Phillip Family L.L.C. v. Bayou Fleet Partnership

110 So. 3d 1158, 12 La.App. 5 Cir. 565, 2013 WL 646459, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 291
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 21, 2013
DocketNo. 12-CA-565
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 110 So. 3d 1158 (Phillip Family L.L.C. v. Bayou Fleet Partnership) 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
Phillip Family L.L.C. v. Bayou Fleet Partnership, 110 So. 3d 1158, 12 La.App. 5 Cir. 565, 2013 WL 646459, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 291 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

JUDE G. GRAVOIS, Judge.

^Defendants have appealed a trial court judgment awarding damages to plaintiffs in this dispute involving defendants’ use of plaintiffs’ riparian rights. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND FACTS

Plaintiff, Phillip Family, L.L.C., owns a parcel of land on the right descending bank of the Mississippi River in St. Charles Parish (“the Phillip Family property”) adjacent to and downriver from a parcel of land owned by defendant, Bayou Fleet Partnership (“the Bayou Fleet property”). These parcels of land front on the Mississippi River and are situated between Louisiana Highway 18 (commonly known as the “River Road”) and the mean low water mark of the river. This property is commonly known as “batture” property. Plaintiff, Beverly Construction Company, operates a business on the Phillip Family property, and defendant, Bayou Fleet, Inc., operates a business on the Bayou Fleet property. On | ¡¡March 6, 2006, plaintiffs filed a petition for damages and for injunctive relief against Bayou Fleet Partnership. Bayou Fleet, Inc. was added as a defendant in a supplemental and amending petition. Plaintiffs alleged that defendants’ unauthorized practice of mooring barges in front of the Phillip Family property prevented plaintiffs from utilizing their property to its fullest potential and interfered with plaintiffs’ business activities. Plaintiffs sought a permanent injunction preventing defendants from mooring barges in front of the Phillips Family property and from interfering with plaintiffs’ use and enjoyment of their property. Plaintiffs also sought damages in the form of rental payments and attorney’s fees.

Defendants removed the suit to federal court. The federal court, however, re[1161]*1161manded the case to state court, finding that there was a valid state law claim and no exclusive issue under federal law. Defendants then answered plaintiffs’ suit and filed a reconventional demand against plaintiffs.

The matter was bifurcated for trial. On October 19, 2010, a bench trial was held on the injunctions. By judgment signed on January 26, 2011, the trial court granted plaintiffs’ petition for permanent injunction against defendants, enjoining and restraining defendants from mooring and fleeting any kind of vessel in front of the Phillip Family property. This judgment also granted defendants’ request for injunctive relief prohibiting plaintiffs from conducting dredging operations in front of the Bayou Fleet property to the extent that such dredging operations would interfere, impede, impair or otherwise block the fleeting and mooring activities conducted by or on behalf of defendants.1

Following a two-day bench trial on the issues of causation and damages, judgment was rendered on December 14, 2011 in favor of plaintiffs awarding |4$78,680 in damages for lost rentals, plus legal interest and costs, and dismissing defendants’ reconventional demand. Defendants’ motion for new trial was denied. This timely appeal followed.

In their only assignment of error, defendants argue that the trial court was manifestly erroneous and/or clearly wrong is awarding $78,680 in special damages to plaintiffs, asserting that the damage award is “wholly unsupported by the evidence and clearly contrary to the testimony provided at trial.” Defendants argue that because plaintiffs continuously used their property for commercial gain, they did not lose any lease revenues because of defendants’ fleeting operations in front of their property. Plaintiffs respond that the trial court’s damage award is substantiated by the evidence and supported by the law.

At trial, Johnny Riley testified that he had been employed by Beverly Construction for ten years. He worked at the subject property continuously from about 2000 until about 2007. Mr. Riley testified that barges were moored by defendants in the river in front of the Phillip Family property “just about every day.” There usually were three or four and sometimes five barges. On some occasions in order to unload limestone, defendants had to be contacted to move the barges out of the way. Pictures taken by Mr. Riley over the years were admitted into evidence. Photographs dated March 3, 2005 show barges fleeting in front of the Phillip Family property. Photographs dated March 11 and 12, 2005 show a cable tied to a buoy and barges fleeting in front of the property. Photographs dated September 17, 2007 shows barges fleeting in front of the property. Photographs dated September 28, 2007 show a buoy with a cable “blocking” the Phillip Family property. Other pictures dated March 17, 2005, April 20, 2005, and October 1 and 15, 2007 also show barges fleeting in front of the property. Mr. Riley testified that | Sthese pictures were just a sample of “what [he] saw everyday” during the time he worked on the Phillip Family property for about seven years.

On cross-examination, Mr. Riley admitted that on some days, no barges were moored in front of the property. He was not able to tell how long it was between [1162]*1162the time he took the pictures and the time the barges depicted in the pictures were moved. He admitted that defendants moved the barges when requested.

Luiz Martinez, the Geographic Information Systems (“GIS”) manager for St. Charles Parish, testified as to aerial photographs of the property. Photographs dated June 16, 2005, August 31, 2005, October 27, 2005, February 6, 2006, April 30, 2006, July 23, 2007, February 5, 2009 and May 18, 2009 depict “some structures” floating in the river in front of the Phillip Family property. On cross-examination, Mr. Martinez admitted that in two of the photographs, there were tug boats near the barges, but he did not know if the tugs were moving the barges. He was unable to tell if the vessels were in the same place the day before or the day after the photographs were taken.

Mary Clulee testified that she owns property immediately adjacent to and downriver from the Phillip Family property. She went on her property at frequencies varying from several times per day to one time per month over the past twelve to fifteen years. In the past ten years, more often than not, she saw barges tied to buoys floating in the river in front of the Phillip Family property. Sometimes a tug boat would be on the downriver side of the barges and other times there was no tug. Sometimes the barges remained docked for more than one day. Photographs taken by Mrs. Clulee dated April 3, 2006, April 9, 2006, and September 17, 2009, depicting barges moored in front of the Phillip Family ]f,property, were admitted into evidence. Although she had no pictures to prove it, she stated that the barges sometimes stayed in place for four days.

Cary Burelle, general manager of Beverly Construction, testified that he “sometimes” went to the Phillip Family property, and most of the time when he was there, barges were paralleling the shore of the property. He recalled two occasions when barges moored in front of the property prevented plaintiffs from unloading rock barges. Defendants did move the barges out of the way, but it took a “couple of hours.” Beginning in 2006, one of defendant’s buoys moved downriver in front of the Phillip Family property.

A.J. Phillip testified that his family owns the Phillip Family batture property and it is leased to Beverly Construction. The property has 465 feet of frontage along the Mississippi River. A sand pit operation and a limestone operation are conducted on the property.

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Bluebook (online)
110 So. 3d 1158, 12 La.App. 5 Cir. 565, 2013 WL 646459, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillip-family-llc-v-bayou-fleet-partnership-lactapp-2013.