SEMINARY v. DuPONT

41 So. 3d 1182, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 1082, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 688, 2010 WL 1856359
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 11, 2010
Docket09-CA-1082
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 So. 3d 1182 (SEMINARY v. DuPONT) 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
SEMINARY v. DuPONT, 41 So. 3d 1182, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 1082, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 688, 2010 WL 1856359 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

SUSAN M. CHEHARDY, Judge.

12This is a boundary dispute between neighbors. The defendants appeal a judgment that granted a mandatory injunction to the plaintiff, ordering the defendants to remove a fence that encroaches on the plaintiffs property, and granted other relief. We affirm.

FACTS

Merlin J. Seminary, Jr. filed suit on December 17, 2008 against John C. DuPont and Roberta DuPont (hereafter collectively “DuPont”), alleging that he and DuPont are owners of adjacent immovable properties on Amigo Avenue in St. Phi-lomena Park Subdivision, Marrero, Jefferson Parish. 1 (DuPont is his next-door neighbors.) Seminary alleged that DuPont had installed a fence that encroached on his property by two feet and that Du *1184 Pont refused to remove the fence despite amicable demand. Seminary sought a mandatory injunction ordering DuPont to remove all of the fence and chain wall that encroaches on Seminary’s property, and to fill and replace the sod that was removed from Seminary’s property as a result of the construction of the chain wall, at DuPont’s expense. Seminary also prayed for a permanent injunction prohibiting DuPont from constructing a fence and chain wall on any portion of Seminary’s property.

| .¡DuPont answered with a general denial and asserted, as affirmative defenses, that the fence is located upon property owned by DuPont and that DuPont has “always owned, possessed and exerted dominion over the property up to and including the location of where the fence referenced in the petition is located since at least December 12, 1967.” Alternatively, DuPont alleged he has acquired the property up to and including the location of the fence by acquisitive prescription of 10 years and/or 30 years.

DuPont also made a reconventional demand against Seminary, asserting that DuPont and Seminary acquired their adjoining lots (respectively, Lot 24 and Lot 25) from common ancestors-in-title, Alice Mae Lelaune, wife of/and Ernest Anthony Loupe, Jr. (“the Loupes”). DuPont asserted that the December 1, 1967 J.J. Krebs survey referenced in and attached to the DuPont act of sale “set and established the boundary line of Lot 24 as being a line running from the front of Lot 24 to the back of Lot 24 and being ten (10’) feet west of the edge of the carport illustrated on said survey, and parallel thereto.” Accordingly, DuPont asserted, when Seminary’s immediate ancestors-in-title (his parents) acquired Lot 25 from the Loupes in 1978,

they acquired only that which the vendors had to sell, and that did not include any of the property located closer (or within) that line running from the front of the property to the rear of the property and being ten (10’) feet west and parallel to the edge of the carport illustrated on the December 1, 1967 J.J. Krebs & Sons, Inc. survey referenced above. It is from Irma Sanchez, wife of/and Merlin Jerome Seminary that the defendant-in-reconvention derives his ownership, and he can not acquire greater ownership than that possessed by Irma Sanchez, wife of/and Merlin Jerome [Seminary]. [Emphasis in original.]

DuPont alleged that the recently constructed fence is on the DuPont property and within the line set forth in the 1967 survey, as illustrated on a February 4, 2009 |4survey by Richmond W. Krebs, attached to the DuPont reconventional demand. DuPont sought judgment dismissing Seminary’s petition and finding that the newly-constructed fence of which Seminary complains is located on the property owned by DuPont, appointing a surveyor to survey and set as the boundary separate Lot 24 from Lot 25 “that line running from the front of Lot 24 to the back of Lot 24 and being located ten (10’) feet west of the western edge of the carport on Lot 24 and parallel thereto,” to have the new survey declared to establish the boundary line separating Lot 24 and Lot 24, and filed in the public record, and assessment of all costs against Seminary.

TRIAL

At trial Seminary testified he purchased the property at 2840 Amigo Avenue from his mother; his parents had purchased the property approximately 20 years earlier, in 1978, when Seminary was eight years old. He remembered there was always a wooden fence between his family’s property and the property of their next-door neighbors, the DuPonts. The DuPont property was *1185 mounded or built up and the Seminary property was lower. The wooden fence was located right where the mounding of the ground came down. When Seminary bought the property in 1998, he did not remove or change the location of the fence. The fence remained in the same place until 2005, when Hurricane Katrina damaged the fence. Seminary thereafter removed the fence and advised DuPont he was going to install another fence. According to Seminary, DuPont told Seminary he would have to move the fence two feet closer to Seminary’s home, because the previous owner had put the fence too close to DuPont and now that the fence was down he wanted it moved over.

|sBoth men thereafter measured off their property line according to surveys both had. According to Seminary, when measured from DuPont’s property line at his other neighbor’s side, measurement according to the survey coincided with Seminary’s survey showing where Seminary’s property began. They remeasured, with the same result. According to Seminary, DuPont nevertheless insisted his property line was ten feet from the edge of his driveway and that was where he was going to fence. That line, as insisted on by DuPont, was two feet over the property line as shown on Seminary’s survey.

Seminary testified that DuPont had modified his house in the late 1970s or early 1980s and expanded his driveway at that time, resulting in the two-foot discrepancy. DuPont denied there was any difference in the measurement of his home following the remodeling. Ultimately, despite further discussion, DuPont proceeded to build a chainwall and a chain link fence at the point he insisted is the true property line, which Seminary asserts is two feet onto his property.

DuPont testified that the new fence is exactly where the old fence was, and denied there was any difference. He stated that the original survey of his lot showed the property line is ten feet from the slab of his carport, and that is how he measured to place the new fence.

The earliest survey in evidence is a survey dated December 1, 1967, by J.J. Krebs & Sons, Inc. It shows DuPont’s property, consisting of Lots 23 and 24 of St. Phi-lomena Park Subdivision, is 100 feet front on the side facing Amigo Avenue. (The front of Lot 23 is 50 feet, and the front of Lot 24 is 50 feet.) Lot 25, which Seminary owns, has a front of 54.55 feet facing Amigo Avenue.

Seminary obtained a survey of his property in 1998, when he purchased the property. That survey indicates a board fence was in place just inside the property line on Seminary’s side between Seminary’s and DuPont’s properties when the | ^survey was performed. The fence indicated on that survey is the one that was damaged by Hurricane Katrina and later removed.

Seminary and DuPont also reviewed a survey from 1978, when Seminary’s parents bought Lot 25. The 1978 survey, as well as the 1967 and 1998 surveys, reflected that Seminary’s property was 54.55 feet front facing Amigo Avenue.

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41 So. 3d 1182, 9 La.App. 5 Cir. 1082, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 688, 2010 WL 1856359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seminary-v-dupont-lactapp-2010.