Court Opinion

ID: 6346255
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-02 20:09:51.492284+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:17:30.494761
License: Public Domain

STATE OF LOUISIANA

                             COURT OF APPEAL

                                 FIRST CIRCUIT

                           NUMBER 2021 CA 1218

                                  JOHN HENRY

                                       VERSUS

                          LOUIS B. MCKINNEY, JR.

                                           Judgment Rendered:
                                                                    JUN 0 2 2022

                                 Appealed from the
                       Twenty -First Judicial District Court
                       In and for the Parish of Livingston
                                 State of Louisiana
                              Suit Number 169453

                      Honorable Erika W. Sledge, Presiding

Stephen M. Stafford                          Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant
Walker, LA                                   John Henry

Cheryl K. Sibley                             Counsel for Defendant/ Appellee
Hammond, LA                                  Louis B. McKinney, Jr.

             BEFORE: GUIDRY, HOLDRIDGE, AND CHUTZ, JJ.

                       Concurs    IA     fakkf -
GUIDRY, J.

       In this petitory action, plaintiff, John Henry, appeals a trial court judgment

dismissing his Petition for Trespass, Restoration of Possession, Injunctive Relief,

Temporary Restraining Order, and Damages with prejudice and granting the petitory

action filed by defendant, recognizing Louis B. McKinney, Jr. as the owner of all

property he purchased from Eileen Bates McCarroll. For the reasons that follow, we

affirm.

                      FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       On February 10, 2021, Henry filed a Petition for Injunctive Relief and

Temporary Restraining Order, naming McKinney as defendant. According to the

allegations of the petition, Henry is the owner of certain immovable property in

Livingston Parish, namely lots numbers 10, 11, 12, and 13 in Square 3 in Tickfaw

Broadmoor Extension Subdivision.       Henry acquired his ownership interest in the

described property by credit deed dated June          18,   1981,   and has maintained

ownership and possession of said property since that time. According to Henry, a

road, referred to as Tickfaw Lane, borders one side of his property, which he uses to

access his lots.   McKinney owns lots 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 of Square 3, bordering lot 10

owned by Henry. Henry alleged that McKinney had moved material, including dirt

and machinery, into Tickfaw Lane, thereby preventing Henry from having access to

any and all of his lots along the same road. Henry asserted that Tickfaw Lane is a

public road and pursuant to La. C. C. art. 457, the public, including Henry, has a right

to use it.   Henry sought an injunction restraining McKinney from interfering with

Henry' s right to secure access to his property by blocking, constructing on or in any

way destroying Tickfaw Lane and sought issuance of a temporary restraining order.

The trial court thereafter issued a temporary restraining order on February 19, 2021.

       Henry subsequently filed a Supplemental and Amended Petition for Trespass,

Restoration of Possession,     Injunctive Relief, Temporary Restraining Order and

                                           2
Damages asserting that he was in possession of a 40 -foot servitude known as

Tickfaw Lane, so designated by the developers of Tickfaw' s Broadmoor Extension

and located on the plat map recorded in the conveyance records in Livingston Parish.

Henry alleged that he had been in possession of the servitude in excess of one year

and pursuant to La. C. C.     art.    639, he has a right of use of Tickfaw Lane.

Alternatively, he alleged that Tickfaw Lane is a public road and, as a member of the

public, he has a right to freely use it. Henry sought judgment recognizing his right

to possession of the servitude and injunctive relief.

      McKinney filed a motion to dissolve temporary restraining order, asserting

that he is not obstructing a public right of way, as the Village of Killian abandoned

the alleged road in 2002. McKinney further stated that an October 2, 2020 judgment,

recorded in the conveyance records, recognized private ownership of a portion of

the former right of way.       Therefore,      McKinney asserted that the temporary

restraining order was improperly issued and should be quashed.

      A hearing on McKinney' s motion to dissolve temporary restraining order was

set for March 30, 2021.    However, on that date the trial court converted the matter

to a petitory action and set the matter for bench trial on May 21,      2021.    The trial

court also issued a preliminary injunction.

      Thereafter, on April 21, 2021, McKinney filed exceptions, an answer and a

reconventional   demand.      In     his   reconventional   demand,   McKinney    alleged

ownership of lots 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 of Block 3 of Tickfaw' s Broadmoor Extension as

well as a parcel of ground measuring 40 feet by 300 feet, known as Tickfaw Lane,

running along the entirety of the west side of lots 5, 6,       7, 8, and 9 of Square 3.

McKinney alleged that he purchased the aforementioned property from Eileen

McCarroll on October 14, 2020, via cash deed recorded in the Livingston Parish

conveyance records on October 16, 2020, and that McCarroll' s ownership of all the

above- described property was confirmed via declaratory judgment rendered on

                                               3
October 2, 2020, and recorded that same date.                As such, McKinney requested that

the court recognize his ownership of the totality of the above-described property,

have his possession restored and the preliminary injunction dissolved, and award

damages.

        Following a trial held on May 21, 2021, the trial court signed a judgment on

June 21,      2021,    dismissing Henry' s petition with prejudice and dissolving the

preliminary injunction enjoining McKinney from constructing upon his property,

granting McKinney' s petitory action, and recognizing McKinney as the owner of all

of the property he purchased from McCarroll as shown on the cash deed recorded in

the conveyance records, which specifically includes the portion of Tickfaw Lane that

was disputed.         Henry now appeals from the portion of the trial court' s judgment

dismissing his Petition for Trespass, Restoration of Possession, Injunctive Relief,

Temporary Restraining Order, and Damages. l

                                           DISCUSSION

        A predial servitude is a charge on a servient estate for the benefit of the

dominant estate.        La. C. C. art. 646. Predial servitudes are either apparent or non -

apparent,      Apparent servitudes are those perceivable by exterior signs, works, or

constructions, such as a roadway. La. C. C. art. 707.                Apparent servitudes may be

acquired by title, destination of the owner, or acquisitive prescription.                 La. C. C. art.

1 Henry assigned as error the trial court' s dismissal of his Petition for Trespass, Restoration of
Possession, Injunctive Relief, Temporary Restraining Order, and Damages as well as the trial
court' s granting of McKinney' s petitory action by not adhering to La. C. C. art. 639 and La. C. C. P.
art. 3663. However, Henry did not brief any issues related to McKinney' s petitory action and in
fact stated "[ w]hether appellee actually purchased Tickfaw Lane from his predecessor in title, and
is the owner of Tickfaw Lane, is irrelevant." Accordingly, we consider the portion of Henry' s
assignment of error related to the granting of McKinney' s petitory action to be abandoned on
appeal and limit our review to whether the trial court erred in dismissing Henry' s petition.

2 Henry asserted in the trial court that, pursuant to La. C. C. art. 639, he had a right of use of Tickfaw
Lane as a servitude previously created that allows him to access his lots along Tickfaw Lane.
However, during the trial, Henry presented evidence, without objection, attempting to establish
that Henry had a predial servitude of passage in accordance with La. C. C. art. 740. On appeal,
Henry solely relies on La. C. C. art. 740 in asserting that the trial court erred in dismissing his
petition because he established a predial servitude. As such, we limit our consideration of Henry' s
assignment of error to the issue of whether Henry established the existence of a predial servitude
of passage.

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740.   A servitude of passage is the right for the benefit of the dominant estate

whereby persons, animals, utilities, or vehicles are permitted to pass through the

servient estate.   La. C. C. art. 705. Whether an apparent servitude has been created

is a factual determination reviewed under the manifest -error, clearly wrong standard

of review.    See Naramore v. Aikman, 17- 1621,          17- 1622, p. 8 ( La. App.   1st Cir.

6/ 4/ 18), 252 So. 3d 935, 940.

       A servitude acquired by title is an alienation of part of immovable property

and as such, the laws governing alienation of immovables apply.          La. C. C. art. 708.

For a servitude to be created by title, the instrument must be express as to the nature

and extent of the servitude.       Because servitudes are so disfavored, an ambiguous

agreement to establish a servitude is unenforceable. Palomeque v. Prudhomme, 95-

0725, p. 8 ( La. 11/ 27/ 95),   664 So. 2d 88, 93- 94. In the instant case, it is undisputed

that neither the deed by which Henry acquired lots 10, 11, 12, and 13 in Square 3 in

Tickfaw Broadmoor Extension Subdivision nor the map attached to the deed have

sufficient language to create a predial servitude by title of Tickfaw Lane. Henry,

however, asserts that he acquired a servitude by title because the recording of the

1974 plat map created a predial servitude by implied dedication of Tickfaw Lane.

       Louisiana courts have recognized four modes of dedication: formal, statutory,

implied, and tacit. Templeton v. Jarreau, 18- 0240, P. 7 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 9/ 24/ 18),

259 So. 3d 356, 361.     Statutory dedication occurs when a landowner subdivides real

estate in accordance with the requirements of La. R.S. 33: 5051. In order to effect a

statutory dedication, complete and detailed compliance with the statute is not

required; substantial compliance will suffice.       Garrett v. Pioneer Production Corp.,

390 So. 2d 851, 856 ( La. 1980). Louisiana Revised Statute 33: 5051 provides for the

subdivision of real estate into squares or lots with named streets and for the

dedication to public use of all streets, alleys, and public squares on the map.            A

statutory dedication vests ownership in the public unless the subdivider reserves

                                               5
ownership of streets and public places and grants the public only a servitude of use.

St. Charles Parish School Board v. P &        L Investment Corporation, 95- 2571, p. 5 ( La.

5/ 21/ 96), 674 So. 2d 218, 222.

       Implied dedication, however, is a common law doctrine recognized by the

courts of this state.      The essential feature of implied dedication is an absence of

requisite   formalities.      Because     implied       dedication   lacks the   formalities   and

safeguards of the other modes of dedication, the two indispensable elements of

implied dedication required by the courts are "           a plain and positive intention to give

and one equally plain to accept." Templeton, 18- 0240 at pp. 7- 8, 259 So. 3d at 361.

Implied dedication gives rise to a servitude of public use and does not transfer

ownership.    Templeton, 18- 0240 at p. 8, 259 So. 3d at 362.

       In the instant case, the trial court specifically found that the 1974 plat map

was in substantial compliance with La. R.S. 33: 5051, resulting in the statutory

dedication of any roads,       streets,   alleys,   or cul- de- sacs to the Village of Killian.

Henry does not dispute on appeal the trial court' s finding that these requisite

formalities were present. Therefore, to the extent that the trial court found there was

a statutory dedication, which issue was not appealed, we find Henry' s argument that

he had a servitude of Tickfaw Lane by implied dedication to be without merit.

Furthermore, while the public has a servitude of use on land that is subject to

statutory dedication, the trial court found that the Village of Killian revoked the

statutory dedication pursuant to La. R.S. 48: 701 in 2002. Accordingly, to the extent

that Henry may have had a servitude of use pursuant to the statutory dedication in

1974, that servitude was extinguished when the Village of Killian revoked the

dedication in 2002.3

       Henry next asserts that he acquired a servitude of Tickfaw Lane by destination

3 We note that Henry did not assign as error the trial court' s finding that the Village of Killian
revoked the dedication in 2002. Accordingly, we do not address the correctness of the trial court' s
finding on this issue on appeal.
                                                    L
of the owner. Louisiana Civil Code article 741 provides:

      Destination of the owner is a relationship established between two
      estates owned by the same owner that would be a predial servitude if
      the estates belonged to different owners.

      When the two estates cease to belong to the same owner, unless there
      is express provision to the contrary, an apparent servitude comes into
      existence of right and a nonapparent servitude comes into existence if
      the owner has previously filed for registry in the conveyance records of
      the parish in which the immovable is located a formal declaration
      establishing the destination.

When the single estate is divided, or two estates cease to belong to the same owner,

an apparent servitude comes into existence of right unless the common owner

disavows its existence.    Naramore, 17- 1621 at p. 85 252 So. 3d at 940.

      In attempting to establish that he had a servitude of Tickfaw Lane by

destination of the owner, Henry relied on the testimony of his expert offered in the

areas of abstracts and servitudes, Robert Harrison. Harrison testified at trial that " if

there is a work, if there was a road— it doesn' t have to be an interstate. If it is wide

enough to walk down or there was some work, then that of right, according to the

civil code, created a servitude of destination in favor of the people that own lots in

Square 3."    Harrison further stated that "   ifthe facts show that there was a work, a

road, a path, or whatever it was to get to the back lots where Mr. Henry has, if that

was in existence when they started selling out lots in Tickfaw Broadmoor Extension,

then that creates a servitude by destination." Accordingly, Harrison' s testimony was

conditioned upon the finding that there was evidence that there was some work at

the time the owner started selling lots in Tickfaw Broadmoor Extension.        Harrison

defined a "   work"   as an external sign that the road exists; you can walk out on the

ground and see it.    Harrison stated that driving a vehicle back and forth for enough

years that there are ruts over time qualifies as a work.       However, Henry did not

present any evidence that any work existed on Tickfaw Lane at the time the lots in

Tickfaw Broadmoor Extension were originally sold. Absent evidence that there was
an external sign that a road existed at that time, Henry failed in his burden of

establishing that a servitude was created by destination of the owner.

      Finally, Henry asserts that he acquired a servitude of Tickfaw Lane by

acquisitive prescription.   In the instant case, because McKinney asserted ownership

of a portion of Tickfaw Lane, McKinney converted Henry' s possessory action into

a petitory action.   In a petitory action, when one party relies on title and the other on

acquisitive prescription, the party relying on title will prevail unless the adversary

establishes his ownership by acquisitive prescription.      George M. Murrell Planting

  Manufacturing_Company v. Dennis, 06- 1341, pp. 4- 5 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 9/ 21/ 07),

970 So. 2d 1075, 1080.     Stated another way, ownership of immovable property under

record title may be eclipsed and superseded by ownership acquired under

prescriptive title. Under the general codal provisions on acquisitive prescription, a

possessor lacking good faith and/or just title may acquire prescriptive title to land by

corporeally possessing a tract for thirty years with the intent to possess as owner.

Such possession confers prescriptive title upon the possessor only when it is

continuous, uninterrupted, peaceable, public, and unequivocal, and confers title only

to such immovable property as is actually corporeally possessed.         See La. C. C. arts.

3424, 3426, 3476, 3486, 3487, and 3488; Falcone v. Springview Country Club, Inc.,

96- 0794, 96- 0795, and 96- 0796, p. 5 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 3/ 27/ 97),    691 So. 2d 314,

316; Brown v. Wood, 451 So. 2d 569, 572 ( La. App. 2nd Cir.), writ denied, 452 So.

2d 1176 ( La. 1984).

       In the instant case, the record is devoid of any evidence that Henry possessed

Tickfaw Lane as owner.       In fact, Henry alleged in his Petition for Injunctive Relief

and Temporary Restraining Order that Tickfaw Lane was a public road, and as a

member of the public, he had a right to use it. As such, any use and/or possession

would be precarious. See La. C. C. art. 3437.

                                             0
         Furthermore,         the trial court was presented with conflicting testimony

regarding whether Henry' s possession was continuous.                      McCarroll testified that she

had not seen Henry on Tickfaw Lane before or after McCarroll acquired the property

from the Village of Killian, except for one time when Henry stopped to speak with

McCarroll after the McCarrolls purchased Tickfaw Lane.                        Additionally, McKinney

testified that he had lived in Killian for a large portion of his life and regularly visited

friends in Tickfaw Broadmoor Extension Subdivision, but he never saw Henry on

Tickfaw Lane until after he purchased the property from McCarroll. Conversely,

Henry testified at trial that he went down Tickfaw Lane every two to three weeks.

This testimony, however, conflicted with his previous testimony wherein he stated

that he went down Tickfaw Lane every two to three months. Finally, Josh Steuber,

who lived in the area for eight years, testified that he saw Henry on Tickfaw Lane

every two weeks cutting the grass on Tickfaw Lane from the boat launch to his

property.'         Accordingly, because the trial court was clearly presented with

4
      Henry asserts on appeal that aerial photographs of the property from Google Earth were
improperly excluded and that they confirm his use and possession of a right of way over Tickfaw
Lane. A decision to admit or exclude evidence is within the sound discretion of the trial court, and
its judgment will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of an abuse of that discretion. Lohenis
v. Rousse, 14- 1078, p. 11 ( La. App, 1st Cir. 3/ 9/ 15), 166 So. 3d 1020, 1028. According to the
record, the trial court excluded the photographs based upon a finding that they could not be
authenticated.      Pursuant to La. C. E. art. 901( B)( 1),   authentication that the matter in question is
what its proponent claims can be established by testimony of a witness with knowledge.                   With
regard to photographs, while the better practice dictates that a photograph be verified and
authenticated by the photographer who took it, nevertheless, authentication may be accomplished
by the testimony of anyone with sufficient knowledge to aver that the picture fairly represents the
subject matter it purports to portray. Wallace v. Travelers Insurance Company, 195 So. 2d 712,
718 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 1967).

       In the instant case, Henry attempted to establish through his testimony that the aerial
photographs depicted Tickfaw Lane, but the trial court did not consider his testimony, alone,
sufficient for purposes of authentication.          From our review of the record and applicable law
regarding authentication, we find that the trial court erred in finding that Henry' s testimony was
insufficient to authenticate photographs depicting his property and Tickfaw Lane and as such,
abused its discretion in excluding these photographs from evidence. However, because these
photographs, which consisted of aerial photos of the property from November 29, 2011, March 5,
2013, October 31, 2014, August 25, 2015, April 6, 2016, and January 24, 2018, were only from
recent years, and the issues at trial and on appeal involve the possession and use of Tickfaw Lane
for years prior to Henry' s acquisition in 1981 or prior to the dates of the pictures, we find that the
trial court' s exclusion of these photographs did not affect a substantial right of Henry and
amounted to harmless error. See Tilden v. Blanca L.L.C., 12- 1311, p. 9 ( La. App. 4th Cir.
6/ 26/ 13),   119 So. 3d 962, 966; see also Wright v. Bennett, 04- 1944, p. 6 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 9/ 28/ 05),
924 So. 2d 178, 183.
conflicting testimony on the issue of possession, we cannot say that its reasonable

evaluation of credibility was manifestly erroneous or clearly wrong. See Stobart v.

State, Department of Transportation and Development, 617 So. 2d 880, 882 ( La.

                     from our review ofthe record, we find DQerror      the trial court' s

                                            for T              T        of TmnsSeSS'
          dismissing Henry' s                        3   88,

Injunctive Relief,     r-'--    Restraining
                               —--—'--'`
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                                              -----------
                                                                   3_

                                   CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court. All costs

of the appeal are assessed to John Henry.

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