Dufilho v. Bordelon

92 So. 744, 152 La. 88, 1922 La. LEXIS 2861
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 29, 1922
DocketNo. 25169
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 So. 744 (Dufilho v. Bordelon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dufilho v. Bordelon, 92 So. 744, 152 La. 88, 1922 La. LEXIS 2861 (La. 1922).

Opinion

O’NIEEL, J.

Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment dismissing his suit on an exception of no cause of action. The suit is to compel defendant to fence both sides of a so-called canal right of wáy, extending across plaintiff’s farm, to compel him to repair a bridge across the canal right of way, and to recover damages for his having taken down his fence at one end of the right of way, where it intersects a public road, allowing cattle to come' in and trespass upon the farm.

It is alleged in the petition that defendant owns the so-called right of way, 350 feet wide, extending entirely across plaintiff’s farm. Whether he owns the strip of land Itself, or only a right of way for maintaining an irrigation canal, is made doubtful £y the arguments and admissions in appellant’s brief. It is admitted that that part of the so-called right of way that extends across appellant’s farm is only a comparatively small section of what was once an irrigation canal route, 6r right of way, 350 feet wide and many miles long. Its use as a canal was abandoned and the canal company went out of business several years ago. However, for the purpose of determining whether appellant has ¿ cause of action to compel defendant to constiuet the fences and -maintain the bridge, we shall assume that defendant owns, not the strip of land itself, but only a canal right of way. It is admitted in appellant’s brief — and in fact it must be conceded — that he has no claim for damages if he has not the right to compel defendant to fence the so-called' right of way.

The pertinent facts alleged in the petition are as follows: In 1902, Hope Philips and the heirs of his deceased wife sold the farm, without any reservation or mention of any right of way across or upon it, to J. Franklin Schell. In 1903, Schell sold the entire farm, without any reservation or mention of a right of way across or upon it, to- the Union Rice & Irrigation Company. The company transferred the property to Schell, as trustee, and he, as trustee, in 1906, conveyed to a new corporation, styled Union Irriga[91]*91tion Company, the canal right of way, 350 feet wide, extending across the farm. In the deed of conveyance, the Union Irrigation Company obligated itself, its successors and assigns, to construct and maintaini a fence on each side of the canál right of way, and a bridge across the canal. The canal was constructed by making a levee along each side of the route, the bed of the canal being therefore almost, if not quite, as high as the adjacent farms. The canal was bridged where it divided plaintiff’s farm. Whether the bridge was built by the Union Rice & Irrigation Company or by the Union Irrigation Company is not alleged. The so-called right of way was never fenced. In 1914, Schell, as trustee for the Union Rice & Irrigation Company, sold the farm to the Union Irrigation Company; that is, the company that already owned the canal right of way.

It is contended’ by defendant, who now owns the right of way, that the obligation of the Union Irrigation Company to fence the right of way and to maintain a bridge across the canal was extinguished by the company’s becoming the owner of both the right of way and the farm itself. The Union Irrigation Company went into the hands of receivers, who, in 1915, sold the farm to H. P. Dart, Jr., and W. K. Dart, trustees. They sold the farm to Benjamin Riseman, in 1920, and he sold it to plaintiff in the same year. It is said in appellant’s brief that the1 receivers’ sale of the farm to the Darts, as trustees, was made subject to the canal right of way; but there is no such allegation in the petition, nor is it alleged that the sale by the Darts, as trustees, to Riseman, or the sale by him to plaintiff, was made subject to the canal right of way. It may be assumed, however, and we do assume, in deciding whether plaintiff has a cause of action, that the receivers of the Union Irrigation Company sold to the Darts, as trustees, only that part of the farm that was not embraced within the canal right of way, or route, 350 feet wide, dividing the farm. Two years after the sale of the farm to the Darts, as trustees, the receivers sold the canal right of way to J. W. Billingsley, from whom defendant acquired title, whether directly or through mesne conveyances is not alleged, and not important. It is said in appellant’s brief that Billingsley intended to operate the canal, from which, if the allegation were made in the petition, we would infer that Billingsley bought the entire canal route, manjr miles long. All of the deeds that we have mentioned were promptly recorded in the conveyance records.

When the Union Irrigation Company, being already the owner of the canal right of way, bought also the farm, the obligation of the company to fence the right of way and to maintain the bridge across the canal was extinguished. It is not alleged or contended that there was any contractual obligation or stipulation, in the subsequent sale of the right of way, or thereafter in the sale of the farm, to fence the right of way or to maintain the bridge across the canal.

When the Union Irrigation Company had bought the right of way, but had not yet bought the farm, the company’s obligation to fence the right of way and to maintain the bridge across the canal was an obligation in favor of the owner of the farm. Therefore, when the company itself became the owner of the farm, the obligation fell under article 2217 of the Civil Code, viz.:

“When the qualities of debtor and creditor are united in the same person, there arises a confusion of right, which extinguishes the obligation.”

The words “debtor” and “creditor” are-used as synonymous with “obligor” and “obligee,” according to the twentieth and twenty-first paragraphs of article 3556 of ■ the Code.

If the obligation to fence the right of way and to maintain the bridge across the canal1 [93]*93was a servitude imposed upon the right of way in favor of the adjacent farm, the obligation was extinguished as soon as the two estates had a common owner, according to the first paragraph of article 805 of the Code, viz.:

“Every servitude is extinguished when the estate to which it is due and the estate owing it are united in the same hands.”

The article last quoted is merely a repetition or an explanation of that part of article 783, enumerating the seven means by which servitudes may be extinguished, which declares: “Servitudes are extinguished: * * * (3) By confusion. '* * * ”

Counsel for appellant argues that a servitude that is extinguished by confusion is revived if the two estates are afterwards separated in ownership, provided the confusion has not lasted long enough to extinguish the servitude by prescription; that is, 10 years, according to articles 789, 8529, and 3546. See Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Salling’s Heirs, 150 La. 756, 91 South. 207. Hence it is argued that confusion, or common ownership of the two estates, does not really extinguish, but merely suspends, the servitude. In support of the argument, counsel cites article 785 of the Code, viz.:

“If the things are re-established in such a manner that they may be used, the servitudes will only have been suspended, and they resume their effect, unless, from the time they ceased to be used, sufficient time has elapsed for prescription to operate against them.”

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Bluebook (online)
92 So. 744, 152 La. 88, 1922 La. LEXIS 2861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dufilho-v-bordelon-la-1922.