Wilfair Assoc. v. Southern Pacific Transp.

572 So. 2d 185, 1990 WL 180089
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 1990
DocketCA 89 1484
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 572 So. 2d 185 (Wilfair Assoc. v. Southern Pacific Transp.) 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
Wilfair Assoc. v. Southern Pacific Transp., 572 So. 2d 185, 1990 WL 180089 (La. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

572 So.2d 185 (1990)

WILFAIR ASSOCIATES, a Partnership
v.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, et al.

No. CA 89 1484.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

November 14, 1990.

John E. Coleman, Jr., Aycock, Horne & Coleman, Franklin, Gordon A. Pugh, Breazeal, Sachse & Wilson, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff/appellant.

James J. Davidson, III, Davidson, Meaux, Sonnier & McElligott, Lafayette, for Southern Pacific Transp. Co.

*186 Edward M. Leonard, Jr., Morgan City, for Virginia G. Bersen, Mary Etta G. Taylor and Emanuel J. Grizzaffi.

B.J. Rawls, Morgan City, for Hudson Drydocks, Inc.

Patrick T. Caffery, Caffery, Ourbre, Dugas & Campbell, New Iberia, for Texaco, Inc.

Before COVINGTON, C.J., LANIER, J., and LEMMON,[*] J. Pro Tem.

COVINGTON, Chief Judge.

On August 3, 1987, Southern Pacific Transportation Company (Southern Pacific) demolished a railroad crossing which had provided access for 50 years from East Railroad Avenue to a tract of property presently owned by Wilfair Associates (Wilfair) in Morgan City, St. Mary Parish, Louisiana. Wilfair filed a Petition for Recognition of Servitude and Damages against Southern Pacific. Wilfair later included the owners of the property to the east, the Grizzaffi tract, and the property to the west, the Texas Company (Texaco) tract, as additional defendants due to allegations by Southern Pacific that one or the other of these estates owed a right of passage to the Wilfair estate.

The trial court granted a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment recognizing the right of passage of Wilfair across the railroad of Southern Pacific which was to replace the crossing it had destroyed on August 3, 1987. The trial court dismissed the claims against the owners of the contiguous properties. Southern Pacific appeals this judgment. Wilfair appeals the dismissal of its alternative claims for a servitude of passage by the Texaco or Grizzaffi estates.

The following issues are presented for consideration by this court:

1. Is the Wilfair tract entitled to a legal servitude of passage over the Southern Pacific railroad?
2. Does the temporary passage to a public road allowed by the Grizzaffi property subsequent to the removal of the crossing by Southern Pacific prohibit classifying the Wilfair property as an enclosed estate?

At one time the property of Wilfair, and that of all defendants, Southern Pacific, Texaco and all of the Grizzaffis, comprised one large tract. Over the years, parcels of the parent tract were sold off so that Wilfair's property is surrounded on the west by property of Texaco, on the north by the railroad right of way of Southern Pacific, on the east by property owned by Grizzaffis, and on the south by Bayou Boeuf, as shown below:

[See page 187 for map of property.]

*187

It is essential to review the title of the Wilfair property along with the changes in the law concerning the right of a servitude of passage.

By an Act of Sale dated September 2, 1895, Borue and Percy O'Brien acquired two large tracts of land in Morgan City. One tract, located north of the railroad, included all the area which is now a subdivision. The second tract, of which the Wilfair property forms a part, extended from the railroad on the north to the bayou at the south.

In 1895, Article 699 of the Civil Code provided that an estate was enclosed if it had no access to a public road. The Borue and Percy O'Brien tract had access to East Railroad Avenue on the northwest corner and Aycock Street on the northeast corner and, consequently, was not an "enclosed estate" in 1895. The codal provision read in full:

The owner whose estate is enclosed, and who has no way to a public road, may claim the right of passage on the estate of his neighbors for the cultivation of his estate, but he is bound to indemnify them in proportion to the damage he may occasion. [Emphasis added].

By Act of Partition, dated February 11, 1911, Borue and Percy O'Brien partitioned the tract of land which extended along the bayou, and Borue O'Brien received the tract between the railroad on the north and the bayou on the south.

The law was the same in 1911 as Civil Code Art. 699 provided that an estate was enclosed only if it had no access to a public road. The tract had access to public roads on the northwest and northeast corners and, consequently, was not enclosed.

By Act of Sale dated May 6, 1911, Borue O'Brien sold Tract "1" to Waddell-Williams Lumber Company (Waddell-Williams). O'Brien retained ownership of the westernmost 35 feet of his lands and granted a servitude of passage across it to Waddell-Williams. O'Brien was granted a servitude of passage across the northernmost 35 feet Tract "1". Additionally, O'Brien had access to Aycock Street on the northeast corner of his property. Neither tract was enclosed in 1911.

That same day O'Brien granted Waddell-Williams a railroad spur track servitude. *188 The spur left the railroad's main line at a point 560 feet easterly of the east Waddell-Williams boundary, and entered Tract "1" at a point 167 feet south of the northern boundary. O'Brien reserved the right to use the track.

By an Act of Sale dated July 31, 1914, O'Brien sold to the Louisiana Syrup and Canning Company (Louisiana Syrup) the waterfront tract labeled "3-A" above. In the sale, O'Brien granted to Louisiana Syrup a servitude to construct a rail spur through the property. Additionally, Louisiana Syrup was granted a road servitude to connect its tract with East Railroad Avenue. No estates were legally enclosed in 1914.

By Act of Sale dated November 18, 1915, O'Brien sold a further parcel of his land having a width of 1,000 feet to Waddell-Williams, and now identified as Tracts "2-A" and "2-B". Tract "2-B" is now part of the property presently owned by Wilfair. In this sale, Waddell-Williams granted O'Brien the right to use the existing spur trackage and to construct an additional spur.

The law in 1915 had not changed, with Article 699 still providing that an estate was enclosed only if it did not have access to a public road. As of this time, Waddell-Williams owned tracts "1", "2-A", and "2-B" ("2-B" is now part of Wilfair's property) and had access to a public road at East Railroad Avenue on the northwest corner; the remaining O'Brien property had access to Aycock Street on the northeast corner. The Louisiana Syrup property shown above had a servitude to Aycock Street across the O'Brien property. No estates were legally enclosed in 1915.

Two days later, on November 20, 1915, Waddell-Williams sold Tract "2-B" (now a part of Wilfair's property) to the Texas Company. In this sale, Texas Company was given the right to use the spur trackage to connect with the railroad's main line. The sale recognized O'Brien's previously reserved right to use all spur trackage which crossed this land.

Tract "2-B" is the first and only portion of the original O'Brien tract that appears not to have access to a public road and would be entitled to a servitude of passage if it so desired. Tracts "1-A" and "2-A" owned by Waddell-Williams still had access to East Railroad Avenue on the northwest; the remaining O'Brien tract had access to Aycock Street across the O'Brien tract.

In 1916, the Legislature changed the law with respect to the servitude of passage with Act 197 of 1916, which amended Article 699 to expand the methods of access that, if available, would preclude an estate from having a right of passage across the property of its neighbors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
572 So. 2d 185, 1990 WL 180089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilfair-assoc-v-southern-pacific-transp-lactapp-1990.