Louisiana Revised Statutes 9:1254 – Enclosed estate; right and servitude of passage on certain waterways
A. The owner of an enclosed estate who has no access to his estate other than by way of an existing waterway passing through neighboring property shall have a right and servitude of passage on such waterway. He is bound to indemnify his neighbor for the damage he may occasion. The existing waterway passing through the neighboring property shall be directly accessible from a publicly navigable waterway, and shall have been and shall still be capable of use for navigation by the owner of either the dominant or servient estate at the time of acquisition by act of sale, inheritance, or otherwise, by the owner of the dominant estate.
B. If more than one existing waterway is capable of providing access to the enclosed estate pursuant to Subsection A, the passage shall generally be taken along the shortest route of safe passage from the enclosed estate to the nearest publicly navigable waterway at the location least injurious to the intervening lands and waterways. The owner of the dominant estate shall not be required to traverse open waters which may become hazardous for small watercraft during inclement weather.
C. The provisions of this Section shall supersede any other provision of law to the contrary.
D. The provisions of this Section are interpretative and are intended to clarify Civil Code Articles 689, 692, and 705 and any other existing law as to the right and servitude of passage on waterways to enclosed estates which have no means of access other than by way of water due to the lack of sufficient land on which to feasibly construct a road, and shall have retroactive application.
Acts 2004, No. 813, §1; Acts 2017, No. 244, §1.