LOUTRE LAND AND TIMBER CO. v. Roberts

72 So. 3d 403, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 897, 2011 WL 3111338
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 27, 2011
Docket45,355-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 So. 3d 403 (LOUTRE LAND AND TIMBER CO. v. Roberts) 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
LOUTRE LAND AND TIMBER CO. v. Roberts, 72 So. 3d 403, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 897, 2011 WL 3111338 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

CARAWAY, J.

11 This boundary action involving the ownership of immovable property and damages is again before us on remand from the Supreme Court for review of the issues regarding damages which were not addressed in an earlier appeal. Loutre Land and Timber Co. v. Roberts, 10-2327 (La.5/10/11), 63 So.3d 120. The defendant’s actions in attempting to construct a boundary fence were conducted on property owned entirely by plaintiff some distance away from the now established boundary between the parties’ tracts. Those actions damaged plaintiffs property. Defendant contests the assessment of those damages by the trial court and the penalties and attorney fees awarded plaintiff under the timber trespass statute. Plaintiff answered the appeal seeking additional damages and trial costs which the trial court refused to award. For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court’s ruling in part and affirm in part.

Facts

This protracted boundary dispute between owners of two contiguous tracts concerns the ownership of a 15-acre tract which Edward W. Roberts (“Roberts”) and his family had lost through his neighbor’s adverse possession and acquisitive prescription. Defendant Roberts had just begun constructing a boundary fence along the north side of the 15-acre tract when he was halted by this suit filed by Loutre Land and Timber Company (“Loutre”). The ownership to the 15-acre tract has now been adjudicated in favor of Loutre, and therefore, the arguments regarding the award of 1 ^damages, costs and fees not addressed in the earlier appeals are now before this court.

[405]*405After a trial on the merits,1 the trial court awarded Loutre $17,650 in total damages for Roberts’s actions. This sum represented the following categories:

Fence and Post Removal: $ 650.00
Restoration: $ 700.00
Treble Damages: $ 300.00
HarassmenVIneonvenience Damages $ 1,000.00
Attorney Fees: $15,000.00

The trial court awarded $300 in treble damages, based upon Loutre’s evidence that the cost for replacement of 65 bare root seedlings was $100. Since a few years had passed between the time of Roberts’s actions in 2003 and the trial, Loutre sought the sum of $1,300 to replace the destroyed seedlings with larger pine trees, plus $1,500 in labor and costs. In contrast to the cost of seedlings, each large tree would cost $20. Loutre’s expert also testified that the site preparation and fertilizer costs would be between $300-$500 each and that total reforestation costs, including the additional $2,800 for planting the larger trees, would be $3,500-$4,000.

Rejecting this view, the trial judge awarded $700 reforestation costs setting forth his reasons for the award as follows:

It is this court’s understanding that Loutre would be entitled to the value of the trees at the time the trees were destroyed. They were seedlings at that time. Loutre would have a duty to replant as soon as possible and then request damages, thereby minimizing damages. The amount they are requesting would be to replant larger trees, so |3they would be put back close to the same position had the trees not been destroyed some years ago. Mr. Perry testified that the value of the seedlings at the time they were destroyed would be approximately $100.00. This amount is fair and reasonable and will be accepted by the Court.
Tracy Scott Weems testified that the site preparation for the replanting would be between $300-$500 and cost of the fertilizer would be between $300-$500. That area that was bush hogged by Roberts was relatively small, therefore the Court will accept the minimum figure. Accordingly, the court will award the sum of $700.00 for the restoration cost.

Thus, the trial court awarded $100 for seedlings, $300 for site preparation and $300 for fertilizer. Additionally, finding that the provisions of La. R.S. 3:4278.1 applied to the facts of this case, the trial court imposed a separate $300 treble damage penalty.2 The court’s reasoning was as follows:

The evidence clearly shows that Edward Roberts went upon the disputed tract in February, 2003; that he did so when the resident forester was not in the area, that he did bush hog some pine seedlings, and did commence to erect a fence. He obviously was trying to take back what he considered to be his property by building a new boundary fence. He knew at the time that he and his family had not possessed the disputed tract. He and his family had paid taxes [406]*406as they held record title, but a survey told him that the line was not where he thought it was. He secured "a quit-claim deed and decided to take action to claim what he thought was his. He certainly had the right to take action, but it should have been through a lawsuit, rather than a trespass. Mr. Roberts did go upon the property, he did so willfully and intentionally, he did cause damage, and he did so without the consent of the owner.
Accordingly, Edwards Roberts must respond in damages for his actions in February, 2003, by going upon the land and cutting the trees, and commencing to erect the fence. Even if this Court were to determine the defendant’s actions were in good faith, he must still respond in damages as requested by Plaintiff, because he certainly should have been aware that his actions were without the consent of Loutre, and he has certainly failed to make payment after notification |4and legal demands were made. This Court finds that Roberts will be held liable for the civil damages and reasonable attorney fees as provided for in LSA-R.S. 3:4278.1.

In denying Loutre an award of survey costs and expert witness fees, which is now contested by Loutre, the court reasoned as follows in its written reasons for judgment:

The end result of this case is that Loutre received more land than it paid for, and that Roberts and his family received less land than they paid for. Robert’s actions were more out of frustration than an attempt to cause deliberate harm. This Court does not deem it fair to assess these costs to the Defendant. Both parties incurred costs in the presentation of their cases, and it is equitable to allow both parties to pay them respective costs. Therefore the request that the cost of the survey and the fees of the expert witness will be denied.

Roberts appealed the judgment arguing that the trial court erred in awarding treble damages and attorney fees under La. R.S. 3:4278.1 because the evidence showed his belief that he was the owner of the tract and was acting in good faith with no intent to destroy Loutre’s trees. Alternatively, Roberts argued that the $700 restoration award and the $15,000 attorney fees award are excessive.

Loutre answered the appeal urging that the attorney fee award was insufficient in light of the extensive work and preparation required for preparation and litigation of the case. Loutre also contends that the trial court erred in awarding insufficient damages for reforestation and in denying an award of survey costs and expert witness fees.

Discussion

I.

The trial court applied the treble damage piracy statute La. R.S. 3:4278.1 (“the Statute”) to only the $100 cost of the 65 pine seedlings | ¿recently planted by Loutre in the months before Roberts’s actions.

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LOUTRE LAND AND TIMBER CO. v. Roberts
72 So. 3d 403 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 So. 3d 403, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 897, 2011 WL 3111338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loutre-land-and-timber-co-v-roberts-lactapp-2011.