Nicholson v. Holloway Planting Company, Inc.

284 So. 2d 898
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 29, 1973
Docket53028
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 284 So. 2d 898 (Nicholson v. Holloway Planting Company, 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
Nicholson v. Holloway Planting Company, Inc., 284 So. 2d 898 (La. 1973).

Opinion

284 So.2d 898 (1973)

Jerry K. NICHOLSON, d/b/a Nicholson Planting and Mfg. Co., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
HOLLOWAY PLANTING COMPANY, INC., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 53028.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

October 29, 1973.
Rehearing Denied November 30, 1973.

*899 Henry B. Alsobrook, Jr., Harold A. Thomas, Adams & Reese, New Orleans, W. B. Middleton, Jr., Middleton & Templet, Plaquemine, for plaintiff-appellant.

Ashton L. Stewart, Laycock, Stewart & Preis, Baton Rouge, Borron & Delahaye, Paul G. Borron, Plaquemine, for defendant-appellee.

CALOGERO, Justice.

We granted writs in this case to review a decision of the Court of Appeal sustaining defendant's exceptions of res judicata and vagueness (by affirmance of trial court rulings in this regard) and affirming an order striking plaintiff's interrogatories, supplemental interrogatories and requests for admissions, and affirming, with minor exceptions, a judgment denying plaintiff's motion for production of documents.

A brief history of this litigation is essential for an understanding of the issues presently before us.[1]

Plaintiff and defendant own adjoining properties in Pointe Coupee Parish. Plaintiff's Eldorado Plantation lies north of defendant's Kenmore Plantation. In 1964 plaintiff filed a lawsuit seeking to enjoin defendant from obstructing the natural drainage from Eldorado onto Kenmore.

Plaintiff was denied the injunction in that litigation by the District Court, the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court. However, while the district court had found he was not entitled to a servitude of drain, the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court determined that he was. Denial of the injunction by the appellate courts was based upon a finding that defendant was in no way impeding the drainage flow.[2]

In 1970 plaintiff filed a second suit, this time to enjoin defendant from interfering with the servitude of drain which plaintiff had had recognized in his favor in the earlier suit, and demanding damages.

*900 Defendant filed exceptions of vagueness and res judicata,[3] rules to strike plaintiff's interrogatories, supplemental interrogatories, requests for admissions, and motion for production of documents.

The trial judge rules entirely in defendant's favor, denying all of plaintiff's discovery efforts, and maintaining the exceptions of vagueness and res judicata (the latter, as requested, only "insofar as obstructions prior to September 28, 1966 are concerned.")

The Court of Appeal judgment, from which we granted plaintiff writs, affirmed the trial court in all particulars except as to denying plaintiff the required production of two photographs, and ordered the case remanded.

RES JUDICATA

As related defendant's res judicata plea only has to do with blockages, etc., which took place and/or existed up to September 28, 1966. However, the plea is directed to both facets of plaintiff's current suit, i. e., plaintiff's claim for injunction and his claims for damages.

With respect to the injunction aspect of the present suit (filed in 1970) there seems to be no question that plaintiff is entitled to this relief under his 1970 lawsuit, if on the merits he can prove his case. He need simply prove upon remand that in 1970 defendant was interfering with his recognized servitude of drain. The nature of that servitude and its attendant limitations are determinable from a review of the applicable statutory and jurisprudential law (including Civil Code Article 660) and the decision of this Court in the first lawsuit.[4] Certainly his failure to prove interference or sufficient interferences on the facts as they were found to exist in 1966 does not bar his effort to prove that an interference existed in 1970. To hold otherwise would require us to hold that a party having once lost a mandatory injunction suit against a given neighbor, perhaps for failure to prove at that time the neighbor's assertedly illegal conduct (for example, a trespass) would be forever barred from bringing another such suit, even if he could prove a later transgression.

The argument between plaintiff and defendant in this regard is not whether plaintiff can try his 1970 injunction suit but rather what operative facts may be inquired into at such trial. Apparently defendant wants to freeze the conditions as of September 28, 1966 (date of first trial) when the court found plaintiff not entitled to an injunction and require plaintiff to show condition changes after September 28, 1966 in order to entitle him to relief. Plaintiff, on the other hand, wants to be able to show not only condition changes after September 28, 1966, but also that certain interferences which existed before September 28, 1966 should now be enjoined.

To facilitate this latter effort plaintiff argues that the September 28, 1966 trial was had on a stipulation of June 16, 1964 (this was the date of trial of the rule for preliminary injunction) the substance of which was that defendant would, without prejudice to his claim that no servitude was owed, unblock the crevasse channels, and the parties would later, on the merits trial, present facts as they existed on June 16, 1964 and as though no action had been taken by either party pursuant to that stipulation.[5]

*901 Defendant counters with the argument that the stipulation had to do only with removing obstructions to the seven crevasse channels created by defendant's road built parallel to and just south of the boundary between the two plantations and not the clearing (to original width and depth) the channels on defendant's property. Defendant asserts that this latter effort was brought into the original suit by supplemental petition filed after the June 16, 1964 preliminary injunction trial and its stipulation, and before the September 28, 1966 trial. Defendant further contended, and the Court of Appeal so found, that under any condition plaintiff abandoned any right he may have had to stand on the stipulation by trying the case on the basis of all facts as they stood on and shortly prior to September 28, 1966.

We find it unnecessary and inadvisable to counsel the trial court as to how to try the 1970 injunction suit on remand. Suffice it to say that with respect to the injunction aspect of plaintiff's current suit the exception of res judicata does not lie.

Any possible extent to which pre-1966 or pre-1964 facts and the earlier judicial resolution of these litigants' differences may bear upon the nature and quality of plaintiff's servitude of drain is of course another matter, which the trial court can consider at the appropriate time.

The res judicata plea as directed to the injunction aspect of this 1970 lawsuit thus has no merit.

With respect to the damage aspect of plaintiff's current suit the trial and appellate courts similarly maintained the res judicata exception "insofar as obstructions prior to September 28 1966 are concerned." The Court of Appeal referred to Heine v. Muse, 206 So.2d 529 (La.App.1st Cir.1968) as support for their finding to the effect that claims for damages incident to blockage of drainage (which may have taken place from time to time, or continuously) before the September 28, 1966 trial were barred by defendant's judgment denying plaintiff injunctive relief in the former litigation.

Was the thing previously demanded the same as that presently demanded? Obviously injunctive relief is not the same as a money damage claim or claims.

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