STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
17-902
NEIL LEJEUNE
VERSUS
RODNEY DRIGGERS
**********
APPEAL FROM THE THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF EVANGELINE, NO. 72349-B HONORABLE GARY J. ORTEGO, DISTRICT JUDGE
MARC T. AMY JUDGE
Court composed of Marc T. Amy, Shannon J. Gremillion, and Candyce G. Perret, Judges.
AFFIRMED.
John F. Craton Barousse & Craton, LLC Post Office Box 1305 Crowley, LA 70527-1305 (337) 785-1000 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: Neil LeJeune
Jacque B. Pucheu, Jr. Pucheu, Pucheu & Robinson Post Office Box 1109 Eunice, LA 70535-1109 (337) 457-9075 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Rodney Driggers AMY, Judge.
By this boundary action, the plaintiff sought a declaration of ownership by
acquisitive prescription of adjoining tracts of property in Evangeline Parish. The
defendant alleged ownership by record title. Following trial, the trial court found
merit in the plaintiff’s claim of acquisitive prescription and additionally rejected the
defendant’s claim of record title of one of the subject tracts. The defendant appeals.
For the following reasons, we affirm.
Factual and Procedural Background
Neil Lejeune filed this boundary action in March 2011 asserting ownership by
acquisitive prescription of three tracts of adjoining property in Evangeline Parish.
The record reflects that the three tracts were, at one time, part of the operations of the
Rock Island, Arkansas and Louisiana Railroad. The plaintiff asserts that, after the
railroad ceased operations in the 1970s, he, along with his ancestors in title, Errol and
Dwight Young, incorporated the railroad property into the existing farming operations
on either side of the disputed tracts. The plaintiff asserted that they possessed the
property in excess of thirty years by “maintaining the vegetation, storing equipment
on said land, and maintaining a fence on said land.” The plaintiff sought
establishment of the boundary to the extent of his possession.
The plaintiff named Rodney Driggers as a defendant in the litigation, noting
that Mr. Driggers “[r]ecently . . . placed a chain across a gate in an attempt to lock the
fence wherein plaintiff herein has had continuous possession of this land for more
than thirty (30) years.” The plaintiff denied that the defendant physically possessed or
controlled the property.
In turn, the defendant asserted that he was the title owner of the property,
having purchased certain property in Evangeline Parish from the railroad in 1985 as purportedly represented by quitclaim deed. By that deed he acquired all “of Grantor’s
right, title and interest, estate, claim and demand” of:
A strip of land of varying widths constituting the former line of railroad and associated station grounds, yards, depots, stock pens, coaling and watering sites and borrow pits as same are evidenced, monumented and located through the following described areas . . . .
The deed thereafter describes with particularity the property conveyed.1
The matter proceeded to a March 2017 bench trial, where the parties stipulated
to various issues before the court. By reference to a corresponding survey entered
into evidence as Joint Exhibit 1, 2 the parties identified the three tracts originally
contested: Tract 4 (identified “as the west half of the railroad right of way”); Tract 5
(identified as “the [e]ast half of the railroad right of way”); and Tract 6 (identified as
“the deed property”). In reciting the parties’ stipulation as to Tract 6, the trial court
noted that it was comprised of “two tracts . . . sold to the railroad originally.”
Importantly, the parties stipulated that Tract 4 was no longer in dispute, representing
that “the ownership of Tract No. 4 is stipulated to be that of the plaintiff, Mr. and Mrs.
Neil Lejeune.”
Following two days of testimony, the trial court declared the plaintiff and his
wife to be the owners3 of “Tracts #5 and #6, along with Tract #4, as stipulated by the
1 As discussed below, the defendant notes that the deed further provides:
The description contained herein notwithstanding, the intent of this document is to convey all right, title and interest of the Grantor wherever evidenced, monumented or located in the Parish aforesaid, less and except any prior conveyances. 2 Used extensively throughout the trial, Joint Exhibit 1 is entitled “Errol and Dwight Young Survey” by Paul N. Fontenot, Registered Land Surveyor. 3 In reasons for ruling, the trial court noted that the defendant filed only a general answer, but explained that:
[P]ursuant to the defendant’s presentation of said evidence at the first day of trial, without objection by the attorney for plaintiff, the court allowed said evidence, as an expansion of the parties’ pleadings, even though same was not properly pled by defendant, and therefore the issue(s) as to the possession and ownership of the said tracts/land in dispute, as to both parties, was allowed as properly before the court.
2 parties, all located in Evangeline Parish in full ownership against all others.” The trial
court specifically found that the defendant failed to prove title to Tract 6. Rather, the
trial court referenced “other public records and documentary evidence[,]” including
parish parcel listings, oil and gas leases, and tax notices favored the plaintiff. On this
latter point, the trial court pointed to the plaintiff’s payment of property taxes on
Tracts 5 and 6.
Regarding the plaintiff’s claim, the trial court further explained:
[T]hat even hypothetically should this court have found that Driggers had proven having a valid/good title to both Tract #5 and #6, which the court did not, the court finds, as a finding of fact, that the plaintiff, Lejeune, has proven by a preponderance and overwhelming evidence showing and providing proof that Mr. Young, as plaintiff’s ancestor in title, and Lejeune, by tacking, have had actual corporeal possession of these two tracts in dispute, and the court further finds that Lejeune has carried his burden of proof and proven his claim of acquisitive prescription of these two tracts in dispute, all pursuant Lejeune and his ancestors in title, Young’s continuous, peaceful uninterrupted actual and public possession of said two tracts of land in dispute, and all pursuant to Lejeune and his ancestor in title, Young, maintaining their continuous daily farming operations, along with the many other activities of possession, as to said tracts/land in dispute, specifically Tracts #5 & #6 for over 30 plus years, and specifically from 1980 until the Driggers’ 2011 disturbance and this resulting litigation filed herein.[4]
The resulting judgment reflected the declaration of the ownership as discussed in the
reasons for ruling, describing with particularity each of the three tracts at issue in the
4 Notwithstanding its observation as to Tract 6, the trial court further found that the defendant failed to prove continuous, peaceful, and uninterrupted possession of the disputed tracts for 10 years. See La.Civ.Code art. 3475 (providing that “[t]he requisites for the acquisitive prescription of ten years are: possession of ten years, good faith, just title, and a thing susceptible of acquisition by prescription); La.Civ.Code art. 3476 (providing that “[t]he possessor must have corporeal possession, or civil possession preceded by corporeal possession, to acquire a thing by prescription. The possession must be continuous, uninterrupted, peaceable, public, and unequivocal.”) Corresponding with its finding regarding the plaintiff’s possession, the trial court noted the possession continued “without interruption during those same 10 plus years as claimed by Driggers’ possession herein.”
3 boundary action. See La.Civ.Code art. 792;5 La.Civ.Code art. 794.6 See also La.Code
Civ.P. art. 3693.7
The defendant appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in: 1) finding that he
failed to demonstrate that he held title to Tract 6; 2) not admitting impeachment
documentation as to the plaintiff’s testimony (subject of Proffer No.1); 3) finding that
the plaintiff and his ancestors in title acquired Tract 5 by corporeal possession of
thirty years; 4) failing to find tacit acknowledgement of his ownership; and in 5)
finding that the plaintiff’s ancestors in title possessed the disputed tracts within visible
bounds and, in turn, that he “tacked” that possession.
Discussion
Proffered Testimony
Taking the defendant’s assignments of error out of turn for discussion, we first
consider the only procedural issue presented. During trial, the plaintiff testified
regarding his presence at an August 11, 1989 meeting conducted at the law office of J.
Nilas Young. Both parties advanced their description of the meeting in support of
their respective positions as to whether possession was interrupted or whether the
defendant’s ownership was acknowledged by the plaintiff’s ancestors in title. The
plaintiff testified that he attended the 1989 meeting at the request of Errol Young.
5 Article 792 provides that: “The court shall fix the boundary according to the ownership of the parties; if neither party proves ownership, the boundary shall be fixed according to limits established by possession.” 6 Article 794 provides that:
When a party proves acquisitive prescription, the boundary shall be fixed according to limits established by prescription rather than titles. If a party and his ancestors in title possessed for thirty years without interruption, within visible bounds, more land than their title called for, the boundary shall be fixed along those bounds. 7 Article 3693 provides: “After considering the evidence, including the testimony and exhibits of a surveyor or other expert appointed by the court or by a party, the court shall render judgment fixing the boundary between the contiguous lands in accordance with the ownership or possession of the parties.”
4 However, during the defendant’s testimony, he denied the plaintiff’s presence at the
meeting. For the stated purpose of corroborating his own testimony, the defendant
attempted to introduce the attorney’s bill from the date of the meeting. He asserted
that the billing record reflected the meeting’s attendees. However, the trial court
rejected the introduction of that evidence, permitting a proffer instead.
Here, the defendant challenges that ruling and argues that the evidence was
admissible as relevant. He suggests that the document provided objective evidence of
his version of events at the August 1989 meeting and, in turn, his testimony regarding
that meeting constituted acknowledgment by the Youngs of his ownership so as to
interrupt prescription.
Following review, we leave the trial court’s ruling undisturbed. While the
defendant suggests that the billing record, issued to Errol and Dwight Young, was
relevant as to the meeting’s attendees, the trial court rejected that argument stating:
This is not a bill to Mr. Driggers. It is a bill and it speaks for itself, attorney’s fees for services rendered and cost incurred in reference to a…a bed…railroad bed dispute with Rodney L. Driggers, May 4, 1988 thru September 15, 1989 and it says on there, Mr. Errol Young and Mr. Dwight Young. That’s their bill. They’re not parties to this litigation…uh…but as far as it being written verification as you’re offering it that’s gonna be for the Judge to decide but that…that…it does not present to the Court written…anything written confirming that…that who was there and who’s not there.… A billing of it…of itself being offered as evidence of who was at the meeting will not be allowed[.]
Louisiana Code of Evidence Article 402 provides that “[a]ll relevant evidence
is admissible, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution of the United States,
the Constitution of Louisiana, this Code of Evidence, or other legislation.”
Conversely, “[e]vidence which is not relevant is not admissible.” Id. While Mr.
Driggers advances the evidence as relevant, the trial court rejected the argument that
the document related to the proposition for which it was advanced, as seen above. On
this point, La.Code Evid. art. 401 defines “relevant evidence” as that “having any
5 tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination
of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.”
Absent an abuse of discretion, a trial court’s ruling as to relevance will not be
disturbed on appeal. Quibodeaux v. Med. Ctr. of Sw. La., 97-204 (La.App. 3 Cir.
3/6/98), 707 So.2d 1380, writ denied, 98-0926 (La. 5/15/98), 719 So.2d 465.
Given the trial court’s observations and the nature of the proffered billing
document, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s determination and leave
its ruling undisturbed. Both parties offered differing accounts of the August 1989
meeting, with the defendant denying the plaintiff’s presence at that meeting. While
the defendant suggests that the document corroborates his version of events, reference
to the document does not dictate such a finding. The multi-entry document instead
supports the trial court’s conclusion that it did not evidence “written confirmation” of
the meeting’s attendees and was instead, a bill issued to the attorney’s clients.
This assignment of error lacks merit.
Acquisitive Prescription of Thirty Years – Tract 5
As revealed in the above-excerpted reasons for ruling, the trial court determined
that, even assuming for purposes of discussion that the defendant established that he
was the title holder of Tracts 5 and 6, the plaintiff sustained his burden of proving
acquisitive prescription. By this assignment of error, the defendant challenges that
determination as to Tract 5, designated by the party’s stipulation as the east half of the
railroad right-of-way. The defendant notes that testimony indicates that, during the
railroad’s operation, fences separated the tract from the surrounding property in order
to keep cattle from the area. He contends, however, that the plaintiff testified that he
6 did not remove the fencing until 1982, 8 a date the defendant contends “was the
beginning date for any acquisitive prescription claim of thirty years.” As the plaintiff
filed the present action in 2011, the thirty-year period “would not lapse until one year
after the litigation was filed” according to the defendant’s argument. He further
contends that, even to the extent the plaintiff may be said to have “tacked” the
possession of his ancestors in title, Errol and Dwight Young, their possession must be
viewed as equivocal rather than unequivocal and uninterrupted.
After review, we maintain the trial court’s ruling. Pertinent to this matter in
which the plaintiff asserts ownership strictly by acquisitive prescription,9 La.Civ.Code
art. 3486 provides that: “Ownership and other real rights in immovables may be
acquired by the prescription of thirty years without the need of just title or possession
in good faith.” Additionally, “[f]or purposes of acquisitive prescription without title,
possession extends only to that which has been actually possessed.” La.Civ.Code art.
3487. Central to the defendant’s inquiry in the second component of this assignment
of error, which addresses the nature of the plaintiff’s possession, La.Civ.Code art.
3476 describes the attributes of possession as follows:
The possessor must have corporeal possession, or civil possession preceded by corporeal possession, to acquire a thing by prescription.
The possession must be continuous, uninterrupted, peaceable, public, and unequivocal.
The party claiming acquisitive prescription has the burden of proving such possession
and must establish that he or she intended to possess the property as owner. See
Crowell Land & Mineral Corp. v. Funderburk, 96-1123 (La.App. 3 Cir. 3/5/97), 692
8 The plaintiff testified that he removed fences from the west and east property lines of the railbed in “[p]robably '81[.]” While he did not know on which tract of land the fences were located, he said that “they were meant to keep the cattle off the railroad[.]” 9 Louisiana Civil Code Article 3446 provides that “[a]cquisitive prescription is a mode of acquiring ownership or other real rights by possession for a period of time.”
7 So.2d 535. A trial court’s finding regarding possession is a factual determination that
will not be disturbed on review unless manifestly erroneous. Id.
Finally, insofar as the plaintiff is the owner of the surrounding farmland and
instituted this matter as a boundary action, La.Civ.Code art. 794 provides that:
When a party proves acquisitive prescription, the boundary shall be fixed according to limits established by prescription rather than titles. If a party and his ancestors in title possessed for thirty years without interruption, within visible bounds, more land than their title called for, the boundary shall be fixed along these bounds.
As noted by the defendant in this assignment of error, the plaintiff’s claim in
this acquisitive prescription matter is dependent on the possession by the plaintiff’s
ancestors in title. On this point, the record indicates that, at one time, the larger
surrounding property was owned in indivision by Dwight and Errol Young. However,
Dwight and Errol partitioned that property in February 2002. By the partition, Errol
accepted “Tracts 5 and 6, containing 2.55 acres and 4.42 acres[,]” 10 whereas Dwight
accepted “Tract 4, containing 3.92 acres.” 11 The partition also indicated that:
“Appearers declare that Tracts 4, 5 and 6 represent portions of the former Railroad
Right-of-Way and appearers do not warrant title as to same, but do warrant title in and
to the remaining tracts received by each in this partition.” Although the plaintiff was
the longtime tenant of Errol and Dwight on the larger property, Dwight transferred his
property, including Tract 4, to the plaintiff and his wife in December 2007 by Act of
Donation. Thereafter, in March 2013, the plaintiff and his wife purchased Errol’s
property, including Tracts 5 and 6.12
10 Errol further accepted “Tract 1, containing 70.71 acres” and “Tract 3, containing 19.92 acres[.]” 11 Dwight also accepted “Tract 2, containing 109.98 acres.” 12 We note here that the plaintiff confirmed during cross examination that he filed the 2011 petition instituting this matter before he owned Tracts 5 and 6.
8 As for the possession of Tract 5, the tract at issue in this assignment of error,
the defendant suggests that, due to the presence of certain fences along the abandoned
railway, the plaintiff’s possession could not have commenced until 1982. However,
the record supports the trial court’s finding that the plaintiff’s possession commenced
earlier than that date. The plaintiff’s wife, Elizabeth Lejeune, testified that, beginning
in the late 1960s, she lived “about maybe a quarter of a mile if that” from the property
with her step-father, Errol, and that her “[school] bus passed by there every day when
we crossed the railroad tracks.” Although she recalled original fencing between the
adjacent cropland and the railroad, she explained that about a year or so after moving
to the area, Errol “had gotten a um…a dozer…a blade on his…he was real excited
about it but he could move dirt and uh…he went out there and he took the fence down
and…and incorporated the rest of the field right there.”
According to the plaintiff, he first became aware of the abandoned railroad
track in early 1976, when Errol explained to him that he and Dwight were meeting
with an individual “to find out what to do with the abandoned railroad track.” The
plaintiff testified that Errol told him that he “and Dwight had built fences on the north
end and the south end and they were to keep the gates closed at all times.” The
plaintiff stated that, although “[t]here was [sic] already fences on the east and the
west[,]” they “just fenced off both ends and they would’ve done that in very early
'76[.]” The plaintiff also testified that: “[H]e did mention it to me that they had done
it and that if I would go to make sure I closed the gates, keep the gate up on the south
end.” Further, when asked when he first began working on railroad property, the
plaintiff explained that he, his brother, and their father asked “Errol for the . . . ballast,
the sand and the gravel and everything that was on there. So we started probably in
mid '77 loading the gravel on the truck and hauling it back to the house.” The
9 plaintiff stated that “the rails and the timbers were all removed by the time we
started.” The plaintiff explained that, by 1981, he and Errol began discussing the
usage of the former railroad bed as an airstrip, as detailed below. In light of this
evidence of the Youngs’ installation of gates for purposes of intentionally enclosing
the property and their granting of permission to others for the removal of materials
from the property, we conclude that the record supports the trial court’s determination
that the plaintiff’s ancestor in title commenced possession of the property well before
the 1982 date referenced by the defendant.
As to the second component of the defendant’s argument, the record further
supports the trial court’s determination that the plaintiff’s possession had the attributes
of continuous, uninterrupted, peaceable, public, and unequivocal possession as
required by La.Civ.Code art. 3476. In addition to the circumstances surrounding the
enclosure created by Errol and his brother in the 1970s and the early removal of the
former railroad materials, much of the testimony at trial focused on the use of Tract 5
as an airstrip. Elizabeth and the plaintiff both explained that Errol felt that the former
railroad bed would make a good airstrip. The plaintiff testified that, after construction
in 1981, they began using Tract 5 as an airstrip in “probably '82 or '83.” 13 He
confirmed that Errol and Dwight, who continued to own the farm, “agreed” with the
use of the airstrip and that “it was all part of what we needed to…to operate the farm,
Errol and Dwight’s farm and then Paul was also farming the Fontenot farm further
down the road and he would use it for that . . . he had a farm also he was using it for.”
The plaintiff explained that a drainage project was completed across Tract 5 with
Errol and Dwight purchasing the pipe. Also, various pilots confirmed their use of the
13 The plaintiff testified that he and his brother began farming the property as Errol and Dwight’s tenants in 1980 and, after 1982, he and Elizabeth did so.
10 airstrip for agricultural purposes, beginning in 1982. Not only did the pilots service
the Youngs’ fields, but pilots used the airstrip for other area farmers as well.
While the defendant suggests that the other pilots’ usage interfered with the
Youngs’, and in turn, the plaintiff’s, continuous, uninterrupted, and unequivocal use
of Tract 5, testimony indicated that the pilots and farmers did so with the knowledge
of the plaintiff and/or Errol and Dwight. Robert Lejeune, the plaintiff’s nephew,
testified that he began flying from the airstrip in 1997 and, by the date of trial, had
used the airstrip over a thousand times. He further explained that, among other things,
he assisted with the maintenance of the strip, including weekly grass clipping, the
placement of a concrete pad, a 2000-gallon water tank, and a water meter on the
property for the pilots’ use. Robert confirmed that his use was with the knowledge
and permission of Neal, Errol, or Dwight. Similarly, the plaintiff testified that other
users of the airstrip property assisted with maintenance, stating that they did so as a
“kind of like a thank you for using the airstrip.”
While the defendant’s assignment questions the continuous, uninterrupted, and
unequivocal nature of the plaintiff’s possession, we note here that the record also
supports the remaining attributes of possession listed by La.Civ.Code art. 3476. First,
the plaintiff’s possession was peaceable. While Errol and Dwight, along with the
plaintiff, became aware of the defendant’s claim of ownership in 1988-1989,14 a point
discussed below, the trial court determined that such notification did not constitute a
disruption sufficient to interfere with their peaceable possession. Further, and given
the agricultural community’s obvious knowledge and permissive use of the airstrip,
the plaintiff’s possession was public in nature. In sum, this evidence supports the trial
14 The defendant points to an August 1989 meeting as the purported point of interruption in the plaintiff’s and the Youngs’ possession. However, the record indicates that the Youngs became aware of a pilot being ordered from the property in 1988. Also, correspondence leading to the 1989 meeting commenced in 1988.
11 court’s ultimate finding that the plaintiff’s possession was continuous, uninterrupted,
peaceable, public, and unequivocal.
This assignment lacks merit.
Record Title – Tract 6
Although the defendant challenges the trial court’s determination regarding
acquisitive prescription as to Tract 5, as discussed above, the defendant returns to his
claim of record title to Tract 6 and argues that the trial court erred in concluding that
he was not the title holder of that portion of the property. The trial court determined
that:
The court has carefully reviewed all of the deeds, court orders, transfers and documentation of conveyance(s) presented by Driggers as to his alleged title and the “chain of title” of his ownership of these two tracts in dispute. A review of the defendant’s chain of title reflects and there appears to be a question and an error in the transfer and title to one of the two tracts in dispute, and specifically, as to Tract #6.
....
A careful review and reading of Driggers’ quitclaim deed, specifically identifies and shows a listings [sic] for Tracts #4 & #5, as identified, marked and highlighted by Driggers. However, a reading of said deed appears to lack any description for Tract #6, in the itemized listing of all tracts transferred to Driggers therein. As further evidence of the failure of said quitclaim deed to contain a listing and transfer of Tract #6 was the testimony of the defendant. When questioned, Driggers testified and confirmed that he nor his attorney could find or point-out, for the record, any specific listing which would correspond with the description of Tract #6 in the listing(s) of the properties described and transferred to Driggers in said quitclaim deed. Therefore, and as a result thereof, and specifically as to the issue of Driggers’ title to Tract #6 of the property in dispute, the court finds, as a finding of fact, that in fact the description and listing of Tract #6 to be missing and the parties to said deed failed to list and transfer said Tract #6; and thus the reading of said deed appears to confirm that the parties failed to transfer said Tract #6 from Chicago Pacific Corporation to Driggers in said Quitclaim Deed. The court therefore further finds that Driggers he has failed to carry his burden of proof of a good/valid title as to Tract #6, and he has failed to provide evidence sufficient as to title to Tract #6 in dispute herein.
(Exhibit citation omitted.)
12 Review of the quitclaim deed confirms the trial court’s observation that,
although Tracts 4 and 5 are included in the itemized listing of transferred parcels,
Tract 6 is not. The defendant instead lodges his claim of title to the deed inclusion by
reference to what he terms the deed’s “catchall phrase[,]” which provides that: “The
description contained herein notwithstanding, the intent of this document is to convey
all right, title and interest of the Grantor wherever evidenced, monumented or located
in the Parish aforesaid, less and except any prior conveyances.” However, and
notwithstanding the general nature of the language relied upon by the defendant, the
trial court further observed that the defendant failed to demonstrate that “he had
peaceful continuous uninterrupted possession of said Tract #6 for a period of 10 years
prior to this litigation” for purposes of his own acquisitive prescription of the
property. See La.Civ.Code art. 3475. The trial court also found that the plaintiff had
proven his own acquisitive prescription of the disputed property, including Tract 6.
This latter finding renders moot the defendant’s claim by virtue of the quitclaim deed.
Further, and like Tract 5, the record supports the trial court’s determination that
the plaintiff, by tacking, possessed Tract 6 in excess of thirty years. Notably, the
testimony was uncontroverted that Tract 6 was incorporated into the surrounding
farming operations and was planted with crops. As pointed out above, Elizabeth
testified that Errol removed fencing and incorporated the area into the existing field.
Testimony further indicated that the airstrip of Tract 5 was narrowed over the years,
with the crops surrounding the strip on either side. The defendant presented no
evidence to contradict the evidence of continuous farming on Tract 6.
Accordingly, this assignment lacks merit.
13 Acknowledgment
By this assignment, the defendant again advances his position that the period of
acquisitive prescription was interrupted by acknowledgment of the plaintiff’s
ancestors in title, Errol and Dwight, in August 1989. That time period relates to the
meeting with the Youngs’ attorney, Nilas Young, as discussed above in connection
with the proffered billing statement. The defendant contends that the trial court erred
in failing to credit his account of the meeting, as well as correspondence generated
during the time period of meeting. His version, the defendant asserts, reveals the
Youngs’ acknowledgement of his ownership of the property.
Acquisitive prescription is interrupted by the filing of suit, by acknowledgment,
or when possession is lost. See La.Civ.Code art. 3462; La.Civ.Code art. 3464;
La.Civ.Code art. 3465. As pertinent to the defendant’s claim, La.Civ.Code art. 3464,
provides that: “Prescription is interrupted when one acknowledges the right of the
person against whom he had commenced to prescribe.”
Regarding the August 1989 meeting at Nilas Young’s office, the defendant
contends that only he, Errol, Dwight, and Nilas Young were present at the meeting.
He denied that the plaintiff was in attendance. He testified that, during the meeting at
which he offered to sell his interest in the property to Errol and Dwight, the men
stated that they had no interest in purchasing the property, but that “they would get off
and leave my property alone and make sure that there weren’t any more planes on it
and we agreed.” He asserts that this series of events is confirmed by correspondence
admitted into evidence and which he finds supportive of his view of acknowledgment.
Contrarily, the plaintiff testified that Errol asked him, as the property’s tenant
farmer, to attend the meeting regarding the claim of ownership so that he would be
aware of matters pertaining to the property. The plaintiff explained that, by the time
14 of the meeting, Errol always consulted him and Elizabeth with regard to decision
making. Describing the meeting, the plaintiff denied that either Errol or Dwight
stated that the property was that of the defendant or that they would cease their use of
the property. Rather, the plaintiff testified that: “Towards the end of the meeting
uh…Mr. Errol just kind of put his head down and he sa[id] uh…Mr. Driggers
I’m…I’m not gonna buy what I already own and if you want it take me to Court in
Ville Platte, take it away from me and that [was] basically how the meeting ended[.]”
The plaintiff further denied that he was told afterwards to change the way he was
using the property. He explained instead that: “Absolutely nothing changed.” 15 He
stated that he next heard from the defendant in 2011, when he found the gate to the
airstrip locked and a “For Sale sign” placed by the roadway.
In assessing the conflicting testimony, as well as surrounding correspondence,
the trial court concluded in reasons for ruling that:
[A] review of the totality of the testimony and evidence as to said 1989 meeting, along with the activities, the several letters and discussions all leading thereto, the court finds that the said meeting was merely a gathering of the parties, wherein Driggers offered to sell Young, as plaintiff’s ancestor in title, these original three tracts of land, and that of Young’s specific refusal to purchase same from Driggers and responding something to the effect of “why should I buy what I already own?”. Driggers further testified that after that 1989 meeting he suffered a major heart attack and as such Driggers acknowledge[s] that he never went back to visit or participate in any activities as to these tracts in dispute, and that he just “left things alone” for another 10 plus years from 1989 to 2011. Therefore, and as to the issue and question as to this meeting in 1989, the court finds, as a finding of fact, that in fact this meeting, along with the telephone calls, activities, letters and discussions leading thereto, are not sufficient to establish any disturbance and/or activities of possession by Driggers as against the continuing possession and farming operations of Young and Lejeune therein.
15 Elizabeth also testified regarding the plaintiff’s attendance at the meeting and that she recalled the plaintiff discussing the meeting when he returned home. She explained that there had been no changes in the way the property was used after the meeting and that it had been used without interruption after that date.
15 Following review, we find that the record supports the trial court’s factual
findings. In addition to the clear credibility determination in favor of the plaintiff’s
account by which his ancestors in title maintained their position as owners, the
correspondence entered into evidence reflects only the defendant’s claim of ownership
and the series of exchanges occurring prior to the August 11, 1989 meeting. In fact,
the final letter in the exchange commemorated the Youngs’ claim of ownership. By
letter dated June 29, 1989, Nilas Young wrote to the defendant, explaining:
I have discussed your letter of June 7, 1989, with Mr. Dwight Young and Mr. Errol Young. They have concluded that the property you claim to have a deed for and which the railroad got by Warranty Deed is property North of their property and until your surveyor shows them otherwise, they feel that they are entitled to the property adjacent to theirs which was abandoned by the railroad which the railroad was using by virtue of a servitude.
If you have other evidence, I would suggest that you call me for a meeting with the Youngs and myself and we will try to amicably resolve this matter. Perhaps such a meeting could resolve this problem and save possible litigation.
While the defendant contends that the trial court should have accepted a billing record
from Nilas Young, which the defendant contends corroborates his version of events,
we have maintained the trial court’s ruling above.
Ancestors in Title – Tacking
Finally, the defendant asserts that the trial court erred in finding that the
plaintiff was able to prove acquisitive prescription by tacking the Youngs’ possession
of the property to his subsequent possession. In addition to his argument that there
was no identifiable boundary between Tract 6 and the plaintiff’s property to the east,
he also contends that the plaintiff was merely a tenant farmer at the time he filed suit
and could not, therefore, have acquired the property by acquisitive prescription. We
take each argument in turn.
16 First, and with regard to the necessity of a visible boundary, La.Civ.Code art.
794 provides that: “When a party proves acquisitive prescription, the boundary shall
be fixed according to limits established by prescription rather than titles. If a party
and his ancestors in title possessed for thirty years without interruption, within visible
bounds, more land than their title called for, the boundary shall be fixed along these
bounds.” (Emphasis added.) While the defendant contends that the plaintiff’s claim
fails as “[t]here was no visible boundary between [Tract 6] and the Youngs’ field to
the east, nor was there any visible boundary after 1982 with regard to [Tract 5] after
Mr. Lejeune removed all fences[,]” the evidence reveals otherwise. Rather, the record
establishes both that Tract 6 was incorporated into the Youngs’ farmland to the east,
stopping at the edge of the airstrip. In turn, the Youngs established and maintained
the airstrip from the edge of their cropland to the west to the edge of the cropland to
the east. The airstrip was maintained between each of these areas of farmland. The
trial court’s resulting judgment was in keeping the fixing of the boundary “along these
bounds[.]”
Neither do we find merit in the contention that the plaintiff could not tack the
possession of his ancestors in title insofar as he was a lessee at the time of the
interruption, i.e., the filing of suit. In support of this argument, the defendant cites
La.Civ.Code art. 3477, which provides that: “Acquisitive prescription does not run in
favor of a precarious possessor or his universal successor.” However, the instant
matter is not one in which either the Youngs or, subsequently, the plaintiff could be
said to have been precarious possessors of the defendant. Instead, and specific to this
boundary action, La.Civ.Code art. 794, anticipates the possession of “a party and his
ancestors in title[.]” (Emphasis added.) The supreme court has explained that, in a
boundary action arising under Article 794, title between a possessor and his ancestor
17 in title does not need to extend to the property for which the possessor asserts
acquisitive prescription. Loutre Land and Timber Co. v. Roberts, 10-2327 (La.
5/10/11), 63 So.3d 120. Rather, in such an action, “one may utilize tacking to
prescribe beyond title on adjacent property to the extent of visible boundaries[.]” Id.
at 125.16
In this case, the entirety of the plaintiff’s possession up until the time of the
interruption of the filing of the 2011 suit was through the possession of the Youngs,
whether both Dwight and Errol or, after partition, by Errol, insofar as the plaintiff did
not purchase the property from Errol until 2013. While the defendant contends that
the plaintiff could not have possessed as owner, which he alleged in his petition, the
evidence is clear that, at all times while a tenant farmer, he was maintaining the
farming practices as conveyed to him by the Youngs. See La.Civ.Code art. 3429
(providing that “[p]ossession may be exercised by the possessor or by another who
holds the thing for him and in his name. Thus, a lessor possesses through his
lessee.”).
DECREE
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Costs of
this proceeding are assessed to the defendant – appellant, Rodney Driggers.
16 In its discussion, the supreme court contrasted La.Civ.Code art. 794 to the general prescriptive articles of La.Civ.Code arts. 3441 and 3442, whereby “tacking may be utilized to prescribe only to the extent of title.” Loutre Land and Timber, Co., 63 So.3d at 125.