Bradford Land Company, L.L.C. v. Montagnet Properties 2, L.L.C. ( 2022 )


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  •                                                      STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    r
    Wv                                                          2021 CA 1393
    BRADFORDBRADFORD LANDLAND COMPANY,COMPANY, L.L. LC.LC.
    VERSUSVERSUS
    MONTAGNETMONTAGNET PROPERTIESPROPERTIES
    #          #                   2,2, L.L. L.L. C.C.
    Judgment Judgment Rendered:Rendered:
    NOVNOV 1717 20222022
    OnOn AppealAppeal fromfrom thethe TwentyTwenty
    -      - SecondSecond JudicialJudicial DistrictDistrict CourtCourt
    InIn andand forfor thethe ParishParish ofof St.St. TammanyTammany
    StateState ofof LouisianaLouisiana
    DocketDocket No.No. 2011-2011- 1534015340
    HonorableHonorable ReginaldReginald T.T. Badeaux,Badeaux, III,III, JudgeJudge PresidingPresiding
    AllisonAllison C.C. BondurantBondurant                                      CounselCounsel forfor Plaintiff/Plaintiff/ AppelleeAppellee
    BrittanyBrittany J.J. WalkerWalker                                          BradfordBradford LandLand Company,Company, L.L. L.L. C.C.
    Madisonville,Madisonville, LouisianaLouisiana
    ReneeRenee S.S. MelchiodeMelchiode                                          CounselCounsel forfor Defendant/Defendant/ Appellant Appellant
    BenjaminBenjamin M.M. Pri-Pri- TalTal                                       MontagnetMontagnet PropertiesProperties
    #          # 2,2, L.L. L.L. C.C.
    NewNew Orleans,Orleans, LouisianaLouisiana
    BEFORE:BEFORE:         McCLENDON,McCLENDON, WELCH,WELCH, ANDAND THERIOT,THERIOT, JJ.JJ.
    McCLENDON, J.
    In this case involving a boundary dispute, the defendant appeals the judgment of
    the trial court in favor of the plaintiff.          The plaintiff answered the appeal.         For the
    reasons that follow, we amend the judgment in part, affirm as amended, and remand
    with instructions.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On August 29, 1977,         Dayle L. Bradford acquired Lot 290 in Flower Estates
    Subdivision in Covington, Louisiana.           On December 31, 2003, James L. Bradford, Jr.,
    M. D.,   and Dayle L. Bradford transferred their interest in Lot 290 to Bradford Land
    Company,      LLC ( Bradford      Land)    by deed entitled Transfer of Property as Capital
    Contribution.'     Bradford Land remains the record title holder of Lot 290.              On May 22,
    1998, Oliver S. Montagnet, Jr. and Monica Cummings Montagnet acquired Lot 289 in
    Flower Estates Subdivision by rash sale. On August 26, 1998, the Montagnets sold Lot
    289 to Montagnet Properties # 2, LLC ( MP# 2). 2               MP# 2 remains the record title holder of
    Lot 289.      Lot 289 and Lot 290 are adjacent to each other and share a common
    boundary line. Both lots front on Louisiana Highway 21. 3
    In early 1999, MP# 2 completed construction of a commercial building, parking
    lot, and other improvements on Lot 289, and on January 27, 1999, received a final
    inspection certificate from the City of Covington. MP# 2 requested a survey of Lot 289,
    and Billy C. Daniels prepared a survey, dated February 10, 1999, of " 1. 00               acre of land
    being Lot No. 289 Flowers Estates Subdivision                       Covington   St.   Tammany Parish
    Louisiana,"   showing the building within the boundaries of Lot 289.               Thereafter, on April
    8, 1999, the City notified MP# 2 that it had re -inspected the property and found items
    not in compliance with the Covington Code of Ordinances, including a five- foot setback
    1 Lot 290 was described as containing " 100 feet on La. State Highway No. 21, by a depth of 400 feet
    along its side line common to Lot 289, by a depth of 400 feet along its side line common to Lot 291, and
    by a distance in the rear of 100 feet." In the transfer to Bradford Land, Dr. Bradford was identified as
    the duly authorized manager for Bradford Land.
    z In the sale, Lot 289 was described as " 100 feet front on Louisiana Hwy. No. 21, having a width in the
    rear of 100 feet, by a depth of 400 feet on each side line."
    3   The transfers to Bradford Land and MP# 2 both reference that the respective lots are described in
    accordance with the survey and plan of E. J. Champagne, Surveyor, dated January 22, 1956.
    2
    requirement.    Subsequently, the City and MP# 2 entered into a consent judgment, which
    was signed by the trial court on December 19, 2000.
    In 2006, in connection with a loan, MP# 2 requested another survey of Lot 289
    and     hired Joseph   M.    Marques.   The Marques survey, dated December 18, 2006,
    indicated that the improvements on Lot 289 were within the boundary lines for Lot 289.
    Beginning in 2006, the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development
    DOTD)     began a government expropriation of certain property for the widening of a
    section of Highway 21.           In   connection   therewith,   Louisiana Property Acquisition
    Company ( LaPAC) managed the acquisition process for the forty- two parcels that were
    procured for the project, including portions of Lots 289 and 290 fronting on Highway
    21. 4    During the course of the project, LaPAC hired John E.              Bonneau &     Associates
    Bonneau) to survey the lots. The Bonneau survey, dated May 14, 2007, showed that
    the State acquired 6. 97 feet from the boundary between Lot 289 and Lot 290.
    Sometime in 2007, Bonneau notified Bradford Land that MP# 2' s improvements
    on Lot 289 might be encroaching on Lot 290. Bradford Land did not take any action
    regarding the disputed building location or setbacks until it sent a letter, dated August
    28, 2009, through its attorney, to MP# 2, alleging that the improvements on Lot 289
    encroached onto Lot 290 and demanding equitable rent for the property encroached
    upon.     The letter also attached a survey performed by Mr. Bonneau, dated June 17,
    20097 showing the alleged encroachments.
    On September 16, 2011, Bradford Land filed suit against MP# 2, asserting that
    MP# 2 constructed parking structures, concrete pads, sewer and drain cleanouts, as well
    as piping, across the Lot 289 boundary line and onto Lot 290 illegally and without the
    permission     of   Bradford    Land.     Bradford     Land   sought    a   declaration    that   the
    improvements encroached onto Lot 290, the removal of the encroachments at MP# 2' s
    cost, and reasonable rent for the time of the encroachment.            Bradford Land also asked
    for damages for the encroachments and for the violation of the setback requirements.
    4 we note that Dr. Bradford' s son, James L. Bradford, III, was involved in the 2007- 2008 project as
    project manager for LaPAC.
    3
    In   response,    MP# 2 filed a peremptory exception raising the objections of
    prescription, no cause of action, and peremption on January 11, 2012.           Bradford Land
    opposed the exceptions.        Following a hearing, the exceptions were denied, and the trial
    court signed a judgment denying same on April 26, 2013.
    Subsequently, the trial court held a two- day bench trial on July 22 and 23, 2020.
    The parties stipulated that MP# 2 is the record title owner of Lot 289 and that Bradford
    Land is the record title owner of Lot 290.       Both parties submitted separate surveys and
    expert surveyor testimony. Bradford Land offered the surveys of John E. Bonneau and
    John Brandon McCain, along with their expert testimony, which showed that the 1999
    improvements on Lot 289 extend more than three feet past the boundary between the
    properties. 5      Bradford Land also offered the 2012 survey of Michael P.             Maillet,
    performed for DOTD in connection with a second improvement project along Highway
    21.
    MP# 2   relied   on the Daniels and     Marques surveys,   and offered the expert
    testimony of Mr. Marques, for its position that none of the improvements extended over
    the boundary between the two properties. MP# 2 argued that it was the title owner of
    the disputed area, but even if it was not, it possessed the land in good faith and with
    just title for over ten years and was therefore the owner by acquisitive prescription.
    The trial court took the matter under advisement, post -trial briefs were filed, and
    on January 8, 2021, the trial court issued its judgment and written reasons, fixing the
    boundary as depicted in the surveys of Mr. Bonneau and Mr. McCain.                In its written
    reasons, the trial court determined that the Bonneau and McCain surveys provided the
    most reliable and accurate evidence of the boundary' s location. The court found that
    the opinions of Mr. Bonneau and Mr. McCain showed definitive proof of the boundary at
    issue since they relied on the record title documents of ownership and the subdivision
    plats, after finding that the boundary could not be located based on the subdivision
    plats alone.      The trial court also determined that Mr. Bonneau and Mr. McCain had the
    most reliable data because they surveyed the entirety of Highway 21 corridor from
    5
    The Bonneau survey, dated June 17, 2009, and revised October 25, 2012, showed the furthest
    encroachment at 3. 5 feet.    The McCain survey, dated October 27, 2012, and prepared by John S.
    Teegarden, surveyor, showed the farthest encroachment at 4.6 feet.
    El.
    Interstate 12 north to the Tchefuncte River Bridge, and they also properly used the
    hierarchy of calls and the data acquired to determine the boundary location.                     The trial
    court determined that the Daniels survey only located the building on Lot 289, with a
    vague reference to concrete parking, and did not identify the sewer cleanouts, concrete
    pads, concrete retaining wall, fencing, and bounds of the parking concrete.
    After fixing the boundary line, the trial court concluded that the building and
    improvements on Lot 289 encroached onto Lot 290. 6                  The court then found LSA-C. C.
    art. 670 applicable and ordered the establishment of a predial servitude.                     Article 670
    provides:
    When     a   landowner      constructs    in   good    faith   a   building   that
    encroaches on an adjacent estate and the owner of that estate does not
    complain within a reasonable time after he knew or should have known of
    the encroachment, or in any event complains only after the construction is
    substantially completed the court may allow the building to remain. The
    owner of the building acquires a predial servitude on the land occupied by
    the building upon payment of compensation for the value of the servitude
    taken and for any other damage that the neighbor has suffered.
    With respect to damages, the trial court found that the only expert opinion was
    that given by Bradford Land' s expert, Ashton Ray, a licensed appraiser, who appraised
    the fair market value of the portion of Lot 290 used by MP# 2, and found it to be worth
    14. 50 per square foot.       Mr. Ray also opined that the servitude should have a width of
    six feet and be a straight line, as opposed to a jagged or saw-toothed line.                          This
    resulted in a total appraisal price of $ 33, 500. 00. 7        The trial court agreed and awarded
    Bradford Land $ 33, 500. 00 for the market value of the predial servitude.                 However, the
    trial court declined to award fair market rent for the property encroached upon by
    MP# 2 in the amount of $53, 000. 00, as Bradford Land requested.                   The court found that
    amount to be speculative and pointed out that Bradford Land was not using the land in
    question for any purpose and that Lot 290 remains undeveloped.
    G We note that Mr. McCain testified that the entire building itself was within the bounds of Lot 289. In its
    written reasons, the trial court stated that the building was not in dispute between the parties, but that
    what was disputed was the location of the sewer cleanouts, concrete pads, the concrete retaining wall,
    fencing, and bounds of the parking lot. The trial court then referred to the building and improvements on
    Lot 289 that encroached on Lot 290.
    The trial court acknowledged that the farthest encroachment on Lot 290 was 4. 6 feet from the
    property boundary line, but agreed with Mr. Ray that a buffer between MP# 2's constructions and
    potential future developments on Lot 290 was appropriate.
    E
    Thus, the January 8, 2021 judgment judicially fixed the boundary as depicted in
    the Bonneau and McCain surveys as the conclusive location of the boundary between
    the lots; granted a predial servitude over the area of the encroached land with a width
    of six feet from the boundary line, running " from the entire boundary of Lot 289 and
    onto Lot 290"; awarded the fair market value of the predial servitude in the amount of
    33, 500. 00 to Bradford Land from MP# 2; and cast all costs, including expert witness
    fees, against MP# 2.
    MP# 2 appealed the judgment and assigned the following as error:
    1.   The trial court committed legal error when it failed to determine that MP# 2 had
    acquired the alleged strip of land via acquisitive prescription after MP# 2
    established possession for more than ten years in good faith and just title based
    on recorded surveys.
    2.   The trial court committed legal error and utilized the incorrect burden of proof
    when determining who had better title to the land in dispute.
    3. The trial court committed legal error when it adopted the findings of two
    different surveys to determine the boundary line despite the inherent defects in
    the surveys and despite their inconsistencies.
    4.   Alternatively, the trial court manifestly erred when it ruled that the Bonneau and
    McCain surveys determined the boundary when the surveyors themselves
    removed the original markings and replaced them with others while in Bradford
    Land' s employment.
    5. The    trial court legally erred because Bradford Land' s claim for damages
    prescribed or was otherwise preempted as suit was filed more than twelve years
    after completion of the improvements and more than one year after Bradford
    Land discovered the alleged encroachment.
    6.   Alternatively, the trial court awarded legally incorrect damages as the City of
    Covington preempted this issue when it ruled via Consent Judgment that MP# 2
    did not violate any setbacks and no law provided damages to Bradford Land for a
    buffer zone beyond the actual encroachment.
    0
    Bradford Land answered the appeal, seeking modification of the January 8, 2021
    judgment, and assigned as error, the following:
    1.    The trial court erred in failing to grant Bradford Land judicial interest from the
    date of judicial demand, although the trial court's Written Reasons for Judgment
    correctly provided for judicial interest from the date of demand.
    2.    The trial court erred in failing to grant Bradford Land fair market rent for the
    portion of Lot 290 encroached upon by MP# 2 from the construction of the
    encroachment through the date of the January 8, 2021 judgment.
    3.    The trial court erred in failing to decree that the predial servitude granted to
    MP# 2     is   limited   and   does   not   allow    MP# 2   to   construct   any   additional
    encroachments onto Lot 290 beyond what existed at the time of the January 8,
    2021 judgment.
    4.    The trial court erred in failing to decree that the predial servitude shall extinguish
    in accordance with law.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    It is well settled that a court of appeal may not set aside a trial court's or a jury's
    finding of fact in the absence of " manifest error" or unless it is " clearly wrong."           Rosell
    v. ESCO, 
    549 So. 2d 840
    , 844 ( La. 1989).                Where there is conflict in the testimony,
    reasonable evaluations of credibility and reasonable inferences of fact should not be
    disturbed      upon     review, even though the appellate court may feel that its own
    evaluations and inferences are as reasonable.             
    Id.
       The location of a boundary line is a
    question of fact, and the determination of its location by the trial court should not be
    reversed    absent manifest error.         Marcello      v.   Jo -Blanche    Corporation,     20- 
    1113 La. App. 1
     Or. 6/ 4/ 21), 
    330 So. 3d 632
    , 639, writ denied, 21- 1666 ( La. 1/ 19/ 22), 
    331 So. 3d 330
    .
    A legal error occurs when a trial court applies incorrect principles of law and such
    errors   are     prejudicial.     Legal errors are prejudicial when they materially affect the
    outcome and deprive a party of substantial rights.                Evans v. Lungriin, 97- 0541 ( La.
    2/ 6/ 98), 
    708 So. 2d 731
    , 735.
    7
    DISCUSSION
    The Boundary Location
    MP# 2 first argues that the trial court erred in determining a boundary line, since
    it has clear title to Lot 289 and owns the land, building, and component parts, by ten-
    year acquisitive prescription, based on its surveys and just title.           Louisiana Civil Code
    article 3475 provides that "[ t] he requisites for the acquisitive prescription of ten years
    are: possession of ten years, good faith, just title, and a thing susceptible of acquisition
    by prescription." The only requirement at issue before us is just title.
    Just title" is defined in LSA -C -C. art. 3483 as " a juridical act, such as a sale,
    exchange, or donation, sufficient to transfer ownership or another real right.               The act
    must be written, valid in form, and filed for registry in the conveyance records of the
    parish in which the immovable is situated."            Thus, to have just title over particular
    property for purposes of ten- year acquisitive prescription, one must have a recorded act
    translative of title that contains a description of the property at issue.
    The August 26, 1998 sale of Lot 289 to MP# 2 referenced the "survey and plan of
    E. J.    Champagne,     Surveyor,   dated January 22nd,       1956"    being the same property
    acquired by the Montagnets in the " act of sale dated May 22,               1998."    However, the
    Champagne survey did not describe the boundary between Lot 289 and Lot 290 in
    sufficient detail to show whether the improvements are inside the boundaries of Lot
    289. 8
    The trial court determined that MP# 2 did not have an act translative of title to
    the property upon which the alleged encroachments sit, and therefore, MP# 2 failed to
    establish the requirement of just title for the purposes of acquisitive prescription.              On
    appeal, MP# 2 asserts that the consent judgment it obtained in the litigation with the
    City of Covington regarding MP# 2' s "        setback and boundaries"      and the survey by Mr.
    Daniels,      dated May 21,     1998, filed in the public records, provides just title to the
    property at issue.
    8
    Mr. Bonneau and Mr. McCain testified that the Champagne survey does not detail the original
    monuments and is missing curve data, courses, and angles necessary to determine the precise location of
    the boundary between Lot 289 and Lot 290.
    However, a judgment does not constitute a just title as it is declarative rather
    than translative of rights. See LSA- C. C. art. 3483, Revision Comments ( b).                Further, the
    consent judgment made no finding or judgment regarding the boundary to Lot 289 nor
    was it translative of any rights. Additionally, the recordation of the Daniels survey did
    not transfer any rights to MP# 2 and did not provide a just title. Accordingly, without
    just title,   MP# 2 failed to establish that it was the owner of the encroached property
    based on ten- year acquisitive prescription, and this assignment of error lacks merit.
    MP# 2 next claims that the trial court erred in using the wrong burden of proof in
    establishing the boundary. Specifically, MP# 2 argues that the trial court failed to apply
    9
    the elements of proof set forth in LSA- C. C. P. art. 3654 governing proof of ownership.
    MP# 2 avers that Bradford Land must establish " title good against the world" because
    MP# 2 is the "   presumed owner" of the property containing the encroachments because
    it is in possession thereof.        MP# 2 contends that Bradford Land failed to show better
    title and that the boundary should be placed based on MP# 2' s possession of the
    building and its components.
    An action to fix the boundary is an ordinary proceeding.                  LSA- C. C. P. art. 3691.
    The boundary may be fixed upon the demand of an owner or of one who possesses as
    owner.     LSA- C. C. art. 786. After considering the evidence, including the testimony and
    exhibits of a surveyor or other expert appointed by the court or by a party, the court
    shall render judgment fixing the boundary between the contiguous lands in accordance
    with the ownership or possession of the parties. LSA-C. C. P. art. 3693; Presswood v.
    9 Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 3654 provides:
    When the issue of ownership of immovable property or of a real right therein is
    presented in an action for a declaratory judgment, or in a concursus, expropriation, or
    similar proceeding, or the issue of the ownership of funds deposited in the registry of the
    court and which belong to the owner of the immovable property or of the real right
    therein is so presented, the court shall render judgment in favor of the party:
    1) Who would be entitled to the possession of the immovable property or real right
    therein in a possessory action, unless the adverse party proves that he has acquired
    ownership from a previous owner or by acquisitive prescription; or
    2) Who proves better title to the immovable property or real right therein, when neither
    party would be entitled to the possession of the immovable property or real right therein
    in a possessory action.
    0
    Spillman, 04-0145 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 2/ 11/ 05),           
    906 So. 2d 509
    , 511, writ denied, 05- 
    0672 La. 5
    / 6/ 05), 
    901 So. 2d 1098
    . 10
    In the matter before us, the parties stipulated that MP# 2 is the record title
    owner of Lot 289 and that Bradford Land is the record title owner of Lot 290. The title
    documents for the parties also establish that both Bradford Land and MP# 2 acquired
    their properties in accordance with the original subdivision plats for Flower Estates.
    However, the title transfers for Lot 289 and Lot 290 contain property descriptions that
    include only a lot number and the length and width of the properties.                     Therefore, the
    issue before the trial court was the placement of the boundary between Lot 289 and Lot
    290, not the ownership of the properties.                 The trial court correctly found that LSA-
    C. C. P. arts. 3691 through 3693, which provide the rules and law governing boundary
    actions, rather than LSA- C. C. P. art. 3654, were applicable to the present matter, and
    we find no legal error by the trial court.
    MP# 2' s next two assignments of error pertain to the fixing of the boundary line.
    MP# 2 contends that the trial court erred when it adopted the findings of two different
    surveys to determine the boundary line, despite their defects and inconsistencies.
    Alternatively, MP# 2 argues that the trial court erred in using the Bonneau and McCain
    surveys to determine the boundary line when the surveyors themselves removed
    original markings and replaced them while in Bradford Land' s employment.
    The Louisiana Supreme Court has established that in cases where boundary
    questions exist, the legal guides for determining the location of a land line in property
    descriptions,     in   order   of   their    importance,      are:    natural    monuments,        artificial
    monuments, distances, courses, and quantity, with the controlling consideration being
    intention of the parties.      Skillman v. Harvey, 03- 2724 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 12/ 30/ 04),              
    898 So. 2d 431
    , 434, writ denied, 05- 0272 ( La. 4/ 1/ 05), 
    897 So. 2d 610
     ( dt[ng City of New
    Orleans v. Joseph Rathborne Land Co., 
    209 La. 93
    , 109- 10, 
    24 So. 2d 275
    , 281 ( La.
    1945); Meyer v. Comegys, 
    147 La. 851
    , 857, 
    86 So. 307
    , 309 ( La. 1920)).                          A survey
    10 Louisiana Civil Code article 792 provides that in a boundary action, the court shall fix the boundary
    according to the ownership of the parties; if neither party proves ownership, the boundary shall be fixed
    according to limits established by possession. Article 793 also provides, in part, that "[w] hen both parties
    rely on titles only, the boundary shall be fixed according to titles."
    10
    predicated on sound surveying principles should be accepted unless the record shows it
    is incorrect. Skillman, 898 So. 2d at 435.
    MP# 2 asserts that the Daniels and Marques surveys verify that it is the owner of
    the disputed strip of land. The parties agreed that the 1956 Champagne survey did not
    refer to natural monuments relative to Lot 289 or Lot 290. MP# 2 argues, however, that
    it did contain artificial monuments, being Highway 21 and Marigold Drive.                  Therefore,
    according to MP# 2, Mr. Daniels based his survey on the location of Marigold Drive, and
    the survey should be accepted because it is the most ancient and follows the original
    ground survey of Mr. Champagne.               MP# 2 also contends that the Marques survey
    determined the boundaries based on the original intent of the Champagne survey and
    utilized original markers that were not considered by Bradford Land' s surveyors.
    The record shows that, in connection with their work in 2007 for the State
    regarding the widening of Highway 21, Mr. Bonneau and Mr. McCain surveyed all of the
    highway from Interstate 12 north to the Tchefuncte River Bridge.                       They located
    monuments along the front and rear property boundaries for all of the lots in the area,
    including residences, shopping malls, office buildings, gas stations, and empty lots.              Mr.
    Bonneau has been a surveyor since 1980 and has surveyed areas of Flower Estates
    since 1976.     Mr. McCain testified that he has also surveyed a number of areas in the
    subdivision.    Mr. McCain stated that he has located monuments similar to the 1/ 2 - inch
    iron pipes found on Lot 289 and Lot 290 and believes that the 1/ 2 - inch iron pipes he and
    Mr. Bonneau used as a basis for their conclusions are the original monuments set by
    the original surveyors."
    The record also shows that Mr. Bonneau and Mr. McCain established the same
    boundary line between Lot 289 and Lot 290, despite MP# 2' s argument to the contrary.
    Using the monuments, the surveyors determined the boundary between Lots 289 and
    290 to have lengths consistent with the Champagne survey and the revised Robert
    Berlin plat of Flowers Estate, dated July 13, 1964, of approximately 400 feet ( there was
    11 we note that during the Highway 21 widening project, Mr. Bonneau and Mr. McCain both testified that
    they believed that they found what were the original monuments for the lots fronting on the highway, but
    they had to be replaced due to the taking by the State.
    11
    a 7/ 100ths of a foot difference after consideration of the sale of frontage by each of the
    parties to the Parish in 2008). 12
    The only meaningful discrepancy between the Bonneau and McCain surveys and
    the Champagne and Berlin surveys was the length of the rear boundary of Lot 288.
    The Champagne and Berlin surveys noted a rear length of 82 feet, whereas the
    Bonneau       and    McCain surveys found           a rear length of 80. 5 feet, based on the
    monuments found and tying them into the lots on the Highway 21 corridor and
    surrounding streets.         Mr. Bonneau testified that if the 82 -feet number was used to
    measure westward,          as suggested by MP# 2, then every other boundary for Lot 289
    through Lot 302 would have to be moved over by one and a half feet, creating a
    domino effect that would push the rear boundary of Lot 302 into Zinnia Drive, which
    would disagree with all of the monumentation that we found within that corridor
    there." 13
    Additionally, Bradford Land submitted evidence regarding the sale of Lot 288 on
    March 4, 2013, with a survey by John G. Cummings, dated February 4, 2013, attached.
    Mr. Cummings located the boundaries of Lot 288 in the same place as the Bonneau and
    McCain surveys, including fording that southern property line of Lot 288 is 80. 5 feet in
    length. 14
    Having thoroughly reviewing the record, we find a reasonable basis for the trial
    court's factual finding regarding the precise location of the boundary line between Lot
    289 and Lot 290.          Accordingly, we find no manifest error and cannot say that the trial
    court was clearly wrong in its determination.
    12 The Bonneau and McCain surveys, performed after the 2008 sale to the Parish, reflect a boundary
    length between Lots 289 and 290 of 392. 82 and 392. 89 feet, respectively. Thus, prior to the acquisition
    by the Parish of 5. 97 feet of that boundary, the boundary length was 400 feet.
    13 The Marques survey, upon which MP# 2 relies, utilized the 82 -feet length for the rear boundary of Lot
    288. Mr. Marques testified that he found points that indicated he could move the property over by a foot
    and an inch, but he chose not to. He stated that he held to 82 feet because that " is what this plan calls
    for."   Marques testified that he did not measure any lots west of Lot 290 to see if the length of 82 feet fit
    within other monumentation to the west of the lot and based his conclusions using monuments in the
    area of Marigold Drive.
    14 Also, Mr. Maillet surveyed Lots, 288, 289, and 290 for the 2012 Highway 21 improvement project. Mr.
    Maillet's survey, dated July 25, 2412, found the same monumentation as found by Mr. Bonneau and Mr.
    McCain and confirms the Bonneau and McCain surveys.
    12
    Additionally,   we note that the judgment of the trial court provides that " the
    boundary between lots 289 and 290 is judicially fixed as depicted in the surreys done
    by John Bonneau and Brandon McCain."          It is clear that the trial court intended to fix
    the boundary according to the parties' titles and the Bonneau and McCain surveys " as
    the conclusive boundary between the lots."         For clarity, we remand to the trial court
    with instructions to amend the judgment for the sole purpose of attaching or
    incorporating into the judgment the specific surveys referenced in its January 8, 2021
    judgment.    See Andermann v. Rouillier, 18- 88 ( La. App. 5 Cir. 4/ 25/ 19),      
    271 So. 3d 384
    , 413, writs denied, 19- 00971 ( La. 9/ 24/ 19), 
    278 So. 3d 978
    , and 19- 00981 ( La.
    9124/ 19), 
    279 So. 3d 935
    .
    Compensation
    In its last two assignment of errors, MP# 2 asserts that if we affirm the trial
    court's placement of the boundary, any award for damages was incorrect.                MP# 2
    acknowledged that an action to fix a boundary does not prescribe. LSA-C. C. art. 788
    The right to compel the fixing of the boundary between contiguous lands is
    imprescriptible' }.    However, it contends that Bradford Land' s claim for damages is a
    delictual action with a one-year prescriptive period pursuant to LSA- C. C. art. 3493.
    As previously stated, the trial court specifically found LSA -GC. art. 670 applicable
    to the matter before us.        The trial court determined that the encroachments were
    placed on Bradford Land' s property in good faith and, pursuant to Article 670, would be
    allowed to stay.      Additionally, the trial court awarded compensation only, finding that
    no " other damage" was due.
    Of note, we do not consider whether the predial servitude set forth in Article 670
    would apply to the specific encroachments at issue herein.       The parties do not contest
    the application of Article 670, and this issue was neither assigned as error nor raised in
    the parties' briefs.    Accordingly, we do not address whether the application of Article
    670 was appropriate under the facts before us.
    Therefore, because the trial court found Article 670 applicable, we consider the
    remedies provided therein.        Pursuant to Article 670, MP# 2 will acquire a predial
    servitude on the land occupied by the encroachments upon payment of compensation
    13
    for the value of the servitude taken and for any other damage that Bradford Land has
    suffered.     The trial court awarded Bradford Land $ 33, 500. 00 as the value of the
    servitude, but declined to award any other damages.
    Although MP# 2 asserts that any claim for damages has prescribed,            its actual
    argument regarding the predial servitude is that the valuation is incorrect. Specifically,
    MP# 2 argues that no law supports the right to a buffer zone when granting a predial
    servitude    pursuant    to Article   670.   According to MP# 2,     the   actual   size   of the
    encroachment was 526 square feet for the concrete parking and 32 square feet for the
    gravel and concrete encroachment, for a total of 558 square feet. Therefore, accepting
    Mr. Ray' s valuation of the property at $ 14. 50 per square foot, MP# 2 argues that the
    value for the actual size of the encroachment should be $ 8, 091. 00.      Alternatively, using
    Mr. Bonneau' s farthest encroachment point at 3. 5 feet, and were one to allow a
    straight-line boundary, MP# 2 argues that the maximum damages would be $ 19, 919. 69,
    not $   33, 500. 00.    However, we note that Mr.       McCain found the farthest point of
    encroachment to be 4.6 feet, being the top of one of the two sewer cleanout tanks.
    A predial servitude is a charge on a servient estate for the benefit of a dominant
    estate.     LSA-C. C. art. 646.   predial servitudes are either natural,   legal, voluntary, or
    conventional.     LSA- C. C. art. 654. The predial servitude contained in LSA- C. C. art. 670 is
    a legal servitude.     Legal servitudes are limitations on ownership established by law for
    the benefit of the general public or for the benefit of particular persons.         LSA- C. C. art.
    659.
    Article 670 was enacted in 1978 to empower the courts with discretionary
    authority to grant a predial servitude to landowners who constructed a building in good
    faith that encroached on an adjacent estate.             This authority is premised on the
    provision that compensation           be made to the adjoining       landowner burdened by
    the servitude.    Bushnell v. Artis, 
    445 So. 2d 152
    , 154- 55 ( La. App. 3 Cir. 1984).
    In Bushnell, the defendant's home encroached on the plaintiffs property for
    approximately six feet. The trial court awarded the encroaching landowner a predial
    servitude to allow a straight- line boundary ( of servitude) on a line three feet east of the
    east edge of the defendant's roof from the rear of her lot south to the street.
    14
    Bushnell, 445 So -2d at 155.      In affirming the trial court's judgment, the third circuit
    noted the well -reasoned opinion of the trial court that reflected sound reasoning in
    fixing the predial servitude, wherein the trial court recognized that the defendant must
    be allowed enough room to maintain and repair her building.       
    Id.
    In Atwood v. Hylan, 28, 971 ( La.App. 2 Cir. 12/ 11/ 96), 
    685 So. 2d 450
    , 453, the
    second circuit amended the trial court's judgment and granted the plaintiff a predial
    servitude under Article 670 on the land occupied by his encroaching boathouse and
    pier.   The servitude included an area of four feet extending around the perimeter of the
    entire structure of the plaintiff to allow access for repair and maintenance.
    Mr. Ray testified that a six- foot buffer was fairly small, considering the 4.6 feet
    encroachment as determined by Mr. Bonneau. On our review, we find no error by the
    trial court in the granting a six- foot straight- line predial servitude under LSA- C. C. art.
    670 and in its calculation of the compensation for the value of the servitude.
    Alternatively, MP# 2 makes the argument that damages were illegally awarded
    because the consent judgment entered into between it and the City of Covington ruled
    that MP# 2 did not violate any setbacks.           The consent judgment set forth the
    requirements for parking spaces, green spaces, and tree plantings by MP# 2 on Lot 289.
    The judgment then       provided that "[   t] he City of Covington shall deem the above
    obligations sufficient to meet all City Planning and Zoning requirements and all parking
    and landscaping requirements for the present zoning classification."
    A consent judgment is a bilateral contract between the parties by which the
    parties adjust their differences by mutual consent.       Its binding force arises from the
    voluntary acquiescence of the parties rather than the adjudication by the court.       Mayo
    v.   Hutchinson, 16- 1642 (   La. App. 1 Cir. 9/ 27/ 17), 
    232 So. 3d 567
    , 573- 74.        The
    consent judgment overturned the denial of the variance by the Covington Board of
    Adjustments with regard to Lot 289, but made no findings, such as the location of the
    boundary line between Lot 289 and Lot 290.          Moreover, MP# 2``s argument regarding
    peremption based on the law applicable to building restrictions and the application of
    zoning requirements is inapplicable as neither issues were before the trial court.
    MP# 2' s argument is without merit.
    15
    The Answer to the Appeal
    Bradford Land filed an answer to the appeal raising several arguments and
    seeking modification of the judgment of the trial court.                    Initially, Bradford Land
    contends that the trial court erred in failing to grant it judicial interest from the date of
    demand, although the trial court' s Written Reasons for Judgment provided for judicial
    interest from the date of demand.
    The January 8, 2021 judgment is silent regarding legal interest.              However, the
    grant of judicial interest is governed by LSA- C. C. P. art. 1921, which provides that "[ t] he
    court shall award interest in the judgment as prayed for or as provided by law."              Since
    the word " shall"   in Article 1921 is mandatory, the court lacks discretion to deny interest
    if interest is prayed for or provided for by law. Quality Design and Const.,                 Inc. v.
    City of Gonzales, 2013- 0752 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 3/ 11/ 14), 
    146 So. 3d 567
    , 573.
    In its petition, Bradford Land prayed for " judicial interest on all amounts due."
    Accordingly, we amend the judgment of the trial court ordering the predial servitude to
    include an award of judicial interest owed by MP# 2 on the $ 33, 500. 00           amount from the
    date of demand, September 16, 2011, until paid.
    Bradford Land next asserts that it is entitled to fair market rent for the period of
    time MP# 2 improperly encroached upon its property.                 Bradford Land contends that
    although the trial court granted a predial servitude to MP# 2 and compensated Bradford
    Land for the value of servitude, the trial court manifestly erred in failing to award
    Bradford Land any damages for MP# 2' s past use of Lot 290, in accordance with the
    provisions of Article 670. 15
    The trial court ordered that Bradford Land be paid $ 33, 500. 00 for the value of
    the predial servitude pursuant to Article 670, but the trial court declined to award any
    rent.   Thus, the trial court implicitly determined that Bradford Land did not suffer " any
    other damage."       On our review of the record, we find no manifest error by the trial
    court in this determination.
    is As previously noted, Article 670 provides for the " payment of compensation for the value of the
    servitude taken and for any other damage that the neighbor has suffered."
    16
    In its last two assignments of error, Bradford Land avers that it is entitled to
    have the predial servitude limited to prevent MP# 2 from constructing any additional
    improvements on Lot 290 as Article 670 does not allow same.                        Bradford Land also
    contends that it is entitled to a decree that the predial servitude granted to MP# 2
    extinguishes in accordance with law and, particularly, LSA- C. C. arts. 751 through 774.
    As   a   general        rule,   an    appellate      court    will   not   consider issues that
    were not raised in the pleadings, were not addressed by the trial court, or are raised for
    the first time on appeal.        Pinnacle Builders, Inc. v. John, 21- 0335 ( La. App. 1 Cir.
    12/ 22/ 21), 340 So -3d 107, 117.       Moreover, LSA- C. C. arts. 646 through 774 set forth the
    law regarding predial servitudes. We decline to add anything further to the judgment.
    CONCLUSION
    For the above reasons, the January 8, 2021 judgment of the trial court in favor
    of Bradford Land Company, LLC is amended to include legal interest from the date of
    judicial demand and,       as    amended,     is affirmed.     We remand to the trial court with
    instructions to amend the judgment for the sole purpose of attaching or incorporating
    into the judgment the specific surveys referenced in its January 8, 2021 judgment.                  All
    costs of this appeal are assessed to Montagnet Properties # 2, LLC.
    JUDGMENT      AMENDED,               AFFIRMED        AS      AMENDED,      AND   REMANDED
    WITH INTRUCTIONS; ANSWER TO APPEAL GRANTED IN PART, DENIED IN
    PART.
    17
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2021 CA 1393
    BRADFORD LAND COMPANY, LLC.
    VERSUS
    MONTAGNET PROPERTIES 42, L.L.C.
    THERIOT, J., concurring with reasons.
    Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure Articles 1919 and 2089 require that all
    final judgments affecting immovable property must describe such property. Because
    a predial servitude is an incorporeal immovable, the specificity requirements of
    Articles 1919 and 2089 apply to the January 8, 2021 judgment' s description of the
    predial servitude running from the entire boundary of Lot 289 and onto Lot 290.      See
    Clark v. Fazekas, 2019- 1386 (La. App. 1 Cir. 5/ 11/ 20), 
    303 So. 3d 1066
    , 1069.     The
    purpose of these articles is " to insure that the public in general, and title examiners,
    successful litigants, officials charged with executions ofjudgments and surveyors in
    particular, can accurately deal with the immovable property."     Hurst v. Ricard, 
    558 So. 2d 1269
    ,   1272 ( La.   App.   1   Cir.), writ denied, 
    559 So. 2d 1378
     ( La. 1990).
    Therefore, I would encourage the trial court to provide an accurate legal
    description of the predial servitude and the boundary line in accordance with the
    surveys done by John Bonneau and Brandon McCain.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021CA1393

Filed Date: 11/17/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/17/2022