Savoie v. Bills

317 So. 2d 249
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 1975
Docket5040
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 317 So. 2d 249 (Savoie v. Bills) 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
Savoie v. Bills, 317 So. 2d 249 (La. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

317 So.2d 249 (1975)

Pauline Andrepont SAVOIE et al., Plaintiffs and Appellees-Appellants,
v.
Terry V. BILLS, Jr., et al., Defendants and Appellants-Appellees.

No. 5040.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

July 30, 1975.
Rehearing Denied August 28, 1975.
Writ Dismissed on Joint Motion October 17, 1975.

*250 Devillier, Ardoin & Morrow by J. Michael Morrow, Eunice, for defendants-appellants.

Guillory, McGee & Mayeux by Donald L. Mayeux, Eunice, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Before HOOD, CULPEPPER and WATSON, JJ.

*251 CULPEPPER, Judge.

The plaintiffs-landowners contend defendants constructed a pipeline across their property without a servitude. Plaintiffs seek $40 per rod for the servitude unlawfully taken, plus damages caused by construction. Alternatively, they seek removal of the pipeline.

Defendants answered, alleging they obtained oral permission from the landowners before constructing the pipeline, and that they secured a written servitude from two of the three landowners after the pipeline was installed. They contend they are indebted only to the landowner who did not sign a written servitude for her one-fourth interest.

At the trial, the district judge, over the objection of defendants, permitted plaintiffs to introduce parole testimony attacking the validity of the written servitude agreement on the grounds of fraud, error and no consideration. Parole evidence by plaintiffs was also admitted to vary the terms of the written agreement.

The judgment rendered grants defendants a servitude, which varies from the written agreement in that the right granted is restricted to the existing 2½ inch pipeline which was constructed, and is limited to the service of the one well, from which the line runs to a tank battery, the servitude to terminate upon abandonment of that well. The judgment ordered defendants to pay the three plaintiffs the sum of $3,000 for the servitude granted and damages to date. Plaintiffs' rights to future damages were reserved.

The defendants appealed, contending essentially that parole evidence should not have been admitted to vary the terms of the written servitude, which was signed by two of the three landowners, and that only the one landowner who did not sign the agreement should have been awarded compensation and damages.

Plaintiffs also appealed, contending the award of $3,000 for the servitude granted should be increased to $8,180. Alternatively, if such increased sum is not awarded, plaintiffs seek the removal of the pipeline.

The substantial issues are: (1) Was evidence admissible by plaintiffs to prove the written servitude agreement, signed by two of the three landowners, was void for fraud or error, where these vices of consent were not pleaded by plaintiffs? (2) If evidence of fraud or error was admissible, is this evidence sufficient to prove the written agreement is invalid?

We ultimately conclude the written servitude agreement is invalid for error of fact on the part of the two landowners who signed, and hence that defendants have no servitude for the pipeline which they constructed across plaintiffs' property. We order that the pipeline be removed and we remand the case for a determination by the district court of the amount of damages to which plaintiffs are entitled.

The plaintiffs are (1) Mrs. Pauline Andrepont Savoie, widow of Ariel Savoie, and owner of a one-half interest in the property; (2) Mrs. Elgie Mae Savoie LaFleur, a daughter of Mr. Savoie, and owner of a one-fourth interest; and (3) Mrs. Patricia Ann Savoie Oubre, also a daughter of Mr. Ariel Savoie, and the owner of the remaining one-fourth interest. Plaintiffs own a large percentage of the royalty for production from Ariel Savoie Well No. 1, the well served by the line in question.

In 1972 the owners of the well, defendants Gold King Production Company and Brown & McKenzie, Inc., decided to rework the well for secondary recovery. The other defendant, Mr. Terry V. Bills, Jr., a geologist, coordinated the operation for the well owners. As part of the work, it was necessary to construct a 2½ inch pipeline from the well to a tank battery. Defendants decided to try to obtain permission from plaintiffs to construct the line across their 90-acre tract of land since plaintiffs owned royalty and would benefit from any production.

*252 The owners of the well contracted with South Louisiana Contractors to lay the pipeline. Shorty Rozas, an employee of South Louisiana Contractors, made the first contact with Mrs. Savoie and Mrs. Oubre. These two landowners testified that Rozas told them the owners of the well already had the right to lay the pipeline and that they were going to install it. They say Rozas stated the purpose of his visit was only a courtesy to the landowners to let them know the line was going to be constructed and to try to place the line in a location where it would do the least damage to the crops of the tenant farmer. Mrs. Savoie and Mrs. Oubre say they told Mr. Rozas that if the well owners already had the right to install the line, then they could proceed, but they also told Rozas that the property was owned by the widow and two daughters, and if permission were necessary that all would have to sign the agreement.

The day after Rozas talked to Mrs. Oubre and Mrs. Savoie, he took Mrs. Oubre's husband on the land for the purpose of showing him where the pipeline would be laid. Mr. Oubre testified that Rozas told him the well owners already had the right to lay the line and that Rozas pointed out two possible locations for the line on plaintiffs' property. Oubre says that he made it clear to Rozas that if permission were required from the landowners, he had no authority to speak for them.

The testimony of Mr. Rozas is in conflict with that of Mr. Oubre. Rozas says he was under the impression that Mr. Oubre was handling the property for the three women, and that Oubre had given permission to proceed to lay the pipeline. Acting on this assumption, Rozas constructed the 2½ inch pipeline a distance of about 3,373 feet across plaintiffs' property.

On or about December 26, 1972, after the pipeline had been completed, Mrs. Savoie and Mrs. Oubre were contacted by Mr. Frank Dietlein for the purpose of securing from them a written servitude in the name of Mr. Terry Bills, Jr. Mr. Oubre was also present on that occasion. Mrs. Savoie and Mr. & Mrs. Oubre testified that Dietlein also stated, as Rozas had previously, that the owners of the well already had the right to construct the pipeline. They say he told them the line would be in the location of the "old Colorado Company right of way." However, Dietlein also said that because of legal technicalities it was necessary that the landowners sign an additional servitude agreement. These witnesses testified Dietlein assured them that the servitude would not be legal until the third landowner, Mrs. LaFleur, signed, and he asked that Mrs. Savoie and Mrs. Oubre go ahead and sign to save Mr. Dietlein another trip. So Mrs. Savoie and Mrs. Oubre signed the right of way agreement. At the time they signed, they were in error as to several facts. They did not know that the pipeline had already been constructed. It had been misrepresented to them by Mr. Rozas and by Mr. Dietlein that the well owners already had the right to install the pipeline. And, it was their understanding the line was going to be constructed in the location of an old right of way which had been previously granted to the Colorado Company.

After Mrs. Savoie and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
317 So. 2d 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savoie-v-bills-lactapp-1975.