Gatson v. Bailey

907 So. 2d 859, 2005 WL 1523348
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 2005
Docket39,835-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 907 So. 2d 859 (Gatson v. Bailey) 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
Gatson v. Bailey, 907 So. 2d 859, 2005 WL 1523348 (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

907 So.2d 859 (2005)

James Bernard GATSON, Plaintiff-Appellant
v.
John BAILEY, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 39,835-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

June 29, 2005.

*860 Rick Lane Candler, for Appellant.

A. Shawn Alford, Farmerville, for Appellee.

Before CARAWAY, PEATROSS and DREW, JJ.

CARAWAY, J.

This case pits the policies allowing for the closure of public roads against those for the protection of enclosed estates. Following the abandonment of a rural parish road by formal act of the police jury in 1988, plaintiff's tract of land located at the end of the road was allegedly without access to a public road. The abandoned bed of the roadway ran through defendant's property, and the defendant placed gates at the points where the road entered and exited his land. This suit filed in 2002 claims that the abandoned public road should still serve as a servitude across defendant's property for access to the plaintiff's land. Alternatively, plaintiff claims that his property is an enclosed estate and that he is entitled to a right of passage through defendant's land pursuant to Louisiana Civil Code Article 689.[1] The trial court ruled that after the road's abandonment by the police jury, a servitude of passage no longer existed as a burden upon defendant's land providing plaintiff access through defendant's property to a public road. Regarding plaintiff's claim for establishment of a right of passage at the same or different location across the defendant's land under Article 689, the court found that the plaintiff had obtained access to a public road by "a precarious right of way resting on the sufferance" of the owners of other neighboring tracts. Plaintiff's request for any right of passage across defendant's property was denied. Finding that the servitude of the parish road remains extant for plaintiff's use, we now reverse the ruling of the trial court.

Facts

The defendant, John Bailey, is the owner of a ten-acre tract described as the Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 10. He and his wife purchased the tract in 1986. The plaintiff, James Bernard Gatson, owns 130 acres of land which, though not contiguous, is within 660 feet of the Bailey tract, lying to the north and east. The closest portions of the Gatson tract to the Bailey tract are the Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 10 and the Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 11. (See copy of plat attached as Appendix I.)

Before 1988, a parish-maintained dirt and gravel road (hereinafter the "Old Road") traversed the Bailey tract from west to east and continued in a northeasterly direction across an adjacent tract (hereinafter the McMath tract), ending as a dead end road in the Gatson tract in Section 11. It is undisputed that the Old Road was a public road maintained by the parish police jury. It was the only access to a public road enjoyed by the Gatson 130-acre tract and before 1988 served occupants of a rural residence on the Gatson tract.

*861 After the house on the Gatson tract was sold and removed from the land, on August 9, 1988, the Union Parish Police Jury passed a resolution of abandonment of the Old Road for the portion beginning at a point on the west line of the Bailey tract and running "northeasterly approximately.4 miles to end of said road located in Sections 10 and 11, T23N, R1W, Ward 3." Shortly thereafter, Bailey began employing gates at the places where the Old Road entered and exited his land.

Immediately west of the place where the Old Road was abandoned on the west boundary of the Bailey tract is the intersection of two public roads. The first is an east to west road leading due west from the Bailey tract. The other road, which is referred to as the Honeycutt Road, runs south along the west boundary of the Bailey tract. This public road intersection at Bailey's west gate appears to be the nearest location of a public road available to the Gatson tract after the abandonment. Bailey testified that he measured the distance from that point northward along his western boundary and across the neighboring property to the southwest corner of the Gatson land in Section 10. The distance was found to be 1178 feet, and this is corroborated by a survey of the Bailey tract in the record which shows the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 10 as having a 1311.9-foot west boundary. If a new road is necessary pursuant to Civil Code Article 689, this route would apparently provide the Gatson tract with the nearest access to a public road.

Gatson acquired ownership of the Gatson tract in 1995 by purchase from the heirs of his uncle. He stated that he first visited the tract in 1993 as he began efforts to acquire the property. He accessed the property at that time by going through the gates on the Bailey tract. He discussed the use of the Old Road with Bailey, and before his purchase of the land, he also investigated through the police jury whether the abandonment of the Old Road might be revoked. He was told that he must reach an agreement for access with Bailey. Gatson did obtain a conventional servitude for that portion of the Old Road east of the Bailey tract traversing the McMath tract.

Bailey did not deny that he routinely allowed hunters and loggers after 1988 and Gatson after 1993 to travel across his tract along the Old Road to reach the Gatson or McMath properties to the northeast. He maintained the gates unlocked and required those parties to keep them closed. Bailey built his home on the ten-acre tract, and the Old Road now serves as his driveway but continues on to the east side of his property in its original path. Bailey also repeated more than once in his trial testimony that he would continue to allow Gatson to traverse his property so long as he opened and closed the gates.

In bringing this suit, Gatson seeks to re-establish his access to the public road west of the Bailey tract by use of the Old Road. Alternatively, he requested that the court establish a new right of passage pursuant to Civil Code Article 689 across the Bailey tract for his enclosed estate. After a bench trial, the trial court denied Gatson any relief. The court concluded that the Old Road across Bailey's land is no longer a public road, and Gatson has no existing servitude, public or otherwise, for access through the Bailey tract. Additionally, the trial court found that a legal servitude or right of passage for the Gatson tract was unnecessary because of Gatson's ability to access the Honeycutt Road south of the Bailey tract by an established, but non-public, dirt route extending along a power utility right-of-way through the McMath tract. The trial court therefore found, after *862 citing Robinson v. Herring, 20 So.2d 811 (La.App. 2d Cir.1944), that the Gatson tract was not enclosed since it had "access to a public road even by means of a precarious right-of-way resting on the sufferance of neighbors."

Gatson now appeals these rulings. He claims that even though the Old Road was no longer maintained by the police jury and was formally abandoned, the trial court erred in finding that no servitude could still remain along the Old Road for access to his land. Alternatively, he argues that the trial court erred in its determination that his property was not an enclosed estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
907 So. 2d 859, 2005 WL 1523348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gatson-v-bailey-lactapp-2005.