Dupont v. Hebert

984 So. 2d 800, 2008 WL 607539
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 2008
Docket2006 CA 2334
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 984 So. 2d 800 (Dupont v. Hebert) 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
Dupont v. Hebert, 984 So. 2d 800, 2008 WL 607539 (La. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

984 So.2d 800 (2008)

Joseph B. DUPONT, Sr.
v.
Carl HEBERT.

No. 2006 CA 2334.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

February 20, 2008.
Writ Denied May 9, 2008.

*802 Joseph B. Dupont, Jr., Dupont, Dupont, & Dupont, Ltd., Plaquemine, LA, for Plaintiff-Appellant, Joseph B. Dupont, Sr.

C. Jerome D'Aquila, New Roads, LA, for Defendant-Appellee, Carl Hebert.

*803 Before PARRO, KUHN, and DOWNING, JJ.

PARRO, J.

This suit involves a petition by a property owner to enforce a servitude so as to prohibit a neighboring property owner from interfering with the use of a servitude of passage. Following a new trial, the trial court dismissed both the main demand and a reconventional demand. Only the petitioner appealed. For the following reasons, we reverse and render judgment in favor of the petitioner.

Factual Background and Procedural History

Joseph B. Dupont, Sr. (Dupont) was a co-owner of multiple rural lots, including Lot 20, of the Edison Berthelot Partition. Dupont had a camp located on his property. In 1977 or 1978, dirt from a pond that was dug on Dupont's property was used by him to form a road running in an easterly direction between Lot 20 and the adjacent lot to the south (Lot 19 of the Edison Berthelot Partition). The western boundary of Lots 19 and 20 fronted Louisiana Highway 75 (Hwy. 75). At that time, Lot 19 was owned by Oswald J. Vaughn and his wife.

The Vaughns sold portions of Lot 19 and other lots of the Edison Berthelot Partition to Carl j. Hebert (Hebert) by an act of cash sale dated August 4, 1994. In this act, the Vaughns disclosed that the property was subject to a "40 foot servitude of passage of which 20 feet is dedicated by vendor for servitude of passage along Parcel 19 in a East West direction" from Hwy. 75. Hebert resided on part of his property and used other portions for the operation of a turtle farm and a crawfish farm. At the trial of this matter, Hebert acknowledged the existence of a 20-foot servitude on his property. Although no further documentation was offered relative to the creation of this servitude, the parties do not dispute that the other 20 feet of the 40-foot servitude burdened the southern, adjacent portion of Lot 20.[1]

In a "Servitude Agreement" dated November 6, 1996, a 50-foot servitude over portions of Lots 19 and 20 was granted to the Iberville Parish Police Jury (Police Jury) by adjacent property owners, including Dupont and Hebert. The agreement provided for the creation of a right-of-way servitude for the construction, improvement, and maintenance of a roadway, L & L Road, extending in an easterly direction from Hwy. 75 for approximately 900 feet. Thus, the 50-foot servitude overlapped the 40-foot servitude for a distance of 900 feet from Hwy. 75, burdening the northern portion of Hebert's property by an additional five feet. The servitude agreement authorized the Police Jury to enter the properties beyond the limits of the right-of-way for the purpose of excavating, constructing, and maintaining lateral drains and/or channel changes required for the proper and adequate drainage of the roadway. The Police Jury constructed and maintained an asphalt roadway down the center of the 50-foot servitude.

In 1997, Hebert filed an application with the United States Army Corps of Engineers (Corps of Engineers), seeking permission to construct a turtle pond in the *804 low-lying area behind his home. After receiving permission and constructing the turtle pond, he later built a crawfish pond, which extended across the rear or easterly portions of Lots 19, 20, and 21. A portion of each of these projects encroached on the 40-foot area on which the servitude of passage existed. Subsequently, with the permission of the Police Jury, Hebert put up a wooden fence near his home site adjacent to the asphalt roadway and within the Police Jury's 50-foot servitude.

When their friendship turned sour, Dupont filed suit against Hebert to enforce the two servitudes. Dupont alleged that Hebert caused or allowed to be constructed a fence, levee, building, and pond within the servitudes of passage that encumbered Lot 19. Dupont averred that despite demands to remove these encroachments, Hebert failed to do so. In his answer, Hebert made a general denial of the allegations in Dupont's petition and reconvened, seeking the removal of a carport, overhang, and pond that had been constructed by Dupont within the servitudes of passage that burdened Lot 20. In his answer to the reconventional demand, Dupont averred that the carport and pond were constructed before the existence of the servitudes.

In opposing a motion for a summary judgment that had been filed by Dupont, Hebert indicated that his encroachment on the servitude was a result of the construction of a turtle farm to which Dupont had consented in a letter dated October 22, 1997, to the Corps of Engineers. Dupont noted that the letter simply indicated that he had no objection to the construction of the proposed turtle farm requested by Hebert. He urged that the letter in no way expressed or implied consent to an encroachment on the servitude. Hebert contended that the encroachment, which was part of the turtle farm, neither impeded or encroached on the traveled portion of the roadway that extended from Hwy. 75 nor interfered with Dupont's enjoyment of his property. Finding that certain improvements, including the turtle pond, encroached on the servitude and that Dupont had acquiesced in the construction of the turtle pond, the trial court denied Dupont's motion for a summary judgment, as well as a crossmotion for a summary judgment that had been filed by Hebert relative to Dupont's alleged encroachments.

After the original trial of this matter, the trial court found that 10 years had not elapsed since the 1996 granting of the 50-foot servitude to the Police Jury. Accordingly, the trial court concluded that it was impossible for the servitude to have been extinguished by nonuse under LSA-C.C. art. 753 as urged by Hebert. However, the trial court found that Dupont had agreed to the encroachments and had requested that Hebert build the levee around the rear of Dupont's property in connection with an alligator farm that never materialized. Nonetheless, the trial court concluded that because this agreement was not reduced to writing, there was no express written renunciation of the predial servitude by Dupont as required by LSA-C.C. art. 771. Accordingly, judgment was rendered, ordering both parties to remove the encroachments from the servitude.

In light of the trial court's failure to consider the issue of nonuse relative to the older 40-foot servitude, Hebert filed a motion for new trial, which was granted. After considering the evidence presented at the new trial, the trial court concluded that the assertion of Dupont's rights was barred by the doctrine of equitable estoppel. The trial court stated:

The property at issue is at the end of a rural street, beyond which it can be *805 described as the heartland of Southern Louisiana's swampland. There was no evidence presented suggesting the commercialization of the swamp on which the servitude extends only on paper. In reality, for this Court to [order] either party to remove their respective encroachments would be contra non valentum and an injustice to both parties. The encroachments impair neither party from access to their properties, nor to the swamplands beyond.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
984 So. 2d 800, 2008 WL 607539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-hebert-lactapp-2008.