Hymel v. St. John the Baptist Parish School Board

303 So. 2d 588
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1975
Docket6386
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 303 So. 2d 588 (Hymel v. St. John the Baptist Parish School Board) 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
Hymel v. St. John the Baptist Parish School Board, 303 So. 2d 588 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

303 So.2d 588 (1974)

Lynn HYMEL et al.
v.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST PARISH SCHOOL BOARD.

No. 6386.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

November 7, 1974.
Rehearing Denied December 10, 1974.
Writ Refused January 31, 1975.

*589 Becnel & Kliebert, Charles S. Becnel and Larry Becnel, Vacherie, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Roland J. St. Martin, La Place, for defendant-appellee.

Before STOULIG, BOUTALL and SCHOTT, JJ.

SCHOTT, Judge.

Plaintiffs instituted these injunction proceedings to prevent defendant from interfering with their use of a right-of-way. In answer defendant denied it impeded the use of the servitude. After trial plaintiffs were awarded a judgment for only part of the relief they sought and they have appealed.

Plaintiffs are the owners of a tract of ground in St. John the Baptist Parish. This tract which they cultivate as sugar cane farmers is directly to the rear of a smaller tract owned by defendant which has constructed and is operating a public school on the tract. Plaintiffs and defendant derive their respective titles from a *590 common ancestor in title, Willie Hymel. When Willie Hymel sold the smaller tract to the defendant in 1963, he reserved a servitude in the following words:

"There is hereby reserved by vendor for himself, his heirs, successors, and assigns, a right of way 25 feet in width along the westerly line of the above property to afford ingress and egress in favor of the property situated south of the herein conveyed property."

The Succession of Willie Hymel later sold to plaintiffs the rear tract together with the servitude.

A surveyor employed to examine the situation noted on a plot of survey the location, dimensions and elevations of various encroachments on the right-of-way. They consisted of a chain-link fence across the width of the servitude in the front, an overhang of the school roof, encroaching on the right-of-way by 1.7 feet in the front and increasing to 2.9 feet in the rear for a distance of 70 feet and at a height of 9.5 feet above ground level; three drop inlets, extending from 2 inches above the natural ground to 11 inches above, all connected will an underground drainage pipe on the east side of the right-of-way near the school building and on the west side a drainage ditch 3 feet wide and 3 feet deep extending entirely along the length of the property line, located entirely within the right-of-way and 1 foot inside the line. Other testimony established that school automobiles were regularly parked on the front portion of the right-of-way.

Plaintiff, Lynn Hymel, testified that the right-of-way is not used constantly but is used to some extent; that the amount of use fluctuates with the various agricultural seasons, such as planting time, cultivation time and harvest time; that the vehicles using the passage are cane cutters, about 13 feet in height and 10 feet in width, cane haulers or trailers about the same size and tractors of various sizes including one used as a three row tractor with draw boards and having a width of at least 20 feet; that all of the right-of-way is necessary for plaintiffs' use; and that various obstacles in the right-of-way prevent two of his vehicles from passing abreast on the servitude from the front of the school building to the rear.

The trial court, recognizing plaintiffs' right-of-way, permanently enjoined defendant from interfering with plaintiffs' peaceful use of it as follows:

"(a) The barrier fence across the entire right of way is to be removed.
(b) The parking of vehicles on and across said right of way is to cease and said vehicles are to be parked elsewhere.
(c) The building overhang is to remain as is and defendant school board is not required to remove same, provided that said plaintiff shall have no interference and peaceful use of said right of way subject to said use bearing in mind that the safety of the school children shall be accorded by plaintiffs in the use of said right of way and specifically at no time shall two vehicles, namely, canecutters pass side by side.
(d) That in accordance with (c) supra the defendant school board is to abandon (by covering up) or remove and cover up said drainage devices currently in use or on said right of way with an end in view to separate defendants property from the right of way with a small ditch or swale in order to afford drainage.
(e) Furthermore, it is ordered adjudged and decreed that the defendant school board strongly consider the installation of a fence separating their property from the right of way in question in order to afford a workable solution with plaintiffs use of their right of way and to afford the maximum degree of safety to the school children.

Each party is to bear his own respective court costs."

Plaintiffs appeal from sub-section (c) and (d) of this judgment and from that *591 portion taxing costs. They specify errors in that the trial judge did not order the removal of the overhang, in that he exceeded his authority in enjoining them from using the right of way as they see fit, and in not taxing court costs, including the expert witnesses' fee against the defendant.

In denying plaintiffs' prayer that defendant be ordered to remove the overhang the trial judge gave the following reasons:

"As far as the building overhang, it is not of such a degree that would warrant removal. The evidence preponderates that said right of way can be used without same impeding said use. The court will not order the overhand removed. To do so would cast an unreasonable burden upon a situation of which the free use of the servitude can be hand without forcing removal of the overhang."

Our discussion of the problem begins with LSA-C.C. Art. 777 which provides:

"The owner of the estate which owes the servitude can do nothing tending to diminish its use, or to make it more inconvenient.
"Thus he can not change the condition of the premises, nor transfer the exercise of the servitude to a place different from that on which it was assigned in the first instance.
"Yet if this primitive assignment has become more burdensome to the owner of the estate which owes the servitude, or if he is thereby prevented from making advantageous repairs on his estate, he may offer to the owner of the other estate a place equally convenient for the exercise of his rights, and the owner of the estate to which the servitude is due can not refuse it."

Defendant contends that under this article plaintiffs have the burden to prove that the overhang has diminished the use of the servitude or made it more inconvenient and that they failed to carry this burden. Defendant relies on evidence which demonstrated that the servitude was used only sparingly and at particular times of the year for the passage of agricultural vehicles and that with the removal of the other impediments, plaintiffs will experience no difficulty whatsoever in the passage of their equipment through the right-of-way. While it may be that two of the larger vehicles may not pass abreast of each other in the area where the school building is located, the testimony is that there is never an occasion when two such vehicles must pass abreast because the servitude is so sparingly used.

On the basis of these facts and the rationale in Kaffie v. Pioneer Bank & Trust Company, 184 So.2d 595 (La.App.2nd Cir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
303 So. 2d 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hymel-v-st-john-the-baptist-parish-school-board-lactapp-1975.