Sarpy v. Hymel

40 La. Ann. 425
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1888
DocketNo. 10,104
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 La. Ann. 425 (Sarpy v. Hymel) 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
Sarpy v. Hymel, 40 La. Ann. 425 (La. 1888).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

Plaintiffs are the widow and heir of Delord Sarpy and the owners of the Glendale plantation, having derived title from Norbert Rancon; and the defendant is the owner of the Gold Mine plantation, having derived title from Thomas May.

These plantations are contiguous estates, and situated in close proximity to Bonnet Carré point, on the Mississippi river, and this controversy involves their mode of drainage.

The plaintiffs’ contention is that the police jury, in pursuance of a special statute, established a plan or system of drainage for said plantations and others on Bonnet Garré point, and that defendant’s author accepted same and bound her to it.

They seek the recognition and maintenance of the servitude of drainage thus established, and in support of it plead, acquirendo causa, the prescription of ten, twenty and thirty years.

Tiie defendant denies the establishment of a servitude — legal, conventional or otherwise — on her property in favor of the plaintiffs’ property ,• and also denies the construction and ownership of a ditch in common between the two estates.

She avers that the ditch described in the plaintiffs’ petition was constructed to drain lands other than those of plaintiffs, and that said ditch was never completed.

In the alternative, she avers that, in case the servitude claimed is found to have existed, same has been lost by non-usage for ten years and by the renunciation and remission thereof on the part of the plaintiffs and their authors.

In reconvention she claims that plaintiffs’ lands are lower than hers and are subject to a natural servitude in favor of hers, and are bound to receive the waters that flow naturally from her lands. That, contrary to law, plaintiffs have erected dams and embankments at the boundary line of respondent’s estate, which obstruct the natural flow of the waters from her lands, and thus interfere with • the servitude irlue by plaintiffs estate to her own.

[427]*427The record discloses the following salient facts, viz :

That the Gold Mine plantation has a front on the Mississippi river, which, at that place, flows due east to the extreme point of Bonnet Carró, and that from that point it flows due south, passing in front of Glendale plantation.

That Glendale extends back from the river in a due west course to a point at which it intersects the rear line of Gold Mine, which extends back from the river in a due south course ; the boundary line between them being a diagonal one extending from northeast to southwest.

The two plantations are situated at right angles with each other and constitute the west and south boundaries of Bonnet Carró point, while the river constitutes the north and east boundaries.

This intervening space is sub-divided into quite a number of plantations, which are owned by a number of different proprietors — -all of which are separated from the swamp in the rear.

The natural course of their drainage is in a southwesterly direction, and that results, in part, from the fact that they are more elevated, and, in part, from the formation of a crevasse on the upper side of Bonnet Carró point. In consequence thereof both the rain and river waters, at high tide, were precipitated upon Glendale, to its great injury and damage.

Originally the course of Bayou Tonó and that of some small coolies was from the river alone in a southerly direction across the central portion of Glendale, and that of Bayou Roussi from the river alone in a southwesterly direction diagonally across the rear portion of Gold Mine. From the latter there was an outlet which passed through the rear portion of Glendale.

In pursuance of Section 6 of the act of March 25,1813, the police jury undertook the adjustment of the drainage of these different estates; and on the 3d of June, 1850, adopted an ordinance in which provision was made for the appointment of a committee having authority to examine “ the locality of Bonnet Carre point and adjacent lands,” and with full authority “to open and clean out Bayou Tonó and Bayou Roussi, situated on said point, down to the lower limit of the parish.”

It was therein “resolved that the opening and cleaning of said bayous shall be at the common expense of the proprietors of the land ■forming Bonnet Carre point.”

At a subsequent meeting of the police jury the committee made a report in which they recommended the dredging and cleaning of Bayou Tonó, the cutting of a new ditch or canal from Bayou Tone to Bayou [428]*428Roussi, the digging and cleaning out of the latter as far as its junction "with the Rancon canal, behind the Gold Mine plantation, at that time • owned by May, and thence continued until it reached the swamp and ■ Bayon Pin ” in the rear.

On the 1st of April, 1852, the committee entered into a contract with Pat Phelan to have the Bonnet Carré point and adjacent lands drained and to make the canals and drains necessary for the same.” He completed the construction of the canal from Bayou Toné to Bayou Roussi, dredged and deepened the latter, and completed the canal beyond Bayou Roussi to its intersection of Rancon canal; but he ‘failed to complete about nine or ten arpents of the canal-at the lower or outer end, which was • necessary to make it reach Bayou Pin. Phelan brought suit against the police jury for a balance due him, ■ and it resulted in a compromise whereby Phelan realized the full ■ amount of his contract of $4000, less $650. It remains in that condi>tion to this day.

This canal was denominated Company canal. It was begun at a ■point on the upper or northern boundary line of Glendale, a little east -of where Bayou Toné intersects it, thence extended west on that line to its intersection of the eastern boundary of Gold Mine, and thence across Gold Mine until it intersected Bayou' Roussi and made • connection therewith.

Through this canal the waters of Bayou Toné and the drainage ■waters from the plantations on Bonnet Carre point were passed into •Bayou Roussi and thence into the swamp in the rear of Gold Mine and Glendale, and by this means Glendale was relieved from distress • and overflow during high water.

It appears that, at present and during the last several years, that .portion of Bayou Roussi that intersects Gold Mine plantation and -unites with Company canal has become obstructed with decayed vegetable matter, weeds and willow trees, and has become partially .■filled with dirt by means of the cultivation of its banks for a series of -.years, so that the flow of water into it from Company canal is retarded and the water backed up and thrown upon the plantations on Bonnet >Carré point and Glendale, whereby the latter is frequently overflowed.

It thus appears that, if Bayou Roussi was opened and the water permitted to flow through it from Company canal, Glendale would be -entirely relieved and Gold Mine would suffer little, if any, injury.

, Because of the- obstructions in Bayou Roussi and the,defendant’s -objection to its being cleaned and deepened, the. plaintiffs have [429]*429brought this suit for the recognition and re-establishment of Company-canal and the deepening of Bayou Roussi.

It is a fact — one evidenced by this statement — that Glendale is now,.

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Bluebook (online)
40 La. Ann. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sarpy-v-hymel-la-1888.