Aurora Properties, Inc. v. Sewerage & Water Board

210 So. 2d 167, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5062
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1968
DocketNo. 2978
StatusPublished

This text of 210 So. 2d 167 (Aurora Properties, Inc. v. Sewerage & Water Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aurora Properties, Inc. v. Sewerage & Water Board, 210 So. 2d 167, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5062 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

HALL, Judge.

Aurora Properties, Inc. filed suit on December 21, 1966 against the Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans for $383,160.00 (plus 5% interest thereon from judicial demand and costs) being the amount allegedly due as “just and adequate compensation” for an unlimited and perpetual servitude in, to, and over 24.029 acres of land which it had transferred to the Sewerage and Water Board on September 30, 1966. The amount sued for included $338,031.00 as the fair value of the land and the sum of $45,129.00 as severance damages.

In its answer the Sewerage and Water Board admitted all the allegations of plaintiff’s petition except those relating to quantum. Upon filing its answer defendant deposited the sum of $220,943.00 in the registry of Court for plaintiff’s account being the amount defendant admitted plaintiff was entitled to receive for the 24.029 acre servitude. Defendant contends that plaintiff is not entitled to receive, and that defendant is not obligated to pay any additional sum therefor.

Plaintiff withdrew the amount deposited in the registry under an order of Court providing that defendant would receive a credit for this payment on account of any judgment that might be rendered “except that plaintiff shall not be entitled to receive from defendant payment of any interest on any part of the $220,943.00.”

The overall question presented to the Trial Court was the question of the value of the servitude which plaintiff had transferred to defendant, and in this connection all parties are in agreement that there is no practical difference between the value of the servitude and the value of the fee.

Following trial on the merits the Trial Judge found the fair market value of the land to be $265,358.40 as of September 30, 1966, the date of its transfer to the Sewerage and Water Board, and that plaintiff was entitled to an additional sum oL$5,-000.00 as severance damages, making a grand total of $270,358.40. From this amount the Trial Judge deducted the $220,-943.00 deposited in the registry and rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor for the net sum of $49,415.00 together with legal interest thereon “beginning 30 days after the date of this judgment.” He also fixed the expert witness fees of Max J. Derbes, Jr. and Thomas B. Dupree (plaintiff’s appraisal experts) at $700.00 each and taxed the fees as part of the costs to be paid by the Sewerage and Water Board.

From this judgment both parties appealed.

[169]*169Plaintiff’s right of action herein emanates from and is based upon a written contract between it and the Sewerage and Water Board dated September 30, 1966, referred to in the record as “The Development Agreement.” A background statement is necessary to an understanding of the case.

Plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land measuring 411.84 acres situated in the Fifth Municipal District of the City of New Orleans in what is commonly known as the “Lower Coast” portion of Algiers. Plaintiff proposed to subdivide, improve and develop this tract for residential, commercial and industrial uses and to that end secured on March IS, 1966 a tentative approval of its proposed subdivision from the City Planning Commission of New Orleans, final approval being subject to the approval of various agencies of the City including the defendant Sewerage and Water Board.

Negotiations by plaintiff looking to the approval of its subdivision plans by the defendant Sewerage and Water Board were commenced by plaintiff in April 1966. At that time the defendant Board had under consideration and had assigned high priority to construction and installation of certain major drainage improvements within its 6,200 acre drainage area in Algiers which drainage area included the 411.84 acre tract owned by plaintiff. The negotiations commenced by plaintiff in April 1966 culminated in the Development Agreement of September 30, 1966.

Plaintiff bound itself by this agreement to donate to the Board out of its 411.84 acre tract a parcel of land measuring 9.8 acres for use as the construction site of the Board’s proposed new pumping station No. 13, and also to donate to the Board a servitude over another portion of its tract measuring 8.664 acres for use as part of the Board’s proposed new East Donner Canal. Plaintiff also granted to the Board, without cost, the exclusive privilege of using a certain access road through its property and bound itself to construct without cost to the Board a certain drainage canal through its tract. Finally plaintiff bound itself to sell to the Board an exclusive, unlimited, irrevocable and perpetual servitude in, to, through, under and over three described parcels of land measuring a total of 24.029 acres, composed of (a) Tract 1 (measuring 20.836 acres) for use as part of the Board’s new Nolan Canal; (b) Tract 2 (measuring approximately 3.130 acres) for use as part of the Board’s new East Donner Canal and/or suction basin for the Board’s proposed drainage pumping station No. 13; and (c) Tract 3 (measuring approximately 0.063 acres) for use as part of the Board’s new Nolan Canal and new East Donner Canal “at a fair and reasonable price, as may be agreed upon by the Board and the Developer, or, for just and adequate compensation, as determined by final judgment of a court of last resort * * * ”

The Board, on its part, obligated itself to construct its proposed new drainage pumping station No. 13 and to construct its new Nolan and East Donner Canals. The Board also bound itself to abandon and release to the developer, without cost, all of its right, title and interest in the existing Donner Canal presently occupying 9.016 acres of developer’s tract which was to be abandoned upon completion by the Board of its new East Donner Canal.

In short the Development Agreement provided mutually beneficial covenants looking toward better drainage of plaintiff’s 411.84 acre tract and the improvement of the Board’s overall drainage system. However we are primarily concerned here with the consideration to be paid by the Board for the servitude over the three parcels of land totalling 24.029 acres which the plaintiff obligated itself to sell to the Board.

In that connection the Development Agreement provided that the Board would submit to the developer (plaintiff) a written appraisal report and a firm offer to pay the value of the land as fixed by its [170]*170appraisers and in the event the developer should reject such offer and the parties could not agree upon “the fair and reasonable price therefor * * * then the Board and/or the Developer shall cause to be instituted, in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, State of Louisiana, * * * not later than December 1, 1966, an appropriate proceeding for expropriation of said land and final determination of the just and adequate compensation that shall be paid by the Board to the Developer. The Developer acknowledges the Board’s legal right to acquire by expropriation the * * * servitude * * * over these three parcels of property for use as parts of the Board’s drainage system, and the only issue to be presented in the litigation shall be the amount of compensation that the Board must pay to the Developer. The Board shall pay to -the Developer all money due hereunder * * * within thirty days after the final judicial determination vof the just and adequate compensation, that shall be paid by the Board to the Developer.”

The servitude in question was transferred by plaintiff to the Board by act before Jacob H. Morrison, Notary Public, dated September 30, 1966.

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170 So. 2d 709 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1964)
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135 So. 2d 302 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
210 So. 2d 167, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aurora-properties-inc-v-sewerage-water-board-lactapp-1968.