Nicholson v. Holloway Planting Co.

216 So. 2d 562, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4926
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1968
DocketNo. 7336
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 216 So. 2d 562 (Nicholson v. Holloway Planting Co.) 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
Nicholson v. Holloway Planting Co., 216 So. 2d 562, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4926 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinions

LANDRY, Judge.

Plaintiff, Jerry K. Nicholson (Nicholson) takes this devolutive appeal from the judgment of the trial court rejecting and dismissing his suit for judicial recognition and enforcement by injunction, both prohibitive and mandatory, of a servitude of drain in favor of appellant’s estate known as Eldorado Plantation (Eldorado) over the adjoining property of defendant Holloway Planting Company, Incorporated (Holloway) known as Kenmore Plantation (Kenmore) which bounds Eldorado on the south. Appellant basically contends his properties are entitled to drain onto defendant’s lands through seven conduits or waterways formed by natural forces and known as “crevasse channels.” Defendant’s primary defense is that Eldorado is not situated “above” Kenmore and therefore is not a dominant estate consequently no servitude [564]*564of drain exists in favor of the former upon the latter. Alternatively, defendant contends the manner in which plaintiff seeks to exercise the alleged servitude exceeds the limits of the relief to which plaintiff is entitled as owner of a dominant estate. In rejecting plaintiff’s demands, the trial court concluded Eldorado was not located above Kenmore inasmuch as he found both properties were of virtually the same elevation. The trial court also held that assuming Eldorado to be located above Kenmore, the redress contemplated by plaintiff exceeds the aid legally available to the owner of a dominant estate with respect to drainage of his lands over those of an adjoining owner situated below. We find that the trial court reached the proper result. However, our reasons for so holding differ from those of the lower court in that we find Eldorado to be the dominant estate but also conclude that the servitude of drain existing in its favor does not encompass the specific remedy herein sought by its owner. More particularly, we find that the relief sought by appellant runs afoul of the statutory provision that no action by the owner of a dominant estate may render the natural servitude due by the servient estate more burdensome.

Initially this matter was heard June 16, 1964, on appellant’s rule for preliminary injunction which prayed that defendant be restrained from blocking or otherwise impeding or interfering with the flow of water through the seven channels involved and that defendant be ordered to clear said channels of all obstructions either artificial or natural. Upon conclusion of said initial hearing a stipulation was entered into between the parties and filed of record. The agreement provides in substance that six specifically designated channels would be cleared on Kenmore to their respective natural widths and depths. It also recites that plaintiff could clear those portions of seven enumerated channels on Eldorado by removing all trees and undergrowth therefrom but not in such manner as to widen or deepen them. The covenant also states that plaintiff could clean and clear lateral ditches on Eldorado provided they were not deepened or widened and that plaintiff agreed to dig no new ditches excepting such as would discharge into one of the channels known as Dixie Bayou. Pursuant to the aforesaid stipulation, the trial court rendered judgment June 17, 1964, preliminarily enjoining both parties from violating the terms of the agreement.

On September 26, 1966, the matter was heard on the merits. Subsequently on June 13, 1967, judgment was rendered dismissing and rejecting plaintiff’s demand. This appeal followed.

This action stems from novel attending circumstances which involve a factual situation apparently never heretofore presented to the courts. Narration at this point of certain undisputed relevant events which disclose the historical and current relationship of these estates to each other is deemed necessary to a clear understanding of the positions and contentions of the respective litigants.

Situated in the southern part of Pointe Coupee Parish, subject properties each contain approximately 2,400 acres of land fronting on the west side of Bayou Maringouin, a former distributary of the Mississippi River. From Bayou Maringouin they extend westerly into the Atchafalaya River swamps. The east protection levee of the Atchafalaya Basin Floodway crosses the rear or western portions of each plantation. On the land (eastern) side of the Floodway Levee is the original borrow pit formed in the construction of the Floodway Levee. This borrow pit, known as the Spillway Canal has been dredged and enlarged by local governmental authority to serve as the principal drainage outlet for all properties lying between Bayou Maringouin on the east and the Spillway Levee on the west, including Eldorado and Kenmore. The main portions of both plantations, that is, those areas devoted to crop farming and cattle raising, are situated between Bayou Maringouin and the Spillway Canal and [565]*565are the only parts of these estates involved in this action. The main line of the Texas and Pacific Railway Company crosses both properties near their front or eastern boundaries, traversing said plantations in a generally northerly-southerly direction parallel to Bayou Maringouin. Eldorado is situated to the north of Kenmore, their common boundary extending along a front of two miles or more. At a point marking the approximate lower third of that portion of Kenmore lying between Bayou Marin-gouin and the Spillway, the Police Jury of Pointe Coupee Parish (Police Jury) has constructed a large canal (Police Jury Canal) extending, for all practical purpose, from Bayou Maringouin on the east through Kenmore to a natural drain situated near the southwesterly corner of Kenmore and from thence southerly into the Spillway Canal. Some distance north of the Police Jury Canal, Holloway has constructed, at its own expense, a canal running from the aforementioned railroad westerly through Kenmore and emptying into the Spillway Canal.

The general vicinity in which subject properties are situated is typical of -the alluvial lands of the lower Mississippi Delta, namely, flat with slight recurring undulations. The same is true of Eldorado and Kenmore. The predominant slope or fall of each estate is from east to west, it being conceded their respective elevations are approximately five feet higher at Bayou Maringouin than at the Spillway Canal. Whether there is a natural slope in the land from north to south sufficient to constitute Kenmore the “lower” estate is the pivotal issue in this lawsuit.

From the northern boundary of Eldorado to the southern limits of Kenmore there is an overall slight decline or fall in land heighth. Plaintiff contends this fall, though admittedly slight, nevertheless causes water to flow naturally from Eldorado onto Kenmore through the crevasse channels in question thus constituting Kenmore the lower or servient estate subject to the correlative obligation of accepting such waters as will flow naturally from the higher to the lower property. Defendant, however, counters with the proposition that Eldorado is not higher or above Kenmore because both are virtually of the same elevation. Additionally defendant urges that the undulations of the estates are such that each plantation is in turn higher and lower than the other in areas along their common boundary, which circumstances results in each naturally draining onto the other at given locations along their line of juncture. Therefore, defendant argues, neither estate is above or below the other and Kenmore owes no servitude of drain to Eldorado.

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Bluebook (online)
216 So. 2d 562, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 4926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-holloway-planting-co-lactapp-1968.