Court Opinion

ID: 1041243
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-09-19 05:30:16.610847+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:17:07.495445
License: Public Domain

Case: 12-30741        Document: 00512378071         Page: 1     Date Filed: 09/18/2013

          IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                   FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
                                                   Fifth Circuit

                                                                             FILED
                                                                        September 18, 2013
                                       No. 12-30741
                                                                            Lyle W. Cayce
                                                                                 Clerk
GULF AND MISSISSIPPI RIVER TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, LIMITED,

                                                   Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.

BP OIL PIPELINE COMPANY, formerly known as Sophio Pipeline Company,

                                                   Defendant-Appellee.

                    Appeal from the United States District Court
                        for the Middle District of Louisiana

Before ELROD and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges, and MARTINEZ, District
Judge.*
JENNIFER WALKER ELROD, Circuit Judge:
      This is an action for an accounting of a share of profits allegedly owed to
Gulf and Mississippi River Transportation Company (“G&M”) because BP Oil
Pipeline Company (“BP”) operated a pumping station on land the companies
co-owned. The express servitude that initially allowed for the pumping station
expired in 1980. Although negotiations to extend the servitude failed, BP
continued to operate the station until 2006. In 2010 G&M sued BP, asserting
that it is a co-owner of both the pumping station and the land on which it sits
and seeking an accounting for all revenue and profit that BP made from the
pumping station. BP moved for summary judgment, contending that the St.

      *
          District Judge of the Western District of Texas, sitting by designation.
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Julien Doctrine prescribed G&M’s claim and contesting G&M’s assertion of co-
ownership.    The district court granted summary judgment for BP.               We
REVERSE the district court’s judgment and REMAND for further proceedings.
                                        I.
      In 1957, G&M acquired a 20% undivided fee interest in a 5.19 acre tract
on Grand Terre Island (“the Tract”). A few years later, in 1960, Gulf Refining
Company (“Gulf”) obtained a right-of-way servitude (“the Servitude”) from all
owners of the Tract “for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating
thereon a booster pump[ing] station to be used in connection with the
transportation by pipe line of oil, gas, water, steam, or any material or substance
which can be conveyed through a pipe line.” The Servitude, by its own terms,
had a limited duration:
      The rights herein granted shall be for a term of 20 years from and
      after the date hereof, after which term, all of said rights shall cease
      and terminate. Grantee shall have a period of 90 days after the
      expiration of this grant in which to remove its property and
      equipment which may have been placed on [the Tract].
Important to this case, the Servitude did not specify what would happen to the
grantee’s “property and equipment” if it remained on the Tract after the
ninety-day removal period expired.
      The Servitude expired on June 24, 1980, but Gulf continued to operate the
pumping station. Three months later, Gulf filed a petition to expropriate a
perpetual servitude over the Tract. In its petition, Gulf alleged that it had
“undertaken to conduct negotiations in good faith to purchase a right-of-way and
servitude over the [Tract] . . . and to agree with [the Tract’s owners] as to the
term and price of said servitude, but to no avail.” Gulf’s petition named G&M
as a co-owner of the Tract and served G&M with the petition through its

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attorney. After that point, however, the expropriation suit essentially stopped
in its tracks: G&M did not file any responsive pleadings or discovery materials.
Gulf experienced trouble locating and serving other potential defendants, and
neither Gulf nor any later operators of the pumping station prosecuted the suit
to judgment.
       Six years later, in 1986, Gulf’s corporate successor, Chevron Pipeline
Company (“Chevron”), sold its interest in the pumping station and attendant
rights to Sohio Pipeline Company (“Sohio”), the corporate predecessor of BP.
The Purchase Agreement for this sale contained a covenant regarding the
“Expired Right-of-Way,” which stated:
       With respect to the right-of-way granted pursuant to [the Servitude]
       dated August 12, 1960 by Lloyd Wright, Executor, which has
       expired pursuant to its terms, [Chevron] shall acquire within twelve
       (12) months after Closing a fee interest in the servient estate, which
       was subject to [the Servitude], in a proportion sufficient to secure
       [Sohio/BP’s] right to continue the present Pipeline occupation . . . .
Chevron fulfilled its obligation under this provision in 1988 when it purchased
an undivided 1.5% fee interest in the Tract, which it quickly sold to BP, through
Sohio.1 BP operated the pumping station until 2006, when it sold its interests
in the pumping station and the Tract to Plains Pipeline, L.P. (“Plains”).2 From
the time the Servitude expired until the time that Plains purchased BP’s
interests, G&M did not receive a single payment for the use of the pumping
station.

       1
        In its answer to G&M’s complaint in this lawsuit, Chevron stated: “Chevron Pipeline
admits that the [expropriation] lawsuit was not prosecuted to a final resolution, but further
avers that this was the result of the acquisition by Chevron Pipeline of a fee interest in the
property from Texaco Producing on October 11, 1988.”
       2
           In 2009, G&M granted Plains a servitude to operate the pumping station.

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                                       II.
      In April 2010, G&M sued Chevron and BP asserting trespass and
accounting claims. G&M contended that (1) Chevron and BP committed a
continuing trespass by operating the pumping station from the time the
Servitude expired until Plains purchased BP’s interests; and (2) BP owed G&M
a share of revenue as a co-owner of the pumping station and the Tract.
      Chevron and BP initially moved for summary judgment on G&M’s trespass
claims. They contended that, because a co-owner cannot commit trespass, the
one-year prescription period for G&M’s trespass claims began to run in 1988
when Chevron (and shortly thereafter BP) acquired the 1.5% interest in the
Tract. G&M opposed the motions and moved for partial summary judgment,
asserting that it co-owned the pumping station with BP and was therefore
entitled to share in the “income, revenue, and/or profits” BP earned during the
period of co-ownership from November 1988 to June 2006 (the “Relevant
Period”).
      The district court granted summary judgment for Chevron and BP on
G&M’s trespass claims; it also denied G&M’s cross-motion. Because the trespass
claim was the only claim that G&M asserted against Chevron, the district court
entered a Rule 54(b) partial final judgment for Chevron. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
54(b). G&M appealed the Rule 54(b) judgment and our court affirmed in an
unpublished opinion. Gulf & Miss. River Transp. Co. v. Chevron Pipeline Co.,
451 F. App’x 372, 375–76 (5th Cir. 2011). In this appeal, G&M does not
challenge the district court’s ruling that its trespass claim against BP is
prescribed; therefore, the trespass claims are no longer at issue.

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      After we affirmed the district court’s ruling on the trespass claim against
Chevron, BP and G&M filed cross-motions for summary judgment on G&M’s
remaining claim for an accounting of all revenue and profit from the pumping
station during the Relevant Period. BP asserted that (1) the St. Julien Doctrine
barred G&M’s claim because it triggered a two-year prescriptive period, which
had lapsed; and (2) even if the St. Julien Doctrine did not apply, G&M was
merely a co-owner of the Tract, not the pumping station, so it had no claim for
an accounting of profits from the pumping station. G&M, on the other hand,
contended that (1) it became a co-owner of the pumping station when the station
remained on the Tract past the ninety-day removal period specified in the
Servitude; and (2) even if it is not a co-owner of the pumping station, it is
entitled to an accounting of the revenues from the pumping station because it
sits on the Tract in which G&M holds an undivided 20% fee interest.
      The district court determined that BP never abandoned the pumping
station, and therefore retains full ownership of the station. The district court
next concluded that G&M failed to establish any right to profits from the
pumping station under general principles of Louisiana co-ownership law.
Finally, the district court found that the St. Julien Doctrine applied to G&M’s
claim against BP, and that the claim was prescribed because BP “actually
occupied and used” the pumping station for more than two years before G&M
filed suit. Accordingly, it granted BP’s motion for summary judgment, denied
G&M’s motion, and entered a final judgment in favor of BP. G&M timely filed
a notice of appeal, invoking our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
                                      III.
      We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Jones v. Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A., 666 F.3d 955, 959 (5th Cir. 2012) (citation omitted). When, as here,
parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, we review each party’s

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position independently, “viewing the evidence and inferences in the light most
favorable to the nonmoving party.” Id. (citation and quotation omitted).
“[S]ummary judgment is proper if the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show
that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party
is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S.
317, 322 (1986). “Only disputes over facts that might affect the outcome of the
suit under the governing law will properly preclude the entry of summary
judgment.     Factual disputes that are irrelevant or unnecessary will not be
counted.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). No genuine
dispute exists “if the record, taken as a whole, could not lead a rational
trier-of-fact to find for the non-moving party.” Kariuki v. Tarango, 709 F.3d 495,
501 (5th Cir. 2013) (citing Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio
Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 597–98 (1986)).
                                           IV.
       This case turns on whether G&M is entitled to, and may still assert a
claim for, an accounting of the profits that BP derived from the pumping station
during the Relevant Period.3 Louisiana substantive law governs our resolution
of this issue. See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 78 (1938).
       “To determine Louisiana law . . . , this Court should first look to final
decisions of the Louisiana Supreme Court.” Howe ex rel. Howe v. Scottsdale Ins.
Co., 204 F.3d 624, 627 (5th Cir. 2000) (citation omitted). If the Louisiana
Supreme Court has not ruled on the issue at hand, “then this Court must make
an ‘Erie guess’ and ‘determine as best it can’ what the Louisiana Supreme Court
would decide.” Id. (quoting Krieser v. Hobbs, 166 F.3d 736, 738 (5th Cir. 1999)).

       3
        At oral argument G&M clarified that it seeks an accounting only for the period from
1988 to 2006 during which it was a co-owner of the Tract.

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In making an Erie guess, we rely on the following:
      (1) decisions of the [Louisiana] Supreme Court in analogous cases,
      (2) the rationales and analyses underlying [Louisiana] Supreme
      Court decisions on related issues, (3) dicta by the [Louisiana]
      Supreme Court, (4) lower state court decisions, (5) the general rule
      on the question, (6) the rulings of courts of other states to which
      [Louisiana] courts look when formulating substantive law and (7)
      other available sources, such as treatises and legal commentaries.
Am. Int’l Specialty Lines Ins. Co. v. Rentech Steel, L.L.C., 620 F.3d 558, 564 (5th
Cir. 2010) (quoting Hodges v. Mack Trucks, Inc., 474 F.3d 188, 199 (5th Cir.
2006)). These principles form the backdrop for our analysis.
      G&M advances two co-ownership-based theories for recovery: First, it
claims that the two companies operated the pumping station as co-owners of the
Tract because G&M owned an undivided interest in the Tract before BP acquired
an interest in the Tract. Alternatively, G&M contends that it became “a
co-owner with BP of the pumping station equipment and structures” after the
ninety-day removal period expired. In response, BP asserts that G&M’s claim
is prescribed because G&M sued four years after BP sold the pumping station
and the St. Julien Doctrine—with its two-year limitations period—applies. BP
further contends that even if G&M’s claim is not prescribed, it fails on the merits
because G&M never co-owned the pumping station with BP and, therefore, is not
entitled to an accounting for any profits BP obtained in connection with the
pumping station. If applicable, BP’s St. Julien-based prescription argument
could be dispositive. We begin with that issue.
                                        A.
      BP asserts that a St. Julien servitude exists and prescribed G&M’s claim.
The district court agreed with BP’s position but, for the reasons below, we do not.
The St. Julien Doctrine originated as a “jurisprudentially-recognized theory
involving the creation of a servitude by ‘unopposed use and occupancy’ by a

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corporation with the power of expropriation.” Eagle Pipe & Supply, Inc. v.
Amerada Hess Corp., 79 So. 3d 246, 267 n.54 (La. 2011); see Concha Chem.
Pipeline v. Schwing, 835 So. 2d 543, 547 (La. App. 1st Cir. 2002) (describing the
St. Julien Doctrine as a “jurisprudential rule . . . allowing [for] the creation of
servitudes by estoppel”). The doctrine has its roots in the common law and bears
the name of the case that established it. St. Julien v. Morgan La. & Tex. R.R.
Co., 35 La. Ann. 924 (La. 1883); see generally Sarah Savoia Vance, Note,
Property–Expropriation– Demise and Resurrection of the St. Julien Doctrine, 51
Tul. L. Rev. 375, 375–76 (1977). In that case, the Louisiana Supreme Court held
that if a landowner “permit[s] the use and occupancy of his land and the
construction of a quasi public work thereon without resistence or even
complaint,” then “[c]onsiderations of public policy . . . require that in such case
the owner shall not be permitted to reclaim his property free from the servitude
he has permitted to be imposed upon it, but shall be restricted to his right of
compensation.” Id. at 925–26.
       Louisiana courts have applied the St. Julien Doctrine for nearly a century.
Since 1976, however, the St. Julien Doctrine has existed solely as a creature of
statute. That year, the Louisiana Supreme Court prospectively overruled St.
Julien and its progeny, see Lake, Inc. v. La. Power & Light Co., 330 So. 2d 914,
918 (La. 1976), prompting the Louisiana legislature to codify the doctrine a few
months later. See La. R.S. § 19:14 (2012).4
       Section 19:14 states, in relevant part:

       4
         We focus exclusively on whether BP has a St. Julien servitude under section 19:14.
BP emphasizes in its briefing that it is not alleging the existence of a St. Julien servitude prior
to the expiration of the Servitude in 1980; to the contrary, BP “assert[s] that [it] meets all of
the requisites to establish a ‘taking’ under the St. Julien Doctrine.” Because BP (more
specifically BP’s predecessor, Sohio) had no connection with the pumping station until a
decade after the Louisiana Supreme Court overruled St. Julien, section 19:14 governs this
case.

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       In the case where any expropriating authority referred to in R.S.
       19:2, other than the state or its political corporations or
       subdivisions, has actually, in good faith believing it had the
       authority to do so, taken possession of privately owned immovable
       property of another and constructed facilities upon, under, or over
       such property with the consent or acquiescence of the owner of the
       property, it shall be presumed that the owner of the property has
       waived his right to receive just compensation prior to the taking,
       and he shall be entitled only to bring an action for judicial
       determination of whether the taking was for a public and necessary
       purpose and for just compensation to be determined in accordance
       with R.S. 19:9, as of the time of the taking of the property, or right
       or interest therein, and such action shall proceed as nearly as may
       be as if the expropriating authority had filed a petition for
       expropriation as provided for in R.S. 19:2.1.
Id. § 19:14(B). The procedural provisions in section 19:2.1, which section 19:14
incorporates, require that “[a]ll claims for . . . damages to the owner caused by
the expropriation of property . . . shall be barred by the prescription of two years
commencing on the date on which the property was actually occupied and used
for the purposes of the expropriation.”5 La. R.S. § 19:2.1(B); see, e.g., Sellers v.
St. Charles Parish, 655 So. 2d 367, 371 (La. App. 5th Cir. 1995), writ denied, 657
So. 2d 1034 (holding that the St. Julien Doctrine applied and concluding that the
two-year prescriptive period in section 19:2.1(B) prescribed the plaintiffs’ claims
for just compensation).
       Although neither the parties nor the district court raised the issue, we
note that there is room to question whether the St. Julien Doctrine would even
apply to a claim for an accounting of profits or revenues, such as G&M requests
here. Louisiana courts have applied section 19:14 in cases where landowners

       5
          Section 19:14 also references section 19:2, which lists the types of corporate entities
that have expropriation powers, including corporations that qualify as “common carrier
pipelines as set forth in R.S. 45:251.” La. R.S. § 19:2(8). Section 45:251, in turn, specifies that
a common carrier “includes all persons engaged in the transportation of petroleum as public
utilities and common carriers for hire . . . .” La. R.S. § 45:251(1).

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seek an injunction to end occupation of their property or damages for a taking
or trespass. See, e.g., Crooks v. Placid Refining Co., 903 So. 2d 1154,1166 (La.
App. 3d Cir. 2005), writ denied, 920 So. 2d 242 (La. 2006); Campbell v. La.
Intrastate Gas Corp., 528 So. 2d 626, 629 (La. App. 2d Cir. 1988); Sigue v. Tex.
Gas Trans. Corp., 154 So. 2d 800, 801–03 (La. App. 3d Cir. 1963), writ ref’d, 244
La. 1025. The parties have not identified, nor have we found, a Louisiana
decision that has applied section 19:14 where a plaintiff seeks an accounting for
profits allegedly owed to it. Because we conclude that BP cannot satisfy the
elements for a St. Julien servitude, we assume, arguendo, that the St. Julien
Doctrine is applicable.
       The Louisiana Supreme Court has yet to meaningfully construe section
19:14. After reviewing decisions by Louisiana’s intermediate appellate courts,
the district court set out the elements under the statute as follows:
       (1) The appropriating authority has been granted powers of
       expropriation;
       (2) The appropriating authority constructs a facility in the public
       interest;
       (3) The appropriating body possesses the property and constructs
       the facility with a good faith belief in its authority to do so;6 and
       (4) The landowner consents or acquiesces in the taking.

       6
         Although section 19:14(B) explicitly requires that the expropriating authority act “in
good faith,” Louisiana appellate courts have repeatedly omitted any reference to the good faith
requirement. See, e.g., Crooks, 903 So. 2d at 1161 (stating the elements as: “(1) A public or
quasi public body with powers of expropriation; (2) the landowner’s consent or acquiescence;
and (3) construction of a facility in the public interest.”); Cancienne v. Lafourche Parish Police
Jury, 423 So. 2d 662, 670 (La. App. 1st Cir. 1982) (same). Louisiana case law is likewise
unsettled as to the point in time the court should consider when assessing whether or not a
party acted in good faith. Compare Campbell, 528 So. 2d at 629 (focusing on the period of
pipeline use, rather than defendant’s conduct at the time the pipeline was originally installed),
with Acadian Gas Pipeline Sys. v. Bourgeois, 890 So. 2d 634, 641–42 (La. App. 5th Cir. 2004)
(distinguishing bad faith at the time the pipeline was built from actions of a subsequent
owner). Out of respect for our federal system, this court recognizes that its duty here is to
faithfully apply Louisiana’s interpretation of its own law. Luckily, we need not risk
misconstruing this unsettled issue of Louisiana law today. We do not reach the issue of
whether BP did show, or needed to show, good faith because we conclude that the fourth
element of the St. Julien Doctrine is not present here.

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G&M asserts that BP does not meet the second,7 third, and fourth elements.
With respect to the fourth element, we agree.
       An expropriating authority claiming a St. Julien servitude must show the
landowner’s consent or acquiescence with actual knowledge of an encroaching
structure. See Holt v. City of Bossier City, 384 So. 2d 495, 498 (La. App. 2d Cir.
1980) (quoting Gumbel v. New Orleans Term. Co., 173 So. 518, 520 (La. 1937),
overruled by Lake, 330 So. 2d at 918); see also Cancienne, 423 So. 2d at 672.
“[P]roof of a servitude will certainly not require express consent, but may
necessitate more than just the mere absence of complaints by the original
landowners.” Lonatro v. Orleans Levee Dist., 809 F. Supp. 2d 512, 520 (E.D. La.
2011). Acquiescence requires an act “recognizing the transaction as existing;
and intended, to some extent at least, to carry it into effect and to obtain or claim
the benefits resulting therefrom.” Cancienne, 423 So. 2d at 672. “[T]he issue of
what is necessary to constitute consent or acquiescence is a fact-sensitive one.”
Lonatro, 809 F. Supp. 2d at 520.
       Prior to 1980, BP and its predecessors operated the pumping station under
the 20-year fixed-term Servitude, which expressly authorized that use.8 Only

       7
        G&M asserts that BP cannot satisfy the second element because it did not construct
the pumping station. This argument would come as a surprise to the district court, which
stated that the second element was “undisputed.” The district court’s statement was well-
founded: G&M did not advance any argument in the district court regarding “construction” of
the pumping station. We therefore conclude that G&M waived its argument regarding the
second element of the St. Julien Doctrine. See Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Laguarta, 939 F.2d
1231, 1240 (5th Cir. 1991).
       8
         This fixed-term makes the Servitude here distinct from the perpetual servitudes found
in many of the cases cited by BP. By its own terms, the Servitude would come to an end after
20 years. Essentially, this creates two servitudes: the 20-year fixed-term Servitude from 1960
to 1980, and a second unauthorized “servitude” that began after the expiration of the first
Servitude and exists only if BP can satisfy the elements of the St. Julien Doctrine. As a result,
G&M’s consent to the construction and use of the pumping station from 1960 to 1980 is
irrelevant to the question of whether or not it consented to the second servitude for purposes
of the St. Julien Doctrine.

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after the Servitude expired did BP’s actions become adverse to G&M, and only
after they became adverse could the St. Julien Doctrine apply. We therefore
focus our inquiry exclusively on whether G&M ever consented or acquiesced to
use of the pumping station following the expiration of the Servitude in 1980.
        A common feature in situations where Louisiana courts have found
consent or acquiescence by the landowner is some affirmative act, however
small, acknowledging and allowing the servitude. For instance, in Campbell the
landowner received royalty payments for the use of the pipeline running beneath
his land, and the receipt of this benefit acted as his consent or acquiescence. 528
So. 2d at 627. In contrast, the record here indicates that G&M did not take any
actions that could be construed as consent or acquiescence.           G&M never
consented to any agreement extending the servitude past its expiration date.
Indeed, Gulf’s expropriation petition indicates just the opposite: G&M refused
to grant a new servitude even after Gulf had “undertaken to conduct
negotiations” regarding the “term and price” for a new servitude. G&M never
reached an agreement giving Gulf or anyone else a servitude to operate the
pumping station during the Relevant Period, as evidenced by that same
unresolved expropriation action. In addition, G&M never accepted payments
from BP for the use of the servitude. BP’s reliance on Campbell is therefore
misplaced: unlike the landowner in Campbell, G&M has not received a benefit
that could be fairly characterized as consent or acquiescence to the servitude.
Id.
        Furthermore, we cannot construe G&M’s inaction to be evidence of consent
or acquiescence. See Lonatro, 809 F. Supp. 2d at 521 (“Indeed, there are
Louisiana cases showing that silence is not deemed acquiescence.”). In Lonatro,
the Orleans Levee District claimed to have a St. Julien servitude over portions
of the plaintiffs’ land abutting a levee. Id. at 513–14. The Lonatro court found

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that “the bare existence of the Levee, without the introduction of any evidence,
is insufficient to demonstrate that the previous landowners acquiesced in the
creation of a St. Julien servitude.” Id. at 521. Here, the bare existence of the
pumping station does not demonstrate G&M’s consent or acquiescence to a
servitude. Nor can G&M’s inaction in the expropriation action serve as the basis
for finding this final element. G&M was not required to make an appearance in
the action, and the suit was subsequently abandoned before reaching a
judgment.9 We therefore conclude that the St. Julien Doctrine does not apply in
this case.
                                              B.
      Because G&M’s claim is not prescribed by the St. Julien Doctrine, we next
consider whether G&M is entitled to an accounting of BP’s profits from the
pumping station during the Relevant Period. For essentially the same reasons
stated by the district court, we agree that G&M never acquired an ownership
interest in the pumping station. As a result, the resolution of this issue turns
on whether those profits were the “civil fruits” of the co-owned Tract.
      Under Louisiana law, “[f]ruits are things that are produced by or derived
from another thing without diminution of its substance.” La. Civ. Code art. 551
(2012). “There are two kinds of fruits; natural fruits and civil fruits.” Id. The
statute defines “civil fruits,” as “revenues derived from a thing by operation of
law or by reason of a juridical act, such as rentals, interest, and certain
corporate distributions.” Id. Unlike natural fruits, “[c]ivil fruits do not derive
from the body of the principal thing; they result from legal relations having as
their object the principal thing.” See A.N. Yiannopoulos, 2 La. Civ. L. Treatise,
Property § 40 n.2 (4th ed. 2001).

      9
        At oral argument both parties agreed that the suit has been abandoned under
Louisiana law, and that the proceeding has no legal effect.

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       In Juneau v. Laborde, the Louisiana Supreme Court explained that when
a co-owner in possession derives rents or revenues from his exploitation of co-
owned property, “he must account to his co-owner[s] [out of possession] for all
rents or revenues he has received because, in obtaining these fruits, he acts not
only for himself but also as the agent of his co-owner for the latter’s just
proportion.” 82 So. 2d 693, 695 (La. 1955). Relying on Juneau, G&M contends
that BP must account to out-of-possession co-owners of the Tract (including
G&M) for the profits it received from that exploitation. See id; see also Goodman
v. Lee, 78 F.3d 1007, 1012 (5th Cir. 1996) (“[A] co-owner has a right of action
against another co-owner to recover his or her share of the fruits or products of
the property held in common.” (footnote omitted)); Knoll v. Delta Dev. Co., 218
So. 2d 109, 113 (La. App. 3d Cir. 1969), writ ref’d, 220 So. 2d 460 (holding that
co-owners out of possession were “entitled to recover a proportionate part of the
revenues which [a co-owner in possession] received from [sales of a cotton crop
that the in-possession co-owner produced]”).
       G&M argues that the Tract was necessary for BP to operate the pumping
station, and that the profits of the pumping station are therefore the “civil fruit”
of BP’s exploitation of the Tract.10 G&M reasons that the Tract served as the
location for both the pumping station and the pipeline and that this particular
location was crucial to BP’s ability to derive profits from either. To support this
argument, G&M also notes that the pumping station was actually “a collection
of things, all of which are joined to the land” and asserts that the Tract was
therefore “essential” to the pumping station and the profits it produced.

       10
          G&M does not seek compensation for the value of the servitude that BP may have
“taken” during the period in which it operated the pumping station on the Tract, and it does
not challenge the district court’s prior ruling that its trespass claim is barred. Instead, G&M
seeks “an accounting from BP . . . for all revenue and profit made by BP from its use of the
[Tract] by BP’s operation of the pumping station.”

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    Case: 12-30741      Document: 00512378071       Page: 15   Date Filed: 09/18/2013

                                    No. 12-30741
         In contrast, BP contends that the profits are the fruit of the pumping
station and BP’s business practices, rather than the Tract. BP argues that
Juneau, Knoll, and Goodman are all distinguishable because the fruits in those
cases (crops and royalties) were “derived directly” from the “thing” that was co-
owned, while the “fruits” here (profits and revenue) were derived directly from
the pumping station, which belongs solely to BP. BP’s argument suggests that
G&M cannot claim the profits as civil fruits if they were derived only indirectly
from the co-owned Tract. We have found nothing to suggest that Louisiana
draws such a distinction.
         The district court determined that “the pumping station is not the fruit of
the land on which it sits” and concluded that “G&M cannot reap the fruits and
revenues from something it does not co-own.” In reaching this conclusion, the
district court did not specify whether it was referring to natural fruits, civil
fruits, or both. We agree that the pumping station itself is not the natural fruit
of the Tract. But unlike natural fruits, which are “produced by the earth or by
animals,” civil fruits are “revenues derived from a thing by operation of law or
by reason of a juridical act . . . .” 2 La. Civ. L. Treatise, Property § 40. Here, the
revenues and profits that BP derived from operating the pumping station could
be characterized as the civil fruits of the pumping station, the co-owned Tract,
or both. Because the district court did not clarify this issue, we think it prudent
to allow it to resolve this question in the first instance. Accordingly, we reverse
and remand to the district court to further consider whether the profits are civil
fruits of the Tract and, if so, whether G&M is therefore entitled to an accounting.
                                               V.
         For the reasons stated above, we REVERSE and REMAND to the district
court.

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