Leo Cumpton and Sarah B. Bolton v. Dragon Estates, LLC

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 21, 2024
Docket55,784-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Leo Cumpton and Sarah B. Bolton v. Dragon Estates, LLC (Leo Cumpton and Sarah B. Bolton v. Dragon Estates, LLC) 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
Leo Cumpton and Sarah B. Bolton v. Dragon Estates, LLC, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Judgment rendered August 21, 2024. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 55,784-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

LEO CUMPTON AND SARAH B. Plaintiffs-Appellees BOLTON

versus

DRAGON ESTATES, LLC Defendant-Appellant

Appealed from the Fifth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Richland, Louisiana Trial Court No. 48,461

Honorable John Clay Hamilton, Judge

HUDSON, POTTS & BERNSTEIN, LLP Counsel for Appellant By: Robert McCuller Baldwin Jason Richard Smith

G. LARRY ARBOUR

COTTON, BOLTON, HOYCHICK, Counsel for Appellees & DOUGHTY, LLP By: John Hoychick, Jr.

Before COX, ROBINSON, and HUNTER, JJ. ROBINSON, J.

Plaintiffs, Leo Cumpton (“Cumpton”) and Sarah B. Bolton (“Bolton”)

(collectively, “Plaintiffs”), filed a boundary dispute action and claim for

damages on December 22, 2021, against Defendant, Dragon Estates, LLC

(“Defendant” or “Dragon Estates”), alleging 30-year acquisitive

prescription, or in the alternative, 10-year acquisitive prescription. Dragon

Estates filed a reconventional demand on February 10, 2022, claiming it is

entitled to a judgment decreeing it the owner of the subject tract based on

just title. After discovery, Plaintiffs filed a motion for partial summary

judgment on April 18, 2023. Defendant opposed Plaintiffs’ motion and filed

its own motion for summary judgment on June 9, 2023. Following a hearing

on August 11, 2023, the trial court granted Plaintiff’s motion for summary

judgment and denied Defendant’s motion. Judgment was rendered August

31, 2023, and filed September 1, 2023. Defendant filed a motion for

devolutive appeal, which was granted by order dated October 10, 2023.

For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court’s ruling.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Dragon Estates Acquisition

Bolton and Dragon Estates are the current owners of adjacent parcels

of property in Richland Parish, referred to herein as the “Bolton Tract” and

the “Dragon Tract,” respectively. Both tracts share a common ancestor in

title derived from a 1957 partition deed that created three tracts. Bolton, her

brother, Lanny Boies, and her mother, Susie F. Boies, received the first tract,

the Bolton Tract. R.C. Boies received the second tract. Dragon Estates later purchased approximately 21.36 acres of the second tract, the Dragon Tract,

from the Boies family in December 2020. The remainder of the second tract

is owned by a third party not involved in the property dispute.

Bill Holdman (“Holdman”) agreed to buy the Dragon Tract from

certain members of the Boies family, Glen Boies and Rachel Gandy, who

had requested that he purchase the family property since the other joint

owners no longer wanted to live in the area. Holdman formed Dragon

Estates for the purpose of purchasing the property. Before purchasing,

Holdman commissioned a professional land surveyor, Tommy Semmes, Jr.,

to survey the boundaries of the property, which was completed in April 2020

(“Semmes Survey”). Dragon Estates then purchased the property by deed

recorded December 30, 2020. In February 2021, Holdman had a barbed

wire fence built on the northern boundary of the Dragon Tract per the

Semmes Survey. At some point during either the surveying process or

building the fence, Holdman discovered that a portion of land just south of

the Dragon Tract’s surveyed boundary line was being farmed by Cumpton

pursuant to a lease with Bolton, and there was an irrigation well south of the

boundary. Plaintiffs allege that the fence Holdman constructed was in a

field being actively cultivated by Cumpton and he was denied access to the

irrigation pump, which ultimately resulted in the Plaintiffs filing suit

regarding the boundary dispute.

Dragon Estates purchased the property to develop a residential

subdivision, the location being ideal because Boies Road (a public road)

runs through the northern part of the Dragon Tract. Dragon Estates claims

that it is critical to the development for the Dragon Tract to include an area

2 up to 45 feet north of the center line of Boies Road for a utility right-of-way.

According to the Semmes survey, the northern boundary line of the Dragon

Tract was the necessary distance from Boies Road to include the requisite

space for the right-of-way. Dragon Estates also claims the encroaching

irrigation well would have to be moved because it is obstructing the required

right-of-way.

Bolton Ownership and Possession

Bolton acquired the Bolton Tract by way of the 1957 partition deed,

and it was owned by her family even prior to that time. Bolton testified that

she had continuously possessed the property up to Boies Road because she

believed she owned that portion of the property as part of the Bolton Tract.

She alleges that the property that is the subject of the dispute has been in

cultivation since the 1970s, and in pasture before then. Billy Boies

maintained the Bolton Tract in pasture until he farmed it from about 1979 to

1987. His son, Glen Boies, farmed the property from 1987 to 1999. When

Glen Boies stopped farming, Eric Rushing leased the land for farming from

1999 to 2019. The property was not cultivated for approximately one year,

1999 to 2000, but it was subject to Eric Rushing’s farm lease. Cumpton

began leasing the property in 2019.

At some point in or before 1966, a fence was constructed which

separated the two tracts. The boundary fence existed for more than 30 years

until it was removed. An aerial photograph of the property from 1989

showed the fence still in place. Glen Boies testified that he farmed the

property up to the fence until 1999, and Eric Rushing testified that no fence

was in place when he leased the property in 1999. Therefore, according to

3 this timeframe, the fence was likely removed in 1999. There are some fence

remnants on the east and west ends of the property near the boundary area,

but the parties dispute the location of the remnants in relation to the

boundary line and whether the remaining fence parts can sufficiently

indicate whether it was actually part of the previous boundary fence.

At some point, a structure used as the residence of Glen Boies’ uncle

was built on the east end of the current Dragon Tract; and Boies Road,

formerly Parish Road 4432, was constructed leading from the public

highway, then LA Highway 137, currently US Highway 425, to the

structure. The road ran south of and alongside the fence line separating the

Bolton tract from the current Dragon tract, though it supposedly curved

south at one time due to the location of a cattle catch-pen on the current

Dragon Tract. However, the parties dispute the exact location of this

particular curve in the road and its distance to the fence. Boies Road became

a public road sometime prior to 1984, and electrical services were

established January 21, 1982, that ran to the structure on the Dragon Tract.

Electric power poles were placed alongside the boundary fence and the north

edge of Boies Road, but the parties do not agree as to the exact proximity of

the poles to the fence.

In 1985, the State Department of Transportation (“DOTD”) began

constructing a four-lane highway utilizing a portion of railroad property

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