Palace Prop. v. Sizeler Hammond Square Par.

839 So. 2d 82, 2002 WL 31888129
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2002
Docket2001 CA 2812
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 839 So. 2d 82 (Palace Prop. v. Sizeler Hammond Square Par.) 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
Palace Prop. v. Sizeler Hammond Square Par., 839 So. 2d 82, 2002 WL 31888129 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

839 So.2d 82 (2002)

PALACE PROPERTIES, L.L.C.
v.
SIZELER HAMMOND SQUARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIP.

No. 2001 CA 2812.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

December 30, 2002.
Writ Denied April 4, 2003.

*86 Rodney C. Cashe, Hammond, for Plaintiff-Appellee Palace Properties, L.L.C.

J. Thomas Anderson, Hammond, Robert A. Kutcher, Metairie, for Defendant-Appellant Sizeler Hammond Square Limited Partnership.

Gwendolyn S. Hebert, New Orleans, for Defendant-in-Reconvention-Appellee Tangipahoa Parish Consolidated Gravity Drainage District No. 1.

Ronald S. Macaluso, Hammond, for Intervenor-Appellee City of Hammond.

Before: PARRO, JAMES, and PATTERSON, JJ.[1]

PARRO, J.

Sizeler Hammond Square Limited Partnership (Sizeler) appeals a declaratory judgment recognizing a conventional servitude of passage owed by it, as the owner of the servient estate, to Palace Properties, L.L.C. (Palace), the owner of contiguous property comprising the dominant estate (the Palace property), and allowing Palace to make improvements on that servitude of passage.[2] The judgment further declared that Sizeler's property is the dominant estate and the Palace property is the servient estate with respect to a natural and a conventional servitude of drain; these portions of the judgment are not contested on appeal. However, Sizeler challenges that portion of the judgment ordering Palace to install culverts beneath and within the confines of the servitude of passage in order to satisfy its obligation to drain Sizeler's property. Sizeler also contests the court's declaration that another conventional drainage servitude owed to Sizeler had *87 prescribed for non-use, its dismissal of certain damage claims asserted by Sizeler in its reconventional demand, and its denial of injunctive relief.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In this summary, we address only briefly the circumstances underlying the complex litigation involving the property at issue in this lawsuit.[3] Sizeler owns property in Tangipahoa Parish on which the Hammond Square Shopping Center (the mall) is located. Sizeler's ancestor-in-title, Sidney W. Lassen, purchased this property on September 17, 1973, from Palace's ancestor-in-title, South Ridge Park, Inc., Venance P. Lambert, and Maurice Lion.[4] Palace owns adjoining property to the north and west of Sizeler's property. In the 1973 Act of Sale, certain servitudes were created in favor of the Palace property, including a utility servitude and a servitude of passage. Both of these servitudes encumber an inverted "L"-shaped piece of land running parallel to and alongside the northern and western boundaries of Sizeler's property where the mall is located.[5] A portion of the property comprising the servitude of passage along the northern boundary was paved by Sizeler's predecessors-in-title in 1976, as part of the ring road for the mall. In 1981-82, C.M. Fagan Drive was constructed, incorporating the then-existing northern portion of the ring road and extending west to and through the Palace property to the U.S. Highway 51 Bypass (the Bypass); C.M. Fagan Drive became a major cross-town artery for public use, connecting the Bypass on the west and U.S. Highway 51 Business on the east.[6] However, the portion of the servitude of passage along the western boundary of Sizeler's property remained, for the most part, in its natural, undeveloped state.

In 1998, Palace notified Sizeler that, in connection with the development of a shopping center on the Palace property, it intended to construct a paved roadway along the western boundary of Sizeler's property, which would utilize the undeveloped portion of the servitude of passage. In early 1999, after Palace had taken certain preliminary steps with Sizeler's acquiescence, Sizeler informed Palace that it had concluded the servitude of passage had prescribed due to non-use and it would not allow the improvements; Sizeler eventually erected a fence to prevent Palace from *88 gaining further access to its property.[7] On May 4, 2000, Palace filed this lawsuit, seeking a declaration of its property rights, particularly the continued viability of the servitude of passage and its right to enter the Sizeler property and construct improvements on that servitude.[8] In a supplemental and amending petition, Palace averred that certain wording in the 1973 Act of Sale concerning the servitudes meant that either party's use of the servitude of passage inured to the benefit of both estates.

In addition to the denials in its answer, Sizeler pled as an affirmative defense that the servitude of passage had been extinguished because of Palace's non-use over a ten-year period. Sizeler also pled affirmative defenses of failure of consideration, failure of cause, and failure of a resolutory condition. Sizeler then asserted reconventional demands against Palace and others,[9] claiming that the defendants-in-reconvention had interfered with natural and conventional servitudes of drain owed to it. In addition, Sizeler alleged that certain acts of trespass on its property, interference with drainage, acts constituting conversion, and conspiracy to deprive it of its property rights by some of the defendants-in-reconvention, had caused and would continue to cause damage to Sizeler. Sizeler asked for a declaratory judgment recognizing its drainage servitude rights, various forms of injunctive relief, and monetary damages.

After voluminous discovery and many vigorously contested motions and exceptions, the case was tried on May 31 and June 1, 2001. In extensive written reasons, the trial court reviewed the evidence and concluded that the Palace property owed Sizeler's property a natural servitude of drain, as well as a conventional servitude of drain (the South servitude) that was outlined in green on a survey prepared by John E. Walker and attached to the 1973 Act of Sale.[10] The court then discussed a second conventional servitude of drain (the North servitude), shown in pink on that survey, which had intersected a drainage canal known as the W-2 L-2-B canal (the old canal) that formerly ran through Palace's property.[11] Noting that the old canal had been replaced by an improved canal in a different location when C.M. Fagan Drive was paved, the court *89 found that the North servitude had prescribed due to ten years of non-use. The court also concluded that the Drainage District had authority to relocate the drainage served by the old canal and that the formal abandonment of the old canal had been accomplished within that authority.

Regarding the conventional servitude of passage in favor of the Palace property, the court rejected some of the arguments proposed by Palace, but agreed that the evidence showed that the servitude was used for the benefit of the dominant estate within the applicable prescriptive period and had not prescribed. Referring to the construction and use of C.M. Fagan Drive by "innumerable members of the public," the court concluded that this use benefited Palace by improving the value of its property. The court further found certain specific acts of use of the servitude of passage by Carson Davis, who had often traversed it to gain access to the Palace property on behalf of Palace's predecessors-in-title. The court concluded from the evidence that Davis's first use of the servitude of passage occurred before February 18, 1983, and that this and later uses interrupted the running of prescription.

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Bluebook (online)
839 So. 2d 82, 2002 WL 31888129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palace-prop-v-sizeler-hammond-square-par-lactapp-2002.