Ellen Ibert v. Timothy v. Croulet and Tamra A. Croulet

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 2018
DocketCA-0018-0245
StatusUnknown

This text of Ellen Ibert v. Timothy v. Croulet and Tamra A. Croulet (Ellen Ibert v. Timothy v. Croulet and Tamra A. Croulet) 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
Ellen Ibert v. Timothy v. Croulet and Tamra A. Croulet, (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

18-245

ELLEN IBERT

VERSUS

TIMOTHY V. CROULET AND TAMRA A. CROULET

**********

APPEAL FROM THE THIRTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF VERNON, NO. 93,629 HONORABLE SCOTT WESTERCHIL, DISTRICT JUDGE

MARC T. AMY JUDGE

Court composed of John D. Saunders, Marc T. Amy, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Michael A. Smith, Jr. Dowden & Smith, LLC 116 East Lula Street Leesville, LA 71446 (337) 238-2800 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES: Timothy V. Croulet Tamra A. Croulet

Ellen Ibert 200 Western Shores Drive Anacoco, LA 71403 IN PROPER PERSON AMY, Judge.

The plaintiff sought a declaratory judgment to protect her alleged rights to a

purported servitude in a residential subdivision, arguing in her petition that the

defendants had obstructed her use thereof. The trial court ultimately ruled in favor of

the defendants due to lack of evidence, and the plaintiff now appeals. For the

following reasons, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

On October 17, 2016, Ellen Ibert filed a “Petition for Declaratory Judgment and

Mandatory Injunction,” in which she stated that she is the owner of a vacant

residential lot known as Lot 18 of Paradise Cove Subdivision in Vernon Parish and

that the named defendants, Timothy and Tamra Croulet, are the owners of Lot 17 in

Paradise Cove Subdivision. In her petition, Ms. Ibert requested an order “to preserve

and implement exercising full rights for preservation of said servitude legally

recorded and referred to as North Street in Paradise Cove Subdivision, under

Instrument No. 503997[.]” Ms. Ibert then asserted:

6.

FURTHER BE IT KNOWN, Plaintiff, ELLEN IBERT, has continuous use and rights as dominant estate,[1] full rights of enjoyment and use of herein said servitude as intended and designated under conveyance record have been obstructed, and Plaintiff is thereby requesting [a] court order granting full and unobstructed rights to Plaintiff pursuant to, and respectful of, Civil Codes.

7.

FURTHER, LET IT BE KNOWN, Defendants, TIMOTHY V. CROULET and TAMRA A. CROULET, refuse to recognize the dominant estate’s real rights of action over serviant [sic] estate[’]s property for access or further improvements with maintenance of the 1 Louisiana Civil Code Article 706 defines affirmative servitudes as “those that give the right to the owner of the dominant estate to do a certain thing on the servient estate. Such are the servitudes of right of way, drain, and support.” designated road and utility easement servitude[2] known as North Street crossing over the serviant [sic] estate referred to as Lot 17 of Paradise Cove Subdivision, and reference hereto Exhibit A.

8.

FURTHER, Defendants, TIMOTHY V. CROULET and TAMRA A. CROULET, refuse to remove any obstructions encroached upon servitude, as hereto Exhibit E, by Defendants that remain as follows:

a) trees, shrubs, raised-brick flower bed, and concrete driveway extension within any portion of the thirty-five feet wide herein referenced servitude crossing over the serviant [sic] estate, referred to as lot 17, regardless of cause; and b) refuse to allow dominant estate owner, Plaintiff herein, rights to remove said obstructions within servitude right-of- way to access passage, inclusive of utility lines and traffic to/from Lot 18 of Paradise Cove Subdivision. ....

10.

IN FACTO, Plaintiff has continuously held legal title to dominant estate and continuously used the herein referenced servitude since, October, 1998, to access Plaintiff’s private property as recorded in legal conveyance records and entered hereto as Exhibits B.1 and B.2; as well Defendants have used the legal se[r]vitude to access their property since 2005; and, after Plaintiff’s legally recorded community property settlement, from February, 2012, Plaintiff has desired to improve road passage and implement the utility easement to access electrical power for residential construction on Lot 18 of Paradise Cove Subdivision by virtue of the North Street servitude, as entered herein evidenced hereto Exhibit C and D. In the petition, Ms. Ibert requested a judgment decreeing that “the herein

dominant estate known as Lot 18 of Paradise Cove Subdivision be granted all

privileges to exercise said rights as dominant estate to said servitude known as North

Street, inclusive of utility easement[.]” She further sought:

2 We note that utility “easement” is used throughout these proceedings. The common law word “easement” has been uniformly accepted in Louisiana law to convey the same idea expressed by the Louisiana word “servitude.” Humble Pipe Line Co. v. Wm. T. Burton Indus., Inc., 253 La. 166, 217 So.2d 188 (1968). See also Quibodeaux v. Andrus, 04-766 (La.App. 3 Cir. 11/10/04), 886 So.2d 1258.

2 [C]larification of legal description for herein said servitude as one- hundred and seventy-five (175) feet running north/south along the east boundary line of Lot 17 of Paradise Cove Subdivision and thirty-five (35) feet east/west wide from the east boundary line of Lot 17 of Paradise Cove Subdivision with ten (10) feet wide along the most westerly side of said servitude designated for utility access to Lot 18 of Paradise Cove Subdivision[.]

Additionally, Ms. Ibert suggested that the judgment should include “specific reference

to rights and privileges of dominant estate thereto for preserving implementation of

full rights to the dominant estate for the intended use imposed upon the herein serviant

[sic] estate for herein designated servitude pursuant to Louisiana Civil Code.”

Contemporaneous with the filing of their answer, the Croulets filed exceptions

of unauthorized use of summary proceeding; prescription for nonuse; and nonjoinder

of an indispensable party, namely the owners of Lot 19 of Paradise Cove Subdivision.

Ms. Ibert ultimately filed a “Motion to Dismiss Mandatory Injunction,” and the trial

court signed an order dismissing the mandatory injunction without prejudice.

Following a hearing, the trial court issued a ruling concerning the exceptions. In the

ruling, the trial court stated that, because the petition for mandatory injunction had

already been dismissed, the exception of unauthorized use of summary procedure was

denied. The trial court also denied the exception of prescription for nonuse, finding

the purported servitude at issue to be an affirmative one under La.Civ.Code art. 706

and explaining: “[T]he encroachments [sic] existence and interference with the

servitude is immaterial and is not sufficient to extinguish an affirmative servitude by

prescription of nonuse for ten years.” Regarding the exception of nonjoinder of an

indispensable party, the trial court concluded that the “owners of Lot 19[] are not

indispensable parties without whom relief cannot accord, nor would the defendants’

ability to protect their interest be impeded or impaired. Therefore, the exception is

denied.”

3 On March 10, 2017, Ms. Ibert filed a “Motion for Declaratory Judgment,” again

requesting that the trial court “declar[e] Plaintiff’s right as dominant estate to the

North Street servitude in Paradise Cove Subdivision over Lot 17” and that the trial

court issue a judgment directing that the Croulets “shall refrain from obstructing the

real rights of the dominant estate described as Lot 18 of Paradise Cove Subdivision

for the preservation of the North Street Servitude, inclusive of utility easement[.]”

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Ellen Ibert v. Timothy v. Croulet and Tamra A. Croulet, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellen-ibert-v-timothy-v-croulet-and-tamra-a-croulet-lactapp-2018.