Luke J. Grezaffi v. Paul Bryan Carroll and Mikki Gremillion Carroll

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 6, 2023
Docket2022CA0229
StatusUnknown

This text of Luke J. Grezaffi v. Paul Bryan Carroll and Mikki Gremillion Carroll (Luke J. Grezaffi v. Paul Bryan Carroll and Mikki Gremillion Carroll) 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
Luke J. Grezaffi v. Paul Bryan Carroll and Mikki Gremillion Carroll, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL Cy A FIRST CIRCUIT

cu NO. 2022 CA 0229

Cw we c\\4 LUKE J. GREZAFFI

mer 4 VERSUS PAUL BRYAN CARROLL AND MIKKI GREMILLION CARROLL Judgment Rendered: _APR 06 2023 * OK OK ok °K On Appeal from the

18th Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Pointe Coupee

State of Louisiana Trial Court No. 49886

Honorable Elizabeth A. Engolio, Judge Presiding

ok ok ok Ok William C. Shockey Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellee, Alex T. Griffin Luke J. Grezaffi Baton Rouge, LA James C. Dewey Attorney for Defendant-Appellant, New Roads, LA Paul Bryan Carroll Cy J. D’ Aguila, Jr. Attorneys for Defendant-Appellant, James C. Dewey Mikki Gremillion Carroll New Roads, LA Dannie P. Garrett, III Counsel for Amicus Curiae, Baton Rouge, LA Pointe Coupee Parish Government ok Ok ok Ok

BEFORE: THERIOT, CHUTZ, AND HESTER, JJ. HESTER, J.

This matter is before us on appeal by defendants, Paul Bryan Carroll and Mikki Gremillion Carroll, from judgments of the trial court, permanently enjoining defendants from interfering with Luke J. Grezaffi’s passage on Lee Lane in Pointe Coupee Parish, State of Louisiana, awarding damages and attorney’s fees to Mr. Grezaffi, and assessing costs of court, including expert witness fees, to defendants. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the trial court’s judgment overruling Mr. Carroll’s exception raising the objection of nonjoinder, set aside the judgments awarding the relief delineated above, and remand the matter to the trial court.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1990, Mr. Carroll and his former wife, Mikki Carroll, acquired a tract of farmland (approximately 246 acres) near Batchelor, Louisiana in Pointe Coupee Parish. The current Carroll Tract was part of a larger tract previously owned by R.E. Lee, which was subdivided into Lot 2 and Lots 1-A and 1-B, which were later resubdivided into Lots 1-A-1 and 1-B-1.' A portion of the Carroll Tract is bordered by Black Bayou. The Carroll Tract is also bordered on two edges by a smaller tract of land, which is known as the Smiley Tract. The Carroll Tract and the Smiley Tract can be accessed from Louisiana Highway 419 through Lee Lane, which follows the property line of Lot 2 and makes a sharp right (westerly) turn in the direction of Black Bayou, successively abutting the property lines of Lots 2, 1-B-1, 1-A-1 (the Carroll Tract), and the Smiley Tract. Central to the dispute herein is whether Lee

Lane is a public road all the way through the Carroll Tract and the Smiley Tract or

' According to the survey plat by James M. Joffrion, originally dated April 18, 1963, revised on April 30, 1984, and referenced in the August 28, 1990 Cash Sale from R.E. Lee to the Carrolls, the Carroll Tract was part of a larger tract which was subdivided with the Carrolls acquiring Lot 1-A. According to an Act of Exchange dated April 24, 1992, the Carrolls, as owners of Lot 1-A, and R.E. Lee, as the owner of Lot 1-B, transferred portions of their respective property to one another, which was depicted on a survey made for the Carrolls and R.E. Lee by Charles R. St. Romain, dated September 22, 1990. As a result of the Act of Exchange, Lots 1-A and 1-B were resubdivided into Lots 1-A-1 and 1-B-1, utilizing Black Bayou as the new boundary line.

2 whether the public road ended at the property line (Black Bayou) of the Carroll Tract,

which was just past the Joey Kent/Bobby Lee (Kent-Lee) house on the neighboring

tract.”

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Mr. Carroll farmed the Smiley Tract for 30 years. Mr. Carroll would

sometimes haul crops out from the Smiley Tract using Lee Lane, but “[m]ost of the

time [he’d] go back out to 419 on [his] improved turnrow,” as Mr. Carroll has access

to the Carroll tract, his home, and his farming headquarters directly from Highway

419. At some point during the period of time he farmed the property, Mr. Carroll

* The disputed portion of Lee Lane spans the length of 814 feet, and the length of Lee Lane

from Highway 419 to the disputed portion is 8,472 feet. replaced a culvert on the Smiley Tract where Lee Lane crosses Sandy Bayou at his expense.”

In June of 2019, the Smiley Tract was sold at a sheriff’s sale. At the time of the sale, Mr. Grezaffi owned approximately a sixteen percent (16%) interest in the Smiley Tract and Mr. Carroll owned approximately a six percent (6%) interest in the Smiley Tract. While Mr. Carroll was present at the sheriff's sale and bid on the property, he was outbid by Mr. Grezaffi. When Mr. Grezzafi became the full owner of the Smiley Tract, Mr. Carroll already had a soybean crop on the property, which he was allowed to harvest. Mr. Carroll and Mr. Grezzaffi had multiple conversations concerning federal money, back rent, and Mr. Carroll’s continued lease of the Smiley Tract. However, Mr. Grezaffi ultimately decided not to lease the property to Mr. Carroll, thereby ending Mr. Carroll’s farming operations on the property. Subsequently, on or about April 1, 2020, Mr. Carroll installed chains and a “Posted” sign on Lee Lane at the point where the road enters his property and removed the culvert he previously installed at Sandy Bayou.

After Mr. Grezaffi encountered the chains and “Posted” sign and saw that the culvert at Sandy Bayou had been removed, he approached Mr. Carroll. Mr. Grezaffi stated that Mr. Carroll informed him that he decided to block Mr. Grezaffi from the Smiley Tract after not being permitted to lease it and that Mr. Carroll moved the culvert at Sandy Bayou to his own property because he was the one who installed it. Subsequently, Mr. Grezaffi and his attorney called Mr. Carroll a number of times to see about working out an agreeable solution, but Mr. Carroll neither answered nor

returned their calls.

> According to Mr. Carroll, the previous culvert at Sandy Bayou collapsed, necessitating its replacement. He further testified that the culvert was located further down from his property, about two-thirds of the way into the Smiley Tract.

4 Ultimately, Mr. Grezaffi filed the instant lawsuit against the Carrolls on July 31, 2020, seeking preliminary and permanent injunctive relief ordering the Carrolls to open Lee Lane, remove all obstructions therefrom at their expense, and not to interfere with Mr. Grezaffi’s use of and passage on Lee Lane. Alternatively, Mr. Grezaffi prayed for the establishment of a predial servitude of passage along Lee Lane across the Carroll Tract for the benefit of the farmland portion of the Smiley Tract.4

While not named as a party, the Pointe Coupee Parish Government (“the Parish’) filed an amicus curiae brief with the trial court on August 11, 2020. In its brief, the Parish noted that the demands made in the petition were limited to injunctive relief relative to the blocked passage of the disputed portion of Lee Lane and the claim for a predial servitude of passage, on which the Parish acknowledged it had no interest or position.

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Luke J. Grezaffi v. Paul Bryan Carroll and Mikki Gremillion Carroll, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luke-j-grezaffi-v-paul-bryan-carroll-and-mikki-gremillion-carroll-lactapp-2023.