McGuire v. Central Louisiana Elec. Co., Inc.

337 So. 2d 1070, 1976 La. LEXIS 4145
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 13, 1976
Docket57567
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 337 So. 2d 1070 (McGuire v. Central Louisiana Elec. Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGuire v. Central Louisiana Elec. Co., Inc., 337 So. 2d 1070, 1976 La. LEXIS 4145 (La. 1976).

Opinion

337 So.2d 1070 (1976)

Ronald C. McGUIRE
v.
CENTRAL LOUISIANA ELECTRIC COMPANY, INC.

No. 57567.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

September 13, 1976.

*1071 Jake Shapiro, Alexandria, for plaintiff-applicant.

Richard E. Lee, Holt, Wagner & Lee, Pineville, for defendant-respondent.

DENNIS, Justice.

On August 10, 1971, plaintiff, Ronald C. McGuire, filed suit against defendant, Central Louisiana Electric Company, Inc., hereinafter Cleco, for damages sustained through Cleco's alleged wrongful cutting and trimming of trees on his property. Cleco held a conventional servitude on plaintiff's lot extending five feet within the property and paralleling plaintiff's southern property line. On February 23, 1971, Cleco, through Meador Contracting Company of Louisiana Inc., hereinafter Meador, a subcontractor working under a Cleco work order, cleared a ten-foot strip within plaintiff's south property line. Three trees within the servitude were cut; three trees outside the servitude were cut; and the foliage on the south side of three other trees, also outside the servitude, was removed. Portions of plaintiff's property outside the servitude were scarred by ruts left by the subcontractor's equipment, and the six unsightly stumps were not removed.

The trial court dismissed plaintiff's claim at his costs, ruling that Cleco had a broad right to cut and trim trees threatening its power lines under its right-of-way agreement, and that in any event, the cutting had been done by an independent contractor, over which Cleco had no control and for which Cleco was not responsible. The Third Circuit Court of Appeal found the exact location of the agreed right-of-way uncertain, but assumed that "a marginal encroachment" occurred. That court affirmed the trial court's dismissal with one judge dissenting, based on its conclusion that, notwithstanding the limited right-of-way granted Cleco by plaintiff's ancestor in title, by virtue of La.Civil Code article 771, Cleco acquired "the right to trim trees and shrubbery located off of the right-of-way proper." We granted writs, and, for the reasons hereinafter stated, reverse.

The Right-of-Way Permit acquired from plaintiff's ancestor in title, in pertinent part, authorized Cleco:

"* * * [T]o cut and trim trees and shrubbery to the extent necessary to keep them clear of said electric line or system *1072 and to cut down from time to time all dead, weak, leaning or dangerous trees that are tall enough to strike the wires in falling.
"It is understood and agreed that the Right-of-Way and easement hereby granted [one half of which is located on plaintiff's property] is 10 feet in width."

A conventional servitude established by title is governed principally by the intention of the parties. Article 709 of the Louisiana Civil Code provides that owners of land may establish "such servitudes as they deem proper," subject to public policy limitations, and that where servitudes are established by title,

"The use and extent of servitudes thus established are regulated by the title by which they are granted, * * *."

See also, La.C.C. arts. 748, 774; 1 M. Planiol, Traite elementair de droit civil (La.St. L.Inst. transl. 1959), No. 2964; Yiannopoulos, Predial Servitudes; Creation by Title; Louisiana and Comparative Law, 45 Tul.L. Rev. 459, 494 (1971) and cases cited therein.

The contract in the instant case expressly limits the width of the present servitude to ten feet, and in our opinion is not ambiguous. The contractual language delineating the servitude follows the language authorizing its holder to cut and trim vegetation and by its position indicates the parties' intention that these accessory rights be exercised only within the servitude boundaries.

The construction given the right-of-way agreement by the majority of the court of appeal would, in effect, delete the restriction on the width of the servitude and thus disregard the intention of the parties. Therefore, the decision below was contrary to codal principles and, as the dissenting judge aptly pointed out, would produce an anomalous result:

"* * * [A]n owner can no longer expressly limit the extent of a conventional servitude. The servitude will be expanded to whatever a `reasonable' limit may be. * * *"

Even if one were to consider the right-of-way agreement ambiguous, which we do not, instruments purporting to establish predial servitudes "in case of doubt as to their extent or the manner of using them, are always interpreted in favor of the owner of the property to be affected." La. C.C. art. 753; McGuffy v. Weil, 240 La. 758, 125 So.2d 154 (1960); Boudreaux v. Landry, 120 So.2d 535 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1960). Thus, any doubts should be resolved in favor of the plaintiff in this case.

The majority of the court of appeal fell into error when it followed Sticker v. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, 101 So.2d 476 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1958) and applied only articles 771-72 of the La.Civil Code to the facts of this case. These articles provide:

"Art. 771. When a servitude is established, everything which is necessary to use such servitude is supposed to be granted at the same time with the servitude.
"Thus the servitude of drawing water out of a spring carries necessarily with it the right of passage.
"But the passage, in this case and in all others in which it is permitted as an accessory to some other servitude, must be made in the way the most direct, the shortest, and the least inconvenient to the estate subject to the servitude."
"Art. 772. He to whom a servitude is due, has a right to make all the works necessary to use and preserve the same."

Sticker involved a right-of-way established, not by title, but through appropriation by the utility under the now defunct St. Julien Doctrine. See St. Julien v. Morgan L. & T.R. Co., 35 La.Ann. 924 (1883) overruled prospectively by Lake v. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 330 So.2d 914 (La. 1976). In Sticker the court of appeal ruled that, by virtue of accessory rights granted the holder of a servitude by La.Civil Code articles 771-72, the telephone company was entitled to clear trees and shrubs to a distance of six feet on either side of the center line of the servitude, because that action was reasonable and necessary to the servitude's continued usefulness.

The majority below failed to note that Sticker did not involve a servitude established *1073 by title. In the absence of an expressed agreement between the parties, and based on the circumstances of that case, the twelve foot wide clearance area approved by Sticker as necessary to use the telephone line servitude, did not represent an unreasonable application of articles 771-72. However, in the present case, because of the contract between the parties limiting the width of the right-of-way the court was required to give heed not only to articles 771-72, but also articles 709, 748, 753 and 774 which, as we explained above, required the court to restrict the area of the servitude to that intended by the parties as stated in the instrument.

We cannot agree with the court of appeal majority's finding that "[t]he exact location of the right-of-way * * * is not clear from the record * * *." As the dissenting judge in the court below observed,

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