Aleman v. Sewerage and Water Board

199 So. 380, 196 La. 428, 1940 La. LEXIS 1184
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 2, 1940
DocketNo. 35185.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 199 So. 380 (Aleman v. Sewerage and Water Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aleman v. Sewerage and Water Board, 199 So. 380, 196 La. 428, 1940 La. LEXIS 1184 (La. 1940).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Dr. Ruth G. Aleman and Dr. Lucy Scott Hill are the owners of a certain piece of property forming the • corner of South Claiborne Avenue and Cambronne Street, in the City of New Orleans. The improvements on the property consist of a single raised bungalow, designated by the Number 8415 South Claiborne Avenue.

In the month of March, 1936, Drs. Ale-man and Hill brought suit to recover damages in the sum of $4,500 against the City of New Orleans, R. P. Farnsworth and Company, and the Sewerage and Water Board. The damages were alleged to be due for repairing and reconstructing, in part, the premises No. 8415 South Claiborne Avenue, which plaintiffs averred had been damaged by the negligent use of a pile driver, concrete mixer, and other canal digging machinery in constructing a culvert in an open canal, known as Claiborne Canal, situated in front of plaintiffs’ property.

After the case had been in court for more than a year, plaintiffs impleaded, as an additional defendant, the Royal Indemnity Company, which plaintiffs alleged had guaranteed Farnsworth and Company' against any claims for damages by the general public.

Issue was joined by all the defendants on plaintiffs’ claim of negligence and demand for damages for the alleged necessary repairs to their property. Farnsworth and Company and its surety, Royal Indemnity Company, denied plaintiffs’ allegations of negligence, averred that no piles had been driven within 600 feet of plaintiffs’ property, showed that the concrete mixer and other machinery used was «standard and proper, and that all the work on the culvert had been performed in accordance with the plans and specifications. The Sewerage and Water Board averred that if plaintiffs’ property was damaged due to negligence, which it denied, the damages were due by the contractor alone, as the Sewerage and Water Board was not and could not be held liable for that which the contractor was alone responsible and over which the Sewerage and Water Board had no control. Respondent further averred that whatever damage plaintiffs’ property suffered, if any, was of long standing and was due to a gradual subsidence of the soil and the heavy traffic on South Claiborne Avenue.

The City of New Orleans denied all the material allegations of plaintiffs’ petition.

At the conclusion of' the trial in the district court, plaintiffs, through their counsel, moved for the entry of a voluntary non-suit against Farnsworth and Company, the Royal Indemnity Company, and the City of New Orleans. This motion was granted. Plaintiffs then attempted to file a supplemental petition against the remaining de *433 fendant, Sewerage and Water Board, alleging a new act of negligence on the part ■of the Sewerage and Water Board, namely, that the Board, in the course of the construction of the culvert in the canal, had negligently permitted the lowering of the water level, or water table, in the vicinity of plaintiffs’ premises and that, by reason ■of its negligence, was primarily- responsible for the damages to plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs further alleged that “the damage to petitioners’ property without compensa-, tion is in violation of Article 1, section 2 of the Constitution of Louisiana.” The trial judge, after a hearing on a rule to show cause, refused to permit plaintiffs to file the supplemental petition.

Upon the submission of the case on the merits, the trial judge rendered a judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ suit against the Sewerage and Water Board as in case of nonsuit. Plaintiffs appealed from the judgment, and the Sewerage and Water Board has answered the appeal, praying that the judgment be amended by making it a judgment rejecting plaintiffs’ demand instead of a judgment of nonsuit.

We do not find any force in plaintiffs’ contention that the case is governed by section 2, Article 1 of the Constitution of 1921, providing that private property may not be damaged for public purposes without adequate compensation paid therefor. Plaintiffs made no such claim in their original petition, and their supplemental petition, in which, for the first time,'1 they set up the claim in the form of a general allegation, was rejected by the trial judge on the ground that it' came too late, changed the issue, and created a new cause of action. The ruling of the trial judge was clearly correct.

A claim for compensation under the constitutional provision is wholly inconsistent with a demand for recovery in an action in tort. Negligence is not an element of recovery in the former case, whereas it is the basis of recovery in the latter case. The measure of recoverable damages in a suit predicated on the constitutional provision is the diminution of the market value of the property. Harrison v. Louisiana Highway Commission, 191 La. 839, 186 So. 354. On the other hand, the measure of recoverable damages for injury to property by tort is the cost of restoration and the value of the lost use. Sherwood v. American Railway Express Co., 158 La. 43, 103 So. 436.

Plaintiffs argue that the pleadings were enlarged by evidence admitted without objection and that such evidence should be considered by the Court in determining the issue presented. But the admitted evidence was not of a character to change plaintiffs’ action from one in tort to one for compensation. The evidence produced on the trial of the case was in conformity to the allegations of the original pleadings. Plaintiffs’ evidence was offered in an attempt to establish the negligence of defendants and the cost of restoring plaintiffs’ property to its former condition. On the other hand, the defendants’ evidence was offered for the purpose of refuting plaintiffs’ charge of negligence and in support of its claim that the injury was caused by the subsidence of the soil *435 resulting throughout the city generally on completion 'of its drainage system and, therefore, was damnum absque injuria.

The Sewerage and Water Board, in its brief, suggests that it is an instrumentality of the State, exercising governmental functions in respect to sewage and drainage and that, therefore, it is not liable for the tortious acts of its agents in discharging those functions. But it does not appear from the record that defense was raised and passed upon by the district court. On the pleadings and the evidence, the case comes, before us as ah ordinary action for damages alleged to be due plaintiffs for repairs to their building, which they averred had been injured by the negligent use of a pile driver, concrete mixer, and other machinery in the construction of a culvert in a canal in front of their property.

We have examined the record carefully and our conclusion is that the plaintiffs have not made out their case with the legal certainty that is required.

The record discloses that Dr. Ruth G. Aleman and her coheirs purchased the property No. 8415 South Claiborne Avenue on February 3, 1927, in the succession proceedings of their deceased parents. At that time the improvements on the property consisted of a single bungalow on a lot of ground measuring 33 feet front by 120 feet in depth. Subsequently, Dr. Aleman acquired the interest of her coheirs and on October 14, 1928, she contracted with Burdette A. Russ to elevate the building, put in a basement, and construct an ornamental brick porch. On October 24, 1928, Dr. Aleman sold to Dr. Lucy Scott Hill an undivided half interest in the property.

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Bluebook (online)
199 So. 380, 196 La. 428, 1940 La. LEXIS 1184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aleman-v-sewerage-and-water-board-la-1940.