Ogden v. Bankston

398 So. 2d 1037
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 18, 1981
Docket80-C-2281
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 398 So. 2d 1037 (Ogden v. Bankston) 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
Ogden v. Bankston, 398 So. 2d 1037 (La. 1981).

Opinion

398 So.2d 1037 (1981)

J. Randolph OGDEN
v.
Walter R. BANKSTON and Alice Folkes Bankston.

No. 80-C-2281.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

May 18, 1981.

*1039 Curtis K. Stafford, Jr., Baton Rouge, for defendants-applicants.

Gerard E. Kiefer, of Forrest, Kiefer, Bacot & Moore, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-respondent.

DIXON, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff is the owner of an enclosed estate bordering on the Amite River. His estate enjoys a servitude of passage to Greenwell Springs Road over land now owned by defendants, Walter R. Bankston and Alice Folkes Bankston. Defendant Walker R. Bankston, a land developer who desires to subdivide and market his property as a residential neighborhood, contends that the present location of the servitude of passage interferes with his plans to develop and sell the property. The issue before us is whether defendant has a right to relocate the servitude.

Plaintiff petitioned the district court to enjoin the defendant from disturbing his right of passage. Defendant, in his answer and reconventional demand, sought a declaratory judgment to establish his right to have the servitude moved to a different location.

After trial on the merits, the district court granted a permanent injunction, forbidding any further interference with the servitude. The reconventional demand for a declaratory judgment was dismissed on the grounds that defendant failed to prove that the present site of the right of passage had become burdensome.

The Court of Appeal affirmed the decision of the trial court. Odgen v. Bankston, 387 So.2d 1355 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1980). The court held that defendant did not have a contractual right to relocate the servitude, and that the legal right of relocation under the provisions of the Civil Code could not be claimed, since the record did not establish that the continued existence of the servitude in its present location had become burdensome. Defendant seeks review.

I

The record discloses that the actual roadway has been in existence at least since 1922; it is described as a rustic, tree lined avenue, and is almost a mile in length. Throughout these proceedings, defendant has assumed that the servitude itself was created in 1963, when one of plaintiff's ancestors in title, Margaretta L. Meares, sold a 5.33 acre tract to James B. Ott. Included in this sale was a "perpetual servitude" at the rear of part of the tract, and the servitude of passage to Greenwell Springs Road. In regard to the latter, the act of sale recites the following:

"A servitude of passage for the use and benefit of the above described property, 30 feet wide from the aforesaid property to the Greenwell Springs Road along and adjacent to the South line of the Vaughn Tract owned by vendor. The vendor, however, reserves the right to relocate this servitude of passage at any other location within the Vaughn Tract, provided, however, that if such servitude is relocated, the property herein shall be provided with either a private or a public means of access from the property herein sold to the Greenwell Springs Road, in a condition equal to or better than the condition of any roadway existing on such servitude of passage at the time of such relocation. Nothing herein contained shall obligate the vendor to maintain the aforesaid servitude of passage. This servitude is shown as a private servitude on the map attached hereto."

*1040 By this language, Mrs. Meares attempted to reserve the right to relocate the servitude, contingent only upon the obligation to provide an alternate right of passage to the public road "in a condition equal to or better than" the existing corridor. So long as she could provide an alternate passageway, Mrs. Meares was not required to justify or explain her decision to relocate the servitude. As will be shown, this contractual right of relocation was somewhat broader than the privilege of relocation afforded by the law.

It is the defendant's contention that the benefit conferred by the proviso in the act of sale from Mrs. Meares to James B. Ott is applicable in this case. However, defendant fails to note that this very same servitude was described in a prior act of conveyance. In 1923 Charles C. Bird sold a small parcel of land to Clive W. Kernan. The act of sale recites that the consideration for the purchase was $25.00 in cash:

"... and the additional consideration of a perpetual servitude of way and passage herein granted by the said Clive Wetherill Kernan to the vendor over and along a certain strip of land thirty (30) feet in width acquired by Clive Wetherill Kernan from Mrs. Elizabeth V. Redden, and indicated on the sketch made by A. G. Mundinger... said strip of land having a front of thirty (30) feet on the Greenwell Springs Road and extending along the southern boundary of the strips of land owned by Clive Wetherill Kernan ..."

The plat attached to this conveyance clearly shows that the servitude described above is over the same ground as the servitude mentioned in Mrs. Meares' act of sale to Ott.[1] An act of correction was filed by Clive W. Kernan in 1931, which modified the servitude so that it conformed with the actual location of the roadbed. (According to this act, the roadbed meandered from the lines established for the servitude in the first 500 feet east of Greenwell Springs Road). The parcel of land to which this servitude was due was never part of defendant's chain of title; it passed instead to plaintiff's vendor, while title to the servient estate passed to defendant's vendor.

At all times relevant to this litigation, the provisions of the Civil Code of 1870 were in effect.[2] The code provides that servitudes may arise "from the natural situation of the places, from the obligations imposed by law, or from contract between respective owners." C.C. 659 [C.C. 654 (Supp.1977)]. The term "contract" is understood to include "all acts by which property can be transferred ..." C.C. 743 [C.C. 722 (Supp.1977)]. In the present case, the servitude of passage to Greenwell Springs Road was established in 1923 in an act of sale conveying property to Clive W. Kernan. When servitudes are created by convention between property owners, their use and extent "are regulated by the title by which they are granted ..." C.C. 709 [C.C. 697 (Supp.1977)]. This principle is amplified in C.C. 722, which defines the servitude of passage:

"The right of passage, or of way, is a servitude imposed by law or by convention, and by virtue of which one has a right to pass on foot, on horseback, or in a vehicle, to drive beasts of burden or carts through the estate of another.
When this servitude results from the law, the exercise of it is confined to the wants of the person who has it.
When it is the result of a contract, its extent and the mode of using it is regulated by the contract."

This court must give effect to the terms by which such servitudes are established: *1041 property owners have the right to establish whatever servitudes they deem proper, "... their power in that respect being limited only by considerations of public order ..." Bernos v. Canepa, 114 La. 517, 520, 38 So. 438, 440 (1905).

In general, a servitude must be imposed upon an "estate" or in favor of an "estate;" the service is not to be imposed "on the person or in favor of the person." C.C. 709 [C.C. 646 (Supp.1977)]. A servitude established in favor of immovable property is "predial," a real right that is inseparable from the property to which it is attached. C.C. 653-54 [C.C.

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Bluebook (online)
398 So. 2d 1037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-bankston-la-1981.