Evans v. Dugan

17 So. 2d 562, 205 La. 398, 1944 La. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 13, 1944
DocketNo. 36961.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 562 (Evans v. Dugan) 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
Evans v. Dugan, 17 So. 2d 562, 205 La. 398, 1944 La. LEXIS 678 (La. 1944).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

On May 29, 1939, J. O. Evans acquired by purchase from Philip G. Cook two tracts of land designated as lots 1 and 2 in Section 13, Township 17 North, Range 10 West in Webster Parish. The tracts front on Lake Bistineau and embrace in the aggre *401 gate about 98.5 acres. The vendor of Evans, through mesne conveyances, had acquired the land from the United States government.

On May 31, 1941, Evans brought this suit to compel James Dugan to remove certain buildings erected by him on the shore of Lake Bistineau in front of Lot 2 and to prohibit Dugan from operating a commercial fishing camp in front of plaintiff’s property. Defendant filed an exception of no cause or right of action which was overruled. Defendant then answered and the cause was tried on the merits. Judgment was rendered in favor of defendant, rejecting plaintiff’s demands, and plaintiff has appealed.

Lake Bistineau is a body of water situated in the northwestern portion of Louisiana forming the boundary line between the Parish of Bienville on the east, the Parish of Bossier on the west, and extending up into the Parish of Webster. At its northern end, the lake is entered by Bayou Dorcheat and at its southern end, the lake empties into Loggy Bayou which, in turn, empties into Red River. Sapp v. Frazier, 51 La.Ann. 1718, 26 So. 378, 72 Am.St.Rep. 493. In addition to the waters of Bayou Dorcheat, the lake is fed by the waters of Red Chute Bayou and other smaller fresh water streams.

As shown by the opinion of this Court in Sapp v. Frazier, which was decided in 1899, the lake was navigable for steamboats for the first six months in the year and non-navigable for the remaining six months. Beginning in the summer and extending through the autumn, the greater portion of the lake bed was uncovered, the waters receding and draining off into Red River.

The Legislature, by Act No. 43 of 1930, established the Lake Bistineau State Game and Fish Preserve out of Bayou Dorcheat and Lake Bistineau embracing the land along the bayou and the lake below mean high-water mark, and created the Lake Bistineau State Game and Fish Commission with power, under control of the Department of Conservation, to administer the Game and Fish Preserve and to make rules and regulations for its control. By Act No. 64 of 1942, the Legislature enlarged the powers of the Commission subject to the supervision and control of the Department of Conservation.

Plaintiff alleges that Lake Bistineau is a navigable body of water and that its banks and bed belong to the State an,d are subject to use by the general public. That defendant has appropriated the bank of the lake to his private use, constructing thereon a permanent dwelling, a parking place for automobiles, a camp house, and is operating a commercial resort, renting boats and selling shiners for bait.

Plaintiff alleges that defendant completely monopolizes the bank of the lake from the line of plaintiff’s property to the water line at low stage and up and down the lake for a distance of some 400 feet. That the defendant is not occupying this public place by virtue of a sale or a lease from the State and is a mere squatter thereon. Plaintiff alleges that he purchased the property fronting on Lake Bistineau, with the intention of dividing it into camp sites *403 for sale, but that due to the illegal use of the bank of the lake by the defendant, he is unable to sell any of his lots and that as a riparian owner, suffering pecuniary loss, he is entitled to have the nuisance maintained by defendant abated. Plaintiff prays for judgment ordering the defendant to remove his buildings and permanently enjoining defendant from operating a commercial fishing camp on the shore of Lake Bistineau in front of plaintiff’s property.

Defendant, in his answer, denies the .substantial allegations of plaintiff’s petition. He admits that Lake Bistineau is a navigable body of water and that the shores thereof belong to the State, but avers that the ownership of the State is subject to the provisions of Act No. 43 of 1930 creating the Lake Bistineau State Game and Fish Commission and making a game and fish preserve of the lake and its shores and placing the administration of the preserve under the State Game and Fish Commission and the Department of Conservation. Defendant alleges that under the powers granted the Commission he was given permission to occupy the premises upon which his improvements are located, which premises are under the control and supervision of the State, the Department of Conservation and the State Game and Fish Commission. Defendant avers that he is not a trespasser and his occupation of the premises is in furtherance of the public interest. He denies that his occupation of the premises is monopolistic or that it interferes in any way with the rights of the plaintiff. Defendant avers that on May 29, 1939, when plaintiff acquired the property described in his petition,, defendant was occupying, and had for some time previously occupied, the portion of the shore of the lake he is now using, and that plaintiff bought his property with full knowledge thereof. Defendant avers that his occupation and use of the portion of the shore of the lake owned by the State is “in furtherance of the public rights and conveniences of hunting and fishing and that on the contrary the plaintiff is operating a similar camp upon the banks of Lake Bistineau and near the camp of defendant and seeks himself to obtain a monopoly for himself of such service and business and exclude your defendant therefrom to his advantage.”

The facts, as disclosed on the trial of the case, are as follows. In the year 1934, the defendant Dugan established a fishing camp on the shore of Lake Bistineau between low-water mark and high-water mark. He erected a one-story house measuring 28'x28' to which he attached a small porch. The house contains four rooms and is used as a dwelling by defendant, his wife and one child. A small garden, partly fenced, lies on the north side of defendant’s dwelling. A short distance south of the house in which defendant lives with his family is a cabin measuring 16'xl6' and containing two rooms. This cabin and a landing for boats is maintained by defendant for the use of the public. After defendant had cleared away the underbrush for that purpose, the parochial authorities constructed a parking place and built a road leading thereto which is also used by the general public.

In the latter part of 1934 and the early part- of 1935, under the authority granted *405 by section 12 of Act No. 43 of 1930, the Conservation Commission constructed a substantial earth dam across the old channel of Loggy Bayou. This resulted in the establishment of a lake covering 20,000 acres with an assured constant water level as compared with the fluctuating water level described in the case of Sapp v. Frazier.

In 1940, the Legislature appropriated $100,000 to be used by the Conservation Department in repairing and improving the dam. This work was completed in November, 1941. The earth dam, with a concrete spillway, is one and one-half miles long and twenty feet high. The lake formed by the impounded waters is about thirty miles in length and its width varies from a few hundred feet to three’ miles.

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Bluebook (online)
17 So. 2d 562, 205 La. 398, 1944 La. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-dugan-la-1944.