Garner v. Waddill

421 So. 2d 1144
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 1982
Docket15001
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 421 So. 2d 1144 (Garner v. Waddill) 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
Garner v. Waddill, 421 So. 2d 1144 (La. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

421 So.2d 1144 (1982)

Sam GARNER and Gretchen Garner, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Alice Bowes WADDILL, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 15001.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

October 25, 1982.

*1145 Sedric E. Banks, Monroe, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Pipes & Pipes by Richard H. Pipes, Monroe, J. Carl Parkerson, Dist. Atty., Monroe, for defendants-appellees.

Before PRICE, FRED W. JONES and SEXTON, JJ.

PRICE, Judge.

This is an action to have a road declared to be public pursuant to LSA-R.S. 48:491. Plaintiffs, Sam and Gretchen Garner, seek to have a passageway located in Ouachita Parish declared to be a public road. The named defendants are Alice Bowes Waddill, Adele Waddill Ransom and Elizabeth Waddill Russell, owners of the tract of land surrounding the road and the Ouachita Parish Police Jury. From a judgment in favor of defendants, plaintiffs appeal. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

We adopt the following findings of fact of the trial court:

"Plaintiffs live at the end of a passageway leading to their residence from `Old Horseshoe Lake Road,' a gravel road which is part of the Ouachita Parish system. They brought this action against the owners of the surrounding property and the Police Jury, seeking to have the passage[1] declared a public road pursuant to R.S. 48:491. The Police Jury answered, disclaiming any interest in the outcome of the suit, that is, asserting no factual allegations, seeking no relief and putting the principal contenders on strict proof.

The whole property is a large tract formerly owned by W.J. Riley, lying between the Ouachita River on the west and the *1146 parish gravel road at the base of the levee on the east, with Horseshoe Lake on the south side. Many years ago, Mr. Riley built a camp less than a half mile west of the gravel road, and the disputed passage apparently originated as the roadway to the camp and through the fields toward the river. The tract was bought in 1956 by Dr. Waddill, husband and father of the individual defendants.

The Waddills lived in the camp house until the doctor's death in 1963, and Mrs. Waddill remained there for a short time thereafter. Since the early 1950's, Paul Ransom[2] has leased and conducted farming and cattle operations on the whole tract. At one time there was at least one residence near a barn on the road, with a smaller house near the camp house. A number of the witnesses resided in one or another of those residences at pertinent times, although the house near the barn no longer exists.

On May 10, 1976, the Waddills sold a 2.35 acre tract around the camp house and small `tenant' house to plaintiffs. The deed confers upon plaintiffs `the Right of Ingress and Egress over a Dirt Road across Mrs. Alice B. Waddill's property' but the sellers reserved `the right to relocate the route of ingress and egress above described.' Plaintiffs have since resided in the camp house.

The road as it presently exists leaves Old Horseshoe Lake Road at a `gate' between two tall pillars some 10 to 12 feet apart. This is the relic of an archway and metal and wire gate presumably constructed as the entrance to his camp by Mr. Riley. Leaving the gravel road, a driver would pass through the gate in a general westerly direction and move along the passage somewhat less than a half mile along the edge of Horseshoe Lake on the left to a point near the barn still in existence. There the road continues generally west into the fields toward the river on one `leg' and turns nearly 90 degrees to the north on another `leg' to the camp house. It has no horizontal ditches on either side, varies in width from 8 to 12 feet according to estimates, and is generally level with ground on both sides."

At trial, numerous witnesses testified on behalf of the parties.

Testifying for plaintiffs was Mr. J.T. Lowery, a former Ouachita Parish Highway Department employee and motor grader operator. Mr. Lowery stated that the parish began regular maintenance of the road in the late fifties or early sixties when a parish employee moved onto the property and at the request of Dr. Waddill, although it had been graded before when Riley had owned the property. Lowery stated that he bladed the road and had applied four to six inches of pit gravel on the entire length of the road on two different occasions sometime approximately in the late sixties. Lowery stated he would request the gravel from either the engineer or the police juror, Mr. Wilhite. Lowery testified he had a regular schedule of maintenance and his rounds, including Sam Garner Road, would take about two to three weeks. Lowery testified that the road had been maintained regularly for fifteen or twenty years. Lowery stated he would grade the road upon the request of the school bus driver, Mrs. Margie Stewart.

Plaintiff, Sam R. Garner, testified that he had lived along the Sam Garner Road since May 5, 1976. Garner stated the road had been regularly maintained by the Ouachita Parish Police Jury since 1976 and he had seen parish equipment working on the road. Garner testified he had only witnessed blading work with a grader but no gravel applications by the parish. Garner stated that the owners of the property had never performed personal maintenance on the road.

Mr. John W. Wilhite, a former Ouachita Parish Police Jury member, testified on behalf of the plaintiffs. Wilhite stated that the Sam Garner Road had been regularly maintained by the police jury and that he had personally instructed Lowery to blade the road "more than once." Wilhite stated that although he could not testify as to seeing the parish crew actually working on the road, when he checked the road the blading had been done as he had instructed.

*1147 Also testifying for plaintiffs was Mrs. Margie Stewart, a school bus driver. Mrs. Stewart testified that for approximately twelve years she traveled the Sam Garner Road as a part of her school bus route when children were living on the property. Stewart stated that when the road needed maintenance, she would contact Lowery and the work would be done, although she never actually saw Lowery performing the work.

Mr. A.B. Spence, a director of public works with the Ouachita Parish Police Jury, testified on behalf of plaintiffs. Spence stated a computer was installed about 1976 and the police jury records reflected maintenance work on the Sam Garner Road from March 1977 to April 1979. The records indicated the following maintenance:

Blading—March 1977 Blading—March 24, 1977 Blading—July 25, 1977 Blading—February 16, 1978 Blading—March 10, 1978 Blading—March 17, 1978 Blading—April 3, 1978 Blading—April 19, 1978 Blading—May 1, 1978 Blading—May 16, 1978 Blading—June 9, 1978 Mowing—June 19, 1978 Blading—June 22, 1978 Blading—August 16, 1978 Blading—August 22, 1978 Blading—August 29, 1978 Blading—March 2, 1979 Blading—March 14, 1979 Blading—April 5, 1979

Spence testified the records were compiled from daily work reports turned in by the particular operators and a supervisor checks the operator's work on the following day. Spence stated he personally observed the road around April 5, 1979 and it was not in good condition and did not appear to have been bladed. Spence testified a road sign had been placed on Sam Garner Road for approximately two days until its removal pursuant to Mr. Ransom's request.

Gary Heath lived by the Sam Garner Road in 1980-81. Heath testified he had seen work being performed on the road about three or four times but could not identify the equipment or the operator.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
421 So. 2d 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garner-v-waddill-lactapp-1982.