Wayne R. Trahan v. Erne Plessala, Sr.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 4, 2015
DocketCA-0014-0795
StatusUnknown

This text of Wayne R. Trahan v. Erne Plessala, Sr. (Wayne R. Trahan v. Erne Plessala, Sr.) 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
Wayne R. Trahan v. Erne Plessala, Sr., (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

14-795

WAYNE R. TRAHAN, ET AL.

VERSUS

ERNE PLESSALA, SR., ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF IBERIA, NO. 103270 HONORABLE GERARD B. WATTIGNY, DISTRICT JUDGE

JOHN D. SAUNDERS JUDGE

Court composed of John D. Saunders, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and John E. Conery, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

J. Wayne Landry Attorney at Law P. O. Box 12132 New Iberia, LA 70560-2132 (337) 369-4420 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: Larry Verrett Wayne R. Trahan Stephen F. Mestayer Attorney at Law P. O. Box 12340 New Iberia, LA 70562-2340 (337) 365-8181 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Gloria L. Plessala Erne Plessala, Sr.

James W. Schwing Attorney at Law 411 Iberia St. New Iberia, LA 70560 (337) 365-2445 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Gloria L. Plessala Erne Plessala, Sr. SAUNDERS, Judge.

This is an appeal regarding the extent of adverse possession. In 1969, the

adverse possessors constructed a crawfish pond on the title land owners’ property

using levees. Sometime thereafter, the adverse possessors moved the soil from the

spoil bank of a nearby canal to create a campsite. Later, the adverse possessors

constructed a bridge over the canal and moved two camps onto the campsite.

The title land owners brought a petitory action against the adverse

possessors. The trial court found that the adverse possessors proved their

possession for 30 years to the extent of the outer levees of the crawfish pond. The

trial court then ordered that the adverse possessors have a plat created to determine

the extent of their adverse possession. After two failed attempts by the adverse

possessor’s expert to create a plat that complied with the trial court’s judgment, the

titled landowners were ordered to find an expert to create a plat. The plat of the

titled landowners’ expert did not include the campsite in the adverse possessors’

adverse possession.

The trial court accepted the plat drawn by the titled landowners’ expert to be

in accordance with its judgment, cast the adverse possessors with all costs of the

proceeding, and ordered that the adverse possessors remove their bridge and two

camps from the campsite. The adverse possessors appeal. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY:

Plaintiffs, Wayne Trahan and Larry Verrett, instituted a petitory action

against Defendants, Erne Plessala, Sr. and his former spouse, Gloria Plessala,

claiming ownership of certain tracts of land in rural Iberia Parish. Originally, the

action was against Erne Plessala, Sr., who was divorced from Gloria Plessala. A

trial on the merits between Plaintiffs and Erne Plessala was held on February 21,

2006. After a judgment was rendered, Gloria Plessala filed a petition for intervention based on the fact that she and Erne never partitioned their community

property, and, given this fact, she was a necessary party for proper adjudication of

the matter. As such, the trial court granted Gloria Plessala’s petition and allowed

her to defend her property rights which could be affected by the suit. The only

issue involved in the second trial that included Gloria was ownership of land not

pertinent to these proceedings.

The trial court’s September 20, 2006 judgment found that Plaintiffs had

proven title to the eastern quarter of Lots 28 and 35, but that Defendants had

established “title up to the outermost levees of the crawfish pond” located in

portions of both Lots 28 and 35.

Lot 28 is bordered on the west by Marshfield Canal and the south by Lot 35.

Lot 35 is also bordered on the west by Marshfield Canal. Thus, to reiterate, Lot 28

is located directly north of Lot 35 along the east side of Marshfield Canal.

The September 20, 2006 judgment went on to order that Defendants were to

establish the boundary of their title gained through their adverse possession in Lots

28 and 35 by having a plat created “up to the outermost levees of his crawfish

pond.”

In accordance with the trial court’s judgment, Defendants hired Ivan

Garzotto to prepare a plat. Garzotto prepared a plat and had it recorded in the

public records of Iberia Parish. Garzotto’s first plat placed the boundary of

Defendants’ adverse possession to include a campsite they had constructed on the

spoil bank of the Marshfield Canal. He did so because he considered the western

levee of the crawfish pond to be the spoil bank of the Marshfield Canal between

where the crawfish pond levees intersected with the spoil bank.

2 Plaintiffs filed a motion to correct survey in accordance with judgment.

Simon Freyou, a licensed land surveyor, testified on behalf of the Plaintiffs. He

disagreed with Garzotto’s plat that the spoil bank should be included because it

was not part of the crawfish pond. Freyou testified that the spoil bank was never

part of the crawfish pond.

The trial court found that Garzotto’s first plat did not comply with its

judgment and declared it invalid. The trial court then ordered Garzotto to redo the

plat with instructions that he:

[Establish] the crawfish levee for the pond . . . if he is able to do so. If he is not able to establish [the entire] levee encompassing the crawfish pond, then he will stop at whatever point the levee stops and then proceed around the crawfish pond at the high water mark until he gets to another portion of existing levee around the crawfish pond. It is also obvious to the Court that [Defendants’] crawfish pond . . . was not in the spoil bank area at least between 1996 to present date. Further, there is no testimony that would support the uninterrupted adverse possession of [Defendants] in the spoil bank area of Lots 28 and 35. The Court also notes that the burden of proof for thirty (30) year adverse possession is on [Defendants].

The trial court also deferred Plaintiffs’ request that Defendants be ordered to

remove the camp(s) from the campsite as well as any other structures, including a

bridge they had built to reach those camps, until Garzotto completed the plat in

accordance with its judgment. Finally, the trial court ordered that Defendants pay

the expert fees of Plaintiffs’ expert, Freyou, and those of their own expert,

Garzotto.

Garzotto then produced and recorded a second plat. It also included the

campsite within the boundary drawn of Defendants adverse possession. Plaintiffs

again filed a motion to correct survey in accordance with judgment. Once again,

the trial court declared Garzotto’s plat invalid. This time, rather than have

Garzotto produce a third plat, the trial court ordered that Plaintiffs establish the

3 extent of Defendants’ adverse possession in Lots 28 and 35 by having a plat

created to the outermost levees of the crawfish pond. The trial court also included

some instructions in its judgment as to which markers present in Garzotto’s second

plat that the Plaintiffs’ expert was to use and others that he was to disregard.

Finally, after having David Moore create a plat based on the trial court’s

judgment, Plaintiffs sought to have that plat accepted by the court as correctly

reflecting the extent of Defendants’ adverse possession and ownership “up to the

outermost levees of the crawfish pond.” Moore’s plat did not include the campsite

as part of Defendants’ adverse possession. The trial court accepted Moore’s plat

and signed a judgment on September 30, 2013, ordering Defendants to remove the

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