Neil Lejeune v. Rodney Driggers

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 2018
DocketCA-0017-0902
StatusUnknown

This text of Neil Lejeune v. Rodney Driggers (Neil Lejeune v. Rodney Driggers) 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
Neil Lejeune v. Rodney Driggers, (La. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

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

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Loutre Land & Timber Co. v. Roberts
63 So. 3d 120 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2011)
Quibodeaux v. Medical Center of Southwest Louisiana
719 So. 2d 465 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Neil Lejeune v. Rodney Driggers, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-lejeune-v-rodney-driggers-lactapp-2018.