Willow Chute Farms, L.L.C. v. Roos

184 So. 3d 266, 2016 WL 154882
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 2016
DocketNos. 50,243-CA, 50,244-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 184 So. 3d 266 (Willow Chute Farms, L.L.C. v. Roos) 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
Willow Chute Farms, L.L.C. v. Roos, 184 So. 3d 266, 2016 WL 154882 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinions

CALLOWAY, J., Pro Tempore.

|,Willow Chute Farms, LLC (“Willow Chute”), filed separate actions to quiet title on property in Bossier Parish and to cancel a servitude from the public records. The two cases were consolidated for trial. The trial court rendered a judgment setting the boundary between Willow Chute’s property and property owned by George and Susan McLemore (“the MeLemores”) along an old fence line and, where the fence line is not visible, in accordance with a 1984 act of exchange that established the servitude. The judgment held the servitude enforceable and rejected Willow Chute’s claim that it had prescribed due to nonuse. Willlow Chute filed a suspensive appeal. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and remand with instructions.

FACTS

This case arises out of a servitude and boundary dispute between adjacent landowners, Willow Chute and the MeLemores. Willow Chute is the owner of an approximate 40.19-acre tract of land in Bossier Parish, which adjoins the MeLemores’ approximate 104-acre tract of land. The MeLemores’ tract is U-shaped and wraps around Willow Chute’s eastern boundary, northern boundary, and a small part of its western boundary.

In 1984, Fred E. Wemple, Jr., Willow Chute’s predecessor in title, and Armand W. Roos, Jr., Henry K. Roos, and Floyd D. Roos, the MeLemores’ predecessors in title, executed an agreement fixing the boundary between the properties at issue. On that same date, an act of exchange between Armand W. Roos, Jr., and the Wemples was recorded in the conveyance records of Bossier Parish whereby Roos conveyed to the | ¡Wemples a .31-acre triangular tract located near the southeast corner of the Willow Chute property. As it relates to this .31-acre tract, the act of exchange provided that “Armand W. Roos, Jr., hereby reserves unto himself, his heirs, and/or assigns a right of way and/or servitude of passage for purposes of ingress and egress across the [.31-acre triangular tract of land].” In exchange, the Wemples granted Armand W. Roos, Jr., a right of way and/or servitude of passage for purposes of ingress and egress across [269]*269the property south of the Roos land. The servitude, as set forth in the act of exchange, is a gravel road that runs northwesterly from Wemple Road to the Willow Chute property. The road is approximately a half mile long, is owned by Willow Chute, and provides access to the southern portion of the Roos (now McLemore) property.

In November 2012, the McLemores acquired their property by cash sale deed from Roos Properties, L.L.C., Henry Roos Properties, L.L.C., and Floyd Roos Properties, L.L.C. (“the Roos sellers”). The cash sale deed conveyed the property “together with all and singular the rights of way, servitudes, easements, appurtenances and hereditaments pertaining thereto, ... unto Buyer and Buyer’s heirs, successors and assigns forever.” It also provided that “[t]he sale is made subject to any servitudes, rights of way, mineral leases and any other instruments or encumbrances affecting the Property.”

After the McLemores’ acquisition, Willow Chute filed two lawsuits. The first suit, filed on December 11, 2012, against various Roos defendants and any heirs/assigns of Armand W. Roos, Jr., sought to cancel the ^servitude granted in the 1984 act of exchange. Willow Chute alleged that the servitude had not been used in over ten years and was thus prescribed. In the second suit, filed against the McLe-mores on February 4, 2013, Willow Chute sought to set the boundary between their respective tracts along an old fence line. Willow Chute alleged that the old fence separated the two tracts for longer than 30. years and that Willow Chute and its ancestors in title maintained continuous, uninterrupted, peaceful, and public possession up to the fence line for more than 30 years. The McLemores filed a reconven-tional demand to fix the boundary between their property and Willow Chute’s property. The two suits were consolidated for trial.

On September 5, 2014, Willow Chute filed a motion for summary judgment contending that there was no genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the servitude had prescribed due to nonuse. Out of an abundance of caution and in response to the suit to cancel the.servitude, the Roos sellers executed a quitclaim deed in October 2014 conveying to the McLemores the servitude/right of use reserved in the act of exchange. The trial court ultimately denied Willow Chute’s motion for summary judgment.

The trial of the consolidated cases took place on December 12, 2014. After taking the. matter under advisement, the trial court rendered a written opinion and judgment on January 12, 2015. The trial court fixed the boundary along the old fence line where it remains visible. Where the fence line is no longer visible, the trial court fixed the boundary in accordance with the 1984 act of exchange, including the servitude reserved in that act. |4The trial court found that the plain language of the act of exchange indicates a transfer of all interest in the servitude to the heirs and assigns of Armand W. Roos, Jr. Finally, the trial court found that the servitude had not prescribed.

On January 15, 2015, Willow Chute filed a suspensive appeal motion. After the trial court issued an amended judgment on January 30, 2015, declaring that the servitude remained in full force and effect, Willow Chute amended its motion to appeal that as well.

On appeal, Willow Chute asserts legal error in .the trial court’s finding that the servitude reserved in the 1984 act of exchange was transferred to the McLemores, error in finding that the servitude has not prescribed for nonuse,' and error in setting the boundary according to the visible fence [270]*270line and the 1984 act of exchange instead of in accordance with the 1984 boundary agreement.

DISCUSSION

Servitude

Willow Chute first argues that the trial court properly determined that the servitude was á personal, rather than predial servitude, but that it made a legal error in finding that the servitude was transferred to the McLemores by either the 2012 cash sale or the subsequent quitclaim deed. Our review shows no error of law by the trial court.

We note that whether the servitude should be classified as personal or predial was not an issue specifically argued before the trial court. In its suit to cancel the servitude, Willow Chute referred to it as a personal servitude. |fiThe record does not show that the McLemores or Roos defendants disputed this classification in the trial court proceedings. Rather, the disputed issues were whether the personal servitude was transferred by the cash sale deed and whether it had prescribed due to nonuse. ' .

Citing Sustainable Forests, L.L.C. v. Harrison, 37,152 (La.App.2d Cir.5/22/03), 846 So.2d 1283, Willow Chute asserts,that the servitude was not transferred to the McLemores because the cash sale deed neither referred to the servitude nor described the land burdened by it. In that case, the plaintiff, Sustainable Forests, filed suit to prevent the defendants from interfering with its use of a right of way across their rural land. The servitude at issue was created by a 1963 road grant in favor of the plaintiffs predecessor-in-title, International Paper (“IP”), by the defendants’ predecessor-in-title. The plaintiff contended that the 1998 deed by which IP conveyed the land to it also conveyed the servitude. Filing an exception of no right of action, the defendants argued that the right of way was not conveyed because the deed did not specifically describe it.

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 3d 266, 2016 WL 154882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willow-chute-farms-llc-v-roos-lactapp-2016.