Thibodeaux v. Landry
This text of 351 So. 2d 522 (Thibodeaux v. Landry) 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.
Opinion
Irving THIBODEAUX, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Ernest LANDRY et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*523 Privat & Regan by Kenneth O. Privat, Crowley, for plaintiff-appellant.
Pugh, Buatt, Landry & Pugh by Lawrence G. Pugh, Jr., Crowley, for defendants-appellees.
Before DOMENGEAUX, WATSON and FORET, JJ.
DOMENGEAUX, Judge.
Plaintiff, Irving Thibodeaux, sued Ernest Landry and Landry's tenants, Emery and Randy Thibodeaux, to enjoin him from disturbing him in the possession of his property, and for damages associated with the alleged disturbance. The trial judge granted a temporary restraining order, but on hearing the motion for a preliminary injunction he denied that injunction. However, he reserved to plaintiff his action for certain enumerated damages. Plaintiff has appealed the denial of the preliminary injunction and the limitations imposed on his damages by the trial judge. Defendants have answered the appeal, praying for damages and attorney's fees. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
Plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land which adjoins defendant Landry's land on Landry's southern border. Both tracts are used for the cultivation of rice. A fence divides their property. Directly south of the fence on plaintiff's property lies a drainage ditch, which parallels plaintiff's large irrigation canal. The drainage ditch was over-grown with weeds and saplings. On November 1, 1976, defendants tore down plaintiff's fence, went onto his property, and "cleaned" out the drainage ditch with a backhoe. Dirt and debris which was removed from the ditch was placed on plaintiff's property. New culverts were installed to facilitate the draining of water from defendant's land onto plaintiff's property. After the temporary restraining order issued, plaintiff removed some of the culverts.
The trial judge found that defendants had a natural servitude of drain across the drainage ditch. Civil Code Article 660 states:
"It is a servitude due by the estate situated below to receive the waters which run naturally from the estate situated above, provided the industry of man has not been used to create that servitude.
The proprietor below is not at liberty to raise any dam, or to make any other work, to prevent this running of the water.
The proprietor above can do nothing whereby the natural servitude due by the estate below may be rendered more burdensome."
The trial court held defendants were entitled to go onto plaintiff's property to do maintenance work on the ditch, but that plaintiff nevertheless had an action for damages for the destruction of his fence and was entitled to have the dirt and trash removed from his property.
Plaintiff cites the following errors on the part of the district judge:
(1) His failure to issue a preliminary injunction.
(2) His finding that a servitude of drainage existed.
(3) His failure to find that defendants have made the alleged servitude more burdensome.
(4) His failure to list trespass as an element of plaintiff's damages.
(5) His assessment of one-half of the court costs against the plaintiff.
Defendants maintain in brief that there exists a natural servitude of drain under Civil Code Article 660, supra, or that they have acquired a conventional servitude of drain by ten-year acquisitive prescription as *524 provided by Civil Code Articles 714 and 765.[1]
The trial judge's holding that the ditch in question was a natural servitude of drain was not erroneous. However, he did err in finding defendants were entitled to enter at will upon plaintiff's property to clean out the ditch. Our Supreme Court was last faced with this issue in Sharpe v. Levert, 51 La.Ann. 1249, 26 So. 100 (1899). The Court there stated that the proprietor of the dominant estate may not enter the servient estate at his pleasure for the purposes of digging a ditch without the consent of the owner.[2]
Defendants cite the case of Miller v. Prairie Canal Company, Inc., 229 So.2d 752 (La.App. 3rd Cir. 1969) for the proposition that they are entitled to go onto plaintiff's land to work on the ditch. The court in Miller stated:
"In the present case, defendant owns a canal servitude across plaintiff's land and implicit in any servitude is the right to use it for the purposes for which it is intended. Equally implicit in this right is that its exercise does not depend upon the consent of the landowner. If defendant is required to obtain permission to go upon plaintiff's land this would of necessity imply that plaintiff has the right to refuse permission and that, in itself, would negate the `right' of servitude. LSA-C.C. Art. 772 is controlling, to-wit:
`Art. 772. He to whom a servitude is due, has a right to make all the works necessary to use and preserve the same.' See also LSA-CC Art. 774."
The trial judge incorrectly cited the Miller opinion, a case which pertains to conventional servitudes of drain, as controlling in this case, which involves a natural servitude of drain. We agree with the venerable case of Landry v. McCall, 3 La.Ann. 134 (1848), which held as follows:
"Whenever the exercise of the servitude is obstructed the plaintiffs must call upon him to remove the obstructions and may compel him by legal process to do so. Had this course been pursued, it is evident that this litigation would have been prevented.
The plaintiffs have not the right to widen the bayous, as the witnesses seem to believe. This improvement, if necessary, can alone be made by the police jury, upon an adequate compensation to the defendant for the damage he may sustain thereby. Arts. 768 and 770 [now Arts. 772 and 774] of the Civil Code, upon which the plaintiffs' counsel relies, relate exclusively to conventional servitudes. Natural servitudes are laws of vicinage and necessity, subject to different rules. Pardessus, 53, 66. . . ."
Although it is arguable that the rules which govern voluntary and conventional servitudes of drain apply by analogy to the natural servitude of drain, see Yiannopoulis, Predial Servitudes, 29 La.L.Rev. 1, at 45, (1969), we believe that the natural servitude of drain is unique and is not affected by those rules. The essential nature of a natural servitude of drain is its existence without the act of man. We do not believe the redactors of the Code contemplated *525 extensive maintenance work to be done in order for a natural drainage to occur.
This is not to say that defendants are prevented from altering their own property to facilitate the natural drain. Freestate Industrial Development Company v. T. & H., Inc., 209 So.2d 568 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1968), as long as they do not make the servitude more burdensome on plaintiff. But without conclusive proof that the defendants have acquired a servitude of drain by prescription, or convention, they are not entitled to enter onto plaintiff's property. See Sharpe, supra.
As the Landry case suggests and the case of Brown v. Blankenship, 28 So.2d 496 (La.App. 2nd Cir. 1946) holds, plaintiffs may be compelled by court order to clean out the ditch.
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