the parties entered into another written agreement, which we will refer to as a supplemental agreement, which bears the same date as does the deed. This supplemental agreement contains the following provisions:

"* * * some question has arisen as to the manner of preparation by `FIRST PARTY' (plaintiff Clause) of the said forty (40) feet parcel of ground for utilization thereof as a means of access to or exit from the lot or parcel of ground conveyed as aforesaid, and it is the desire of `FIRST PARTY' and `SECOND PARTY' (defendants Broussard and Rees) to agree with references thereto and thereby set at rest all questions with reference thereto.
"NOW, THEREFORE, it is herein mutually agreed by and between `FIRST PARTY' and `SECOND PARTY,' in and for the same consideration recited in the aforesaid instrument of cash sale and without which same would not have been executed, that, in the preparation by `FIRST PARTY' of the said forty (40) feet parcel of ground for utilization thereof, under the aforedescribed servitude of passage, as a means of access to or exit from the lot or parcel of ground conveyed as aforesaid, the level of the said forty (40) feet parcel of ground will not be lowered except for such grading of its northwestern thirty (30) feet as may be required to allow the passage of vehicles to and from Bridge Street." (Minor typographical errors corrected).

Within a week after this sale was completed, plaintiff began the construction of the post office building pursuant to his agreement with the Government. During this construction the entire 40-foot strip of land affected by the servitude of passage was cleared, graded for a road and partially graveled or shelled, and it was used during a part of the construction for passage and to store supplies and materials for the building project. Defendant Rees on several occasions during that construction ordered plaintiff's employees off that strip of land and otherwise interfered with plaintiff's use of it, and because of this interference, plaintiff instituted an injunction suit against defendant before the building was completed, but that suit was later dismissed by the court. The new building was completed and the post office personnel moved into it on October 22, 1959. On the same day, defendant Rees constructed a fence which enclosed all of the property included in this servitude, except the front 30 feet of it. The only part of the servitude property which remained unenclosed by the fence and thus accessible to plaintiff or his lessee, therefore, was the area fronting 40 feet on Bridge Street by a *831 depth of 30 feet. Plaintiff promptly demanded that this fence be removed, but defendants have refused to do so.

It is apparent from the foregoing that this action involves an interpretation of the provisions contained in the two documents entered into between plaintiff and defendants, both dated February 14, 1959, relating to this servitude of passage. The specific question presented is whether plaintiff's lessee, the Post Office Department, has the right to use the entire strip of land, having a frontage of 40 feet on Bridge Street by a depth of 185.9 feet, for access to and exit from the post office property. Plaintiff contends that it does have that right, while defendants contend that plaintiff or his lessee can use only that portion of the 40-foot strip "which may be necessary" for that purpose, and that it is only "necessary" for the Post Office Department to use the front 30 feet for such passage.

Plaintiff offered parol evidence tending to show the intent of the parties in executing the deed and the supplemental agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 2d 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clause-v-broussard-lactapp-1962.