Sceroler v. Rancher

808 So. 2d 803, 2002 WL 227083
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 2002
Docket1999 CA 2859, 1999 CA 2860
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 808 So. 2d 803 (Sceroler v. Rancher) 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
Sceroler v. Rancher, 808 So. 2d 803, 2002 WL 227083 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

808 So.2d 803 (2002)

Donald Joseph SCEROLER, Jr. and Pasha McDonald Sceroler
v.
Vardie L. RANCHER, Jr. and Sheila Rancher.
Larry Benard McDonald and Pasha McDonald Sceroler
v.
Vardie L. Rancher, Jr. and Sheila Rancher.

No. 1999 CA 2859, 1999 CA 2860.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

February 15, 2002.

*804 Carey T. Jones, Denham Springs, Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants Donald Joseph Sceroler, Jr., Pasha McDonald Sceroler and Larry Benard McDonald.

Robert H. Harrison, Jr., Denham Springs, Counsel for Defendants/Appellees Vardie L. Rancher, Jr. and Sheila Rancher.

Before: CARTER, C.J., PARRO, and *805 CLAIBORNE,[1] JJ.

CLAIBORNE, Judge.

This case involves a dispute about the plaintiffs' right to access a public road from their enclosed estates south of Denham Springs, Louisiana, and the validity of an alleged compromise agreement. The trial court articulated very detailed and well-written reasons for judgment in holding that plaintiffs were not entitled to a predial servitude under La. Civ.Code art. 689 but were instead entitled to one in the form of a gratuitous right of passage over the property of their donor according to La. Civ.Code art. 694. The trial court further held that the parties did not have an enforceable compromise agreement to settle their differences. It is from this judgment that plaintiffs appeal. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

For many years, Larry W. and Nelda Rebecca McDonald (the McDonalds) owned an irregular-shaped tract of land in Livingston Parish, south of Denham Springs, Louisiana. The western boundary of the property was located adjacent to property owned by the defendants, Sheila and Vardie L. Rancher, Jr. (the Ranchers). The eastern boundary of the McDonald property was located along Henderson Road. Henderson Road always served as the public road access for the McDonald property because there was no other road adjacent to the property boundaries.

In 1988, the Ranchers decided to reserve ten acres of their property for their private residence and subdivide into lots and sell the remainder of their property located adjacent to the McDonald property. The Ranchers requested that the adjacent property owners, including the McDonalds, contribute towards the cost of building a road (Rancher Drive) along the common boundary line to serve as access for the subdivision to a nearby public highway, Harris Road. None of the adjacent landowners joined in the building of Rancher Drive, so the Ranchers proceeded to build the road approximately one foot inside the common boundary line thereby denying the adjacent property owners access to Rancher Drive. The Ranchers then dedicated Rancher Drive to Livingston Parish for use as a public road into the Ranchers' subdivision. As a condition of acceptance of the road into the parish system, the Ranchers were required, at considerable expense, to build the road so as to conform with parish road standards. The Ranchers sold eight residential lots with certain property restrictions; however, the Ranchers never sold the one foot "buffer zone" strip of land between Rancher Drive and the adjacent property owners.

On April 18, 1997, the McDonalds donated a portion of their property (approximately 2.93 acres) to their daughter and her husband, Donald Joseph Sceroler, Jr. and Pasha McDonald Sceroler (the Scerolers), to give them a place to build a family home near the McDonalds. On May 12, 1997, the McDonalds donated another portion of their property (approximately 10.24 acres) to their son, Larry Benard McDonald (Ben McDonald). The western boundaries of both tracts of donated land are adjacent to the Ranchers' narrow strip of land, approximately one foot away from Rancher Drive. Only the Sceroler tract adjoins (on the eastern boundary) the McDonalds' remaining property which has access *806 to Henderson Road. Neither tract of donated land borders any public road. Ben McDonald's tract is separated by the Sceroler tract from the McDonald's remaining land with access to Henderson Road. Both tracts of donated property are vacant, unimproved pieces of pasture land with no bayous, creeks, woods, marshes, railroads or any other obstacles on the land. There are no roads, paths or trails on the donated tracts of land. At no time did the McDonalds access the property donated to their children from any location other than the area adjacent to Henderson Road. After the donations were made, both the Scerolers' land and Ben McDonald's land had no direct access to a public road.

Shortly after the donations in 1997, Ben McDonald and the Scerolers attempted to negotiate the sale of the one foot "buffer zone" strip of land owned by the Ranchers in order to gain access to Rancher Drive. The Ranchers were not willing to sell the strip of land without the same subdivision property restrictions that were required on the lots they had previously sold also encumbering all of the Scerolers' and Ben McDonald's property. The negotiations were unsuccessful, and the Scerolers filed suit against the Ranchers alleging that their property was enclosed and demanding access to the nearest public road, Rancher Drive.[2]

Meanwhile, Ben McDonald continued to negotiate with the Ranchers in an attempt to purchase the one foot "buffer zone" strip of land. The Ranchers indicated their willingness to sell the strip of land provided the Scerolers and Ben McDonald were willing to subject the strip of land and their respective tracts of land to the same restrictions imposed on the lots previously sold by the Ranchers.

Communications by letter and telephone conversations were ongoing between Ben McDonald's and the Scerolers' (plaintiffs') attorney and the Ranchers' attorney, concerning a possible compromise of the litigation. Plaintiffs' attorney wrote to the Ranchers' attorney on April 7, 1998, suggesting that "Ben and/or Pasha buy the strip of property bordering their land" and "by counter letter" assure the Ranchers that the property would not be used for any objectionable purpose. In a letter dated April 28, 1998, the Ranchers' attorney indicated that the Ranchers were willing to sell the "property in question" for $15,000 along with some proposed property restrictions to be "placed on the property conveyed." On May 11, 1998, in a letter to the Ranchers' attorney, plaintiffs' attorney accepted "the offer set out" in the April 28, 1998 letter and then indicated that he would have the proposed property description and "necessary conveyances" prepared. Then, by letter on June 17, 1998, plaintiffs' attorney wrote to the Ranchers' attorney enclosing "a draft of the Cash Sale between Ben McDonald and Vardie and Sheila Rancher." The letter stated: "[a]s I understand it, Ben and the Ranchers have agreed to these terms and are ready to sign the deed." The last paragraph of the letter states: "[i]f there are any terms that need to be changed, please let me know so that I can make the necessary changes. Otherwise, I look forward to hearing from you soon." After seeing the draft of the sale documents, the Ranchers notified their attorney that they would not sign the documents because the property restrictions were not encumbering all of the property that the Ranchers believed were a part of the agreement. On April 27, 1999, Ben McDonald and *807

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Bluebook (online)
808 So. 2d 803, 2002 WL 227083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sceroler-v-rancher-lactapp-2002.