William J. Berard, Et Ux. v. St. Martin Parish Government

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 2013
DocketCA-0013-0114
StatusUnknown

This text of William J. Berard, Et Ux. v. St. Martin Parish Government (William J. Berard, Et Ux. v. St. Martin Parish Government) 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
William J. Berard, Et Ux. v. St. Martin Parish Government, (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

13-114

WILLIAM J. BERARD AND JACQUELINE CASTLE BERARD

VERSUS

ST. MARTIN PARISH GOVERNMENT AND ACE AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY

**********

APPEAL FROM THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. MARTIN, NO. 77377 HONORABLE PAUL JOSEPH DEMAHY, DISTRICT JUDGE

JOHN E. CONERY JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and John E. Conery, Judges.

THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge, concurs in the result. PICKETT, J., concurs in the result and assigns written reasons.

REVERSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN PART. Jacques P. Soileau Soileau Law Office Post Office Box 344 Breaux Bridge, Louisiana 70517 (337) 332-4561 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLEES: William J. Berard Jacqueline Castille Berard

James L. Pate Sara Rodrigue Laborde & Neuner Post Office Drawer 52828 Lafayette, Louisiana 70505-2828 (337) 237-7000 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS: St. Martin Parish Government Ace American Insurance Company CONERY, Judge.

The trial court found in favor of William and Jacqueline Berard (the Berards)

and against the St. Martin Parish Government and its insurer, Ace American

Insurance Company (collectively, St. Martin Parish), and awarded treble damages,

costs, and attorney fees for the destruction of three live oaks and seven pecan trees

during the clearing of a drainage channel located in St. Martin Parish. For the

following reasons, we affirm the damage award of $37,790.00 for the loss of the

trees and damage to the Berards’ property, plus trial court costs of $1,300.00, but

we reverse the award of treble damages of $113,370.00 and attorney fees of

$35,000.00.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In September of 2010, St. Martin Parish performed maintenance and

drainage improvement work on a drainage channel located on Sosthene Guilbeau

Road near Breaux Bridge, Louisiana. The drainage channel at issue runs between

the property of the Berards and that of their neighbor to the west, Eta. S. Lalonde.

The boundary line between the two properties is in the center of the drainage

channel.1

The Berard and Lalonde properties were also separated by a tree line on the

eastern, or Berard, side of the boundary, which served as a fence to enclose and

shade the pasture for their horses. There was an old fence constructed of barbed

wire twisted around the tree line, as well as some cypress fence posts placed on the

property by Mr. Berard’s grandfather.

1 St. Martin Parish did not conduct a survey of the property prior to the work on the drainage channel. However, the Berards’ expert surveyor, Michael Breaux, testified that the boundary line between the two properties was, in fact, in the center of the drainage channel. The entirety of the Berards’ property in question is described in the St.

Martin Parish Assessor’s Parcel Reports, dated October 20, 2009, and consists of

parcels 04301A3934, 04301A4334, and 04301A4534. The October 20, 2009

Parcel Reports introduced in to the record at trial consist of properties that are

described as “LANDOWNER NO. 2 RESIDENTIAL,” “LANDOWNER NO. 4

VACANT,” and “LANDOWNER NO. 6 VACANT.” The residential lot is .616

acres, assessed at $5000.00. The two vacant lots are each approximately .516 acres,

assessed at $3,000.00 each, or $6,000.00 total. 2

Due to a problem with drainage back up on the adjoining Lalonde property,

Ms. Lalonde made a request to her Parish Councilman, James Hebert, to have St.

Martin Parish clear the debris, trees, and tree roots from the drainage channel in

order to facilitate proper drainage. Councilman Hebert contacted the St. Martin

Parish Department of Public Works (DPW) to put in the request, and Parish Road

Supervisor Ronnie Angelle conducted an inspection of the drainage channel.

After the inspection, Angelle concluded the drainage channel was silted up

with sedimentation and vegetative debris, including trees and tree roots. Based on

the condition of the drainage channel, he proposed a maintenance and

improvement project to improve the limits of the entire channel. DPW further

confirmed that St. Martin Parish had maintained the drainage channel in the past

for many years. Angelle testified at trial he personally worked on the drainage

channel for approximately twenty to thirty years as an employee of the DPW. This

prior maintenance thus granted the DPW the authority to perform the proposed

2 Defendants’ Exhibit C (Parcel Reports in globo, Pages 283, 285 and 287).

2 project, as St. Martin Parish had established a “maintenance servitude” on the

Berards’ property.3

On August 11, 2010, St. Martin Parish sent correspondence to all affected

landowners, including the Berards, notifying them of the impending work on the

drainage channel. The correspondence contained a legal description of the drainage

channel and a map highlighting the proposed maintenance. The letter to the

adjacent property owners also stated:

In an effort to improve drainage in this area, this project will include the removal of trees along the canal and the subsequent excavation of the canal. The trees will be burned and buried and excavated material will be spread onto the property as per our standard operating procedure.

(Emphasis added.)

The August 11, 2010 correspondence from St. Martin Parish also advised the

landowners to contact Nanette Theriot, Public Works Technician for St. Martin

Parish, if they had any questions or concerns, but a response was not necessary.

The letter was sent to the landowners as a courtesy to inform them of the plans for

maintenance of the drainage channel, which was “scheduled to begin within the

next twenty-one (21) to thirty-five (35) days weather permitting.” The

correspondence also notified the landowners that James Hebert, District 8 Council

Member, “played a major role in getting this job approved.”

The Berards did not contact Theriot at the DPW office, but instead visited

Councilman Hebert at his home to discuss the upcoming project. Mr. Berard is a

riverboat captain, and he was scheduled to be on the Ohio River during the planned

execution of the drainage channel project. The details of the Berards’ conversation

3 Defendants’ Exhibit C (in globo - St. Martin Parish Drainage Project, Page 284, which reflects a servitude based on “Virtue of Maintenance Channel”).

3 with Councilman Hebert were disputed at trial. Hebert denied that the Berards

voiced any concerns over the anticipated tree removal. Mr. Berard testified that he

was very concerned for his property, his horses and the trees, which included trees

planted at least seventy-two years ago by Mr. Berard’s grandfather and trees

planted some thirty or so years ago by Mr. Berard. He specifically testified that he

told the councilman he did not want their large trees to be removed. Councilman

Hebert testified that the Berards were concerned about the safety of their horses

during the work, but they did not reserve any trees or request that the trees not be

removed. It is undisputed that several large trees on or near the drainage channel

were removed during the project that began in September of 2010.

Following the removal of the trees on the Berards’ property, St. Martin

Parish cleaned up all debris, leveled the property, and put up a fence in order to

contain the Berards’ horses. At the Berards’ request, St. Martin Parish President

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William J. Berard, Et Ux. v. St. Martin Parish Government, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-j-berard-et-ux-v-st-martin-parish-government-lactapp-2013.