Roche v. St. Romain
This text of 51 So. 2d 666 (Roche v. St. Romain) 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.
Opinion
ROCHE et al.
v.
ST. ROMAIN et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*667 Cobb & Wright and John S. Donnaud, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.
John E. Fleury, Gretna, for defendants-appellees.
JANVIER, Judge.
The plaintiffs, Edward J. Roche, Harry J. Collins and Edward W. Wells, at the time of the filing of this petition for injunction, were all home owners in Orleans Parkway Subdivision of the Parish of Jefferson.
When the matter was argued before us it was stated by counsel for all parties that Edward W. Wells had sold his property and no longer resided there.
The plaintiffs seek to enjoin the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Russel Laughlin, who also own a residence in the same subdivision very close to the residence of the three plaintiffs, from operating a commercial dog kennel on their property.
It is alleged that the injunction should issue for either or both of two reasons: First, that the conduct of such a business as a commercial dog kennel is violative of certain restrictions which are contained in the titles of defendants and of plaintiffs; and also because the operation of such a kennel in "* * * a residential area, is degrading and devaluating to the property in said subdivision which surrounds defendants' property on two sides," and that the "noises and noxious odors that emanate from these kennels" constitute a nuisance and "a serious detriment to the health and welfare of the children as well as your petitioners and other persons residing in the subdivision."
Petitioners prayed for and obtained a temporary restraining order "restraining, enjoining and prohibiting said defendants * * *, their agents, servants and employees, from further operating and maintaining dog kennels and making any additions to the dog kennels on their premises * * *."
When the matter came up for hearing on the rule nisi for a preliminary injunction, counsel agreed to submit the matter on the merits.
The defendants answered, denying that the operation of the kennel was in violation of the title restrictions referred to and denying also that the operation of the kennels constituted a nuisance, and they averred that the kennels had been in operation for more than two years when the petition was filed and that, therefore, any right which the plaintiffs or any one else may have had as a result of the title restrictions had been lost by prescription because of the provisions of Act No. 326 of 1938, LSA-RS 9:5622. During the progress of the trial, counsel for the defendants tendered evidence for the purpose of showing that within the subdivision there were operated businesses of various kinds, and he argued that as a result there had been a general waiver of the title restrictions in question and that consequently plaintiffs no longer had the right to insist upon the enforcement of these restrictions.
After a trial on the merits there was judgment recalling the restraining order and dismissing plaintiffs' suit for a permanent injunction.
The matter is now before us on devolutive appeal by plaintiffs.
The record shows that the defendants own the property No. 625 Second Street, and in the rear of this property they maintain the kennel to which plaintiffs object. The property which was owned by Wells, one of the plaintiffs, bears the No. 621 Second Street and is immediately alongside the property of defendants. The residence of Harry J. Collins, another plaintiff, bears the No. 630 Third Street. A portion of the rear line of Collins' property forms a portion of the rear line of the property of defendants. The property of Roche, the other plaintiff, is No. 624 Third Street and a portion of the rear line of this property also forms a portion of the rear line of the property of defendants.
*668 The defendants bought their property in July, 1946. It is conceded that there was in their title and in the other titles with which we are concerned a restriction reading as follows: "The property herein sold shall never be used for a barroom or other noxious business, factories, dairies or business of any character or anything that would tend to depreciate the value of neighboring real estate; that the property shall never be leased or sold to persons of African descent, and that should a residence be constructed it shall cost no less than $2000.00, at the prevailing market prices of material."
Wells did not buy his property until November, 1948; Roche, the second of the plaintiffs, bought his property in November, 1946, and Collins, the third of the plaintiffs, bought his property in and has occupied it since 1940.
The plea of prescription of two years is based upon the provisions of Act No. 326 of 1938, the pertinent portion of which reads as follows: "Be it enacted by the Legislature of Louisiana, That all actions to enjoin, or to obtain damages for the Commission, or continuance, of a violation of restrictions contained in the title to land, where otherwise such action presently exists under the laws of this State, must be brought within two years from the commission of said violation; * * *."
The defendants offered much evidence in support of their allegation that they had been operating the kennel "since about the middle or latter part of 1947", and they maintain that since the suit was not filed until May 12, 1950, any rights, which may once have existed as a result of the title restrictions, have now been lost by prescription.
Plaintiffs countered with considerable evidence tending to show that though the defendants may have taken care of a few dogs as early as during the latter part of 1947, they did not complete the construction of the kennel, which they have since operated, until much later, and it is argued on behalf of plaintiffs that the period of prescription did not commence to run until the kennel was completed and operation thereof in its present form commenced.
The record makes it very clear that, although the defendants may have operated a kennel in which they took care of a few dogs in the year 1947, they did not complete their construction work until much later and that during the early days of their operation it was not possible for the neighbors to see and know what was going on or to determine if a kennel was being operated, except for the fact that, according to defendants, from the very beginning of their operations, they maintained a sign on their property advertising the operation of a kennel. Plaintiffs deny that the sign referred to kennels and assert that such sign as there was merely advertised a dog "at stud."
Whatever the sign advertised, the record conclusively shows that from the beginning such kennel as was operated was run on a very small basis and the building in which a few dogs were kept was so located as not to be seen from the outside of the property. In fact, Mr. Laughlin himself said that in the beginning Collins, one of the plaintiffs, could not "see just what I had over there." A little later he was asked if anybody could see what was in his yard, and he said: "No, not unless they came in the yard."
The fact that the kennels, as they are now operated, did not really come into existence until very much later is evidenced by the testimony of many witnesses of which the statement of Mr. Herbert Behrend, a witness offered by defendants, is typical.
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51 So. 2d 666, 1951 La. App. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roche-v-st-romain-lactapp-1951.