Tensas Parish Police Jury v. Perritt

181 So. 3d 143, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1886, 2015 WL 5718799
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 2015
DocketNo. 50,123-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 So. 3d 143 (Tensas Parish Police Jury v. Perritt) 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
Tensas Parish Police Jury v. Perritt, 181 So. 3d 143, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1886, 2015 WL 5718799 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

GARRETT, J.

|, The defendants, Allen Perritt, Sr., Lyndel C. Perritt, and Lawrence Perritt, appeal from a declaratory judgment finding that a road was tacitly dedicated as a public road. They also claim nonjoinder of a party needed for just adjudication. Finding merit to the second argument, we vacate the trial court judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.

FACTS

In 1966,- the Tensas Parish Police Jury (“TPPJ”) constructed a bridge over Van Burén Bayou and a road, known as Van Burén Road, connecting the bridge with LA Hwy, 892. The TPPJ attempted to obtain an easement and right-of-way for the road. However, the bridge and the road were constructed at a different location, several hundred feet southwest of the originally proposed location. TPPJ claims it maintained the road to some extent and it was used by the public for approximately 40 years.. The TPPJ alleged that, at some point, the defendants acquired property next to the road and, in 2007, they plowed it up and incorporated ft into' their farming operations. The TPPJ made demand on the defendants to restore the road; they refused and this litigation followed.

On February 14, 2013, the TPPJ filed a petition for declaratory judgment to determine whether the road was tacitly dedicated to public use and whether it would further the interests of justice to declare it a public road. The only named defendants were the Perritts. They answered, arguing that the road was not constructed on the TPPJ right-of-way, that the 1966 right-of-way was not valid because not all the required signatures of adjoining landowners were obtained, that there had been no maintenance of 12the road for many years, and that the road was not used by the public, but only with the permission of adjoining landowners.

The matter was heard by the trial court on November 24, 2014. The parties entered into the following stipulations:

1. The Tensas Parish Police Jury did construct an unpaved road between LA Hwy. 892 and the bridge over Van Bu-rén Bayou, which is the road in controversy, in or around 1966.
[145]*145,2. The Tensas Parish Police Jury did construct the. bridge over Van Burén Bayou that connected to the road in controversy.
3. The Tensas Parish Police Jury did reconstruct the bridge in or around 1969 after it was damaged.
4. The Tensas Parish Police Jury did attempt to obtain a right-of-way for the construction of a road in the general area of the site of the road in controversy by execution of a document entitled EASEMENT FOR BRIDGE AND PUBLIC ROAD, which document was executed on December 15, 1966, and idéntifíed the location of the bridge over Van Burén Bayou and the road connecting the bridge to LA Hwy. 892. The parties are not stipulating as to the efficacy of the document, but rather to its execution and recordation with the Ten-sas Parish Clerk of Court.
5. The bridge and road that were constructed were not located as indicated in the Easement, but rather the bridge was located at the narrower end of Van Bu-rén Bayou and the road was located southwest of the location set forth in the Easement to connect with 'the bridge location. ‘ ■ . ' -
6. The road was never formally dedicated to public use, nor was it formally accepted into the parish road system.
7., Defendants tilled over the road and incorporated the land.into the agricultural, fields .that existed on either side of the road in 2007.
8. In October 2007, the Tensas Parish Police Jury, through Parish Attorney David' [Doughty], made demand on defendants' to restore the road to public use.
9. Defendants were the owners of the property on'one side of the road and held a leasehold interest on the other side of the broad until 2006 or 2007, when they acquired the area over which they held a leasehold interest.

The primary issue at -trial was whether Van Burén Road was. a public road by tacit dedication. The defendants contested the extent of .maintenance by the parish and the amount of public use. The parties agreed that La. R.S. 48:491(B) controlled the issup.1 .

Several witnesses testified for the TPPJ that the'road had-been’graded at some points over the years and had been used by the public. The defendants presented testimony from witnesses who stated "that they never saw á road grader or any other maintenance on the road' over a period of many years. Some of the witnesses' had seen the Perritts maintain the road.

[146]*146| ¿Alien Perritt, Sr., who is retired from the Tensas Parish Sheriffs Office, farmed in the area of the disputed road. He first obtained property adjacent to the road on the east side in 1987. His son, Lawrence Perritt, now farms that land. Allen described the road as more like a “turnrow.” He never saw the TPPJ perform any work on it. There was no gravel on the road and there were no drainage ditches on the sides of the road. The road would get deeply rutted during hunting season and rainwater ran along the road to the head wall of the bridge, causing erosion damage. This was the reason he plowed up the road. Two years before, an official with the TPPJ asked his permission to take a track hoe over the road, and Allen allowed this.

Allen stated that Lawrence bought some property on the west side of the road. When asked whether there was any other landowner who had property adjacent to the road, Allen said that Robert Lee Mickey owned land along the road and Lawrence leased that piece of property. Allen was shown Perritt Exhibit No. 1, and identified a small strip of land owned by Mr. Mickey. According to Allen, Mr. Mickey’s-property, is approximately “24 rows wide” and it is actually Mr. Mickey’s land that lies adjacent to the west side of Van Burén Road. He also referred to an unsuccessful attempt to obtain a written easement from Mr. Mickey at some point.

Lawrence Perritt testified that he has farmed in the area with his father since 1995. In 1996, he bought 36 acres from Theodore Jackson in the area of the road. Lawrence lives 300 yards from the road and had never seen the parish grade it. The road was removed for erosion control. He was ^questioned about the small strip of land labeled “Robert Mickey.” He testified that he has leased the property from Mr. Mickey for the last 10 to 12 years. Mr. Mickey lives in Chicago and comes to the area “I think once a year maybe.”

In closing arguments, the defendants’ attorney stated:.

Now, something came up that we haven’t really discussed, but it’s this Mickey property. If the testimony of the Perritts is correct, there is a strip of property along the road that separates Lawrence Perritt’s property from the road and that’s Robert Mickey’s property. Obviously, if it’s twenty-four rows— a row is two feet, I guess, that’s forty-eight feet that he’s leasing, then no matter what you do, the road is not going to get to Lawrence Perritt’s property because he’s not adjacent to it. Now, I haven’t really given a lot of thought on what that means. I’m just throwing that out to the court, and we’ll be glad to write something on that if you want, but that’s kind of something that just fell out of the blue here today.

In rebuttal, the attorney for the TPPJ argued that, if the Perritts knew there was some difference in ownership, they had an opportunity in their answer to state it.

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181 So. 3d 143, 2015 La. App. LEXIS 1886, 2015 WL 5718799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tensas-parish-police-jury-v-perritt-lactapp-2015.