Kevin Dale Griffin, Et Ux. v. Doris John Abshire, Et Ux.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 2004
DocketCA-0004-0037
StatusUnknown

This text of Kevin Dale Griffin, Et Ux. v. Doris John Abshire, Et Ux. (Kevin Dale Griffin, Et Ux. v. Doris John Abshire, Et Ux.) 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
Kevin Dale Griffin, Et Ux. v. Doris John Abshire, Et Ux., (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

04-0037

KEVIN DALE GRIFFIN, ET UX.

VERSUS

DORIS JOHN ABSHIRE, ET UX.

************

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF VERMILION, NO. 76818-D, HONORABLE EDWARD RUBIN, DISTRICT JUDGE

JIMMIE C. PETERS JUDGE

Court composed of Jimmie C. Peters, Michael G. Sullivan, and John B. Scofield,* Judges.

REVERSED IN PART; AMENDED IN PART; AFFIRMED IN PART; RENDERED IN PART.

R. Chadwick Edwards, Jr. Edwards & Edwards Post Office Box 217 Abbeville, LA 70511-0217 (337) 893-2884 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLANTS/APPELLEES: Kevin Dale Griffin Camila Broussard Griffin

J. Isaac Funderburk Funderburk & Herpin Post Office Drawer 1030 Abbeville, LA 70511-1030 (337) 893-8140

* John B. Scofield participated in this decision by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court as judge pro tempore. COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS/APPELLEES: Doris John Abshire Theresa Pommier Abshire PETERS, J.

This appeal arises out of a dispute between neighbors over the size, ownership

and use of a private road established in a 1951 act of partition. Kevin Dale Griffin and

Camila Broussard Griffin (the “Griffins”), husband and wife, are the plaintiffs and

defendants in reconvention in the litigation. Doris John Abshire and Theresa Pommier

Abshire (the “Abshires”), husband and wife, are the defendants and plaintiffs in

reconvention. Dissatisfied with the judgment of the trial court, both sets of litigants

have appealed. For the following reasons, we reverse in part, amend in part, affirm

in part, and render in part.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

The litigation stems from an act of partition dated September 21, 1951, dividing

the community of acquêts and gains previously existing between Martial Trahan and

his deceased wife, Alene Hebert Trahan.1 In that partition agreement, Martial Trahan

and his children2 divided both movable and immovable property. One of the

properties received by Martial Trahan in full ownership was a twenty-five acre tract

of land in Section 4, Township 12 South, Range 2 East, Vermilion Parish. The

partition agreement described the tract by the property surrounding it rather than by

metes and bounds. Of significance to this litigation is the established western

boundary of the tract, the Hunter Canal. Because some of the immovable property

transferred to his children lay north and west of the twenty-five acres, Martial Trahan

granted his children a thirty-foot servitude of passage along its western boundary.

Martial Trahan died on January 21, 1971. On February 12, 1971, his children

entered into an act of partition wherein they divided the twenty-five acres as well as

1 Alene Hebert Trahan died on January 12, 1951. 2 The children were identified in the act of partition as Elier Trahan, husband of Ella Broussard; Edmee Trahan, wife of Harrison Marceaux; Rex Trahan, husband of Nellie Labrie; and Enite Trahan, wife of Lennis Abshire. other property.3 Enite Abshire4 acquired the west one-fourth of the twenty-five acres

with the remaining three-fourths being divided among the other three children. This

act of partition continued to describe the divided tracts by the property surrounding

each, and not by metes and bounds. It described the west boundary of Enite Abshire’s

tract as the Hunter Canal.

On November 4, 1982, Enite Abshire transferred 1.431 acres of the property she

obtained in 1971 to her son, Doris John Abshire, and his wife, Theresa Pommier

Abshire. The cash deed transferring the 1.431 acres described the property as:

That certain tract or parcel of ground, containing 1.431 acres, more or less, and being located in Southeast Quarter (SE¼) of Section 4, Township 12 South, Range 1 [sic] East, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana and being the same property marked “DORIS ABSHIRE & THERESA POMMIER” on a plat of survey prepared by Stephen J. Langlinai [sic], P.E., dated August 27, 1982, and attached hereto and made a part hereof.

The attached plat established the location of the 1.431 acres as a generally rectangular

tract extending 370 feet north and south on the east and west boundaries and as

situated north of a line approximately 760 feet north of the southern boundary of Enite

Abshire’s property. The east line of the 1.431 acres corresponded to Enite Abshire’s

east property line, but the west line fell thirty-eight feet east of her west property line

along the Hunter Canal. The plat described the thirty-eight-foot parcel not transferred

as a private right-of-way. Additionally, the plat extended the thirty-eight-foot-wide

private right-of-way the complete length of Enite Abshire’s western boundary. In

other words, the right-of-way described on the plat was eight feet wider than the

3 In the act of partition, the children were identified as Edmay (Edmee) Trahan, wife of Harrison Marceaux; Elier Trahan, husband of Ella Broussard; Rex Trahan, husband of Nellie Labry (Labrie); and Anite (Enite) Trahan, widow of Lanest (Lennis) Abshire. 4 Mrs. Abshire was referred to in the February 12, 1971 partition as “Anite Abshire.” However, in the September 21, 1951 act of partition and in later deeds, she was referred to as “Enite Abshire.” For consistency in this opinion, we will refer to her as “Enite Abshire.”

2 servitude of passage granted in the 1951 act of partition. The deed did not transfer the

Abshires any interest in the right-of-way, but simply described the right-of-way.

On June 12, 1991, or almost nine years after she sold the 1.431-acre tract to

Doris John and Theresa Abshire, Enite Abshire divided the remainder of the tract, as

well as other immovable property, among her children. In the act of donation

transferring the property, four of her children (Hazel Abshire, Roland Abshire, Doris

John Abshire, and Linus Abshire) shared the remainder of the west one-fourth of the

twenty-five acres, while her remaining children received other properties. The four

named children each received a lot measuring 170 feet east and west and 380 feet

north and south, with Hazel Abshire acquiring the lot immediately north of Louisiana

Highway 696 (the southern boundary of the original twenty-five acres); Roland

Abshire acquiring the next lot; Doris John Abshire, who already owned the next lot

based on the November 4, 1982 transfer, acquiring the lot immediately north of that

acquisition; and Linus Abshire acquiring the northernmost lot. The act of donation

described the west boundary of each lot as “the 30 foot right-of-way.” Thus, whether

intentionally or by inadvertence, Enite Abshire retained ownership of the thirty-foot

strip as well as her entire interest in the servitude of passage.

Kevin and Camila Griffin purchased Hazel Abshire’s tract on July 8, 1992. In

the cash deed, Hazel Abshire also transferred to the Griffins “[a]ll of [her] rights, titles

and interest in and to the 30 foot private road right of way which runs northerly along

the west side of [the property transferred].” Doris John and Theresa Abshire acquired

Roland Abshire’s tract on July 19, 1995.

3 On September 5, 2001, the Griffins instituted suit against the Abshires.5 In their

petition, the Griffins asserted an undivided ownership interest in the thirty-foot

servitude of passage and asserted that the Abshires had constructed a fence on the

thirty-foot tract in an effort to impede their use of the property, had filed criminal

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Kevin Dale Griffin, Et Ux. v. Doris John Abshire, Et Ux., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-dale-griffin-et-ux-v-doris-john-abshire-et-ux-lactapp-2004.