Boudreaux v. STATE, DEPT. OF TRANSP. & DEVELOPMENT
This text of 780 So. 2d 1163 (Boudreaux v. STATE, DEPT. OF TRANSP. & DEVELOPMENT) 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.
Opinion
Jean BOUDREAUX, et al.
v.
The STATE of Louisiana, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEVELOPMENT.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*1164 Byard Edwards, Jr., Andrew M. Edwards, II, Ponchatoula, Jean-Paul Layrisson, Timothy D. Scandurro, Stephen O. Scandurro, New Orleans, Henry G. Terhoeve, Keith L. Richardson, Baton Rouge, Counsel for Plaintiffs and The Class Representatives-Appellees-Jean Boudreaux, et al.
Richard P. Ieyoub, Attorney General, Baton Rouge, Julie Mobley Lafargue, Reginald W. Abrams, Special Assistant Attorneys General, Shreveport, Counsel for Defendant-Appellant-The State of Louisiana, Department of Transportation and Development.
Before: PARRO, FITZSIMMONS, and GUIDRY, JJ.
FITZSIMMONS, J.
The State of Louisiana, Department of Transportation and Development (DOTD) appeals from a class action judgment in which the court cast DOTD liable for flooding that had occurred in Tangipahoa Parish in 1983. After review of the record and law, we affirm the trial court judgment.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs, Jean Boudreaux and the "victims of the flood on April 6, 1983" (the class), filed a petition against various defendants, including DOTD. The petitioners were certified by the district court as a class. The class alleged that the construction of U.S. Interstate 12 caused flooding and damage to the property of the class members in part of Tangipahoa Parish on April 6, 7, and 8, 1983. Prior to trial, the class abandoned its claims of negligence and fault based on La. C.C. art. 2317. Additionally, questions of liability and damages were bifurcated. The subject of the instant appeal is limited to the trial court's decision to ascribe liability to DOTD under codal articles dealing with predial servitudes.
DOTD alleges as its assignments of error two trial court fallacies: its denial of DOTD's defense that the claims had prescribed pursuant to La. R.S. 9:5624; and, the trial court's disallowance of evidence of the return frequency of the rainfall event.
*1165 PRESCRIPTION[1]
The alleged flooding to the property contained within the class delineations occurred in 1983. The instant lawsuit was filed in 1984. DOTD asserts that evidence of instances of the occurrence of flood damage allegedly caused by the construction of Interstate 12, more than two years prior to the plaintiffs' lawsuit, was introduced at trial via the testimony of Ron Novak. Additionally, DOTD maintains that there had been a written complaint of flood conditions in the area as early as January 1973 by Edward Silverstein, an owner of property within the boundaries of the designated class where the interstate highway was constructed.
The letter written by Mr. Silverstein was confected while Interstate 12 was still under construction. It apprised DOTD that approximately two miles north of Interstate 12, the Tangipahoa River was rising faster than it had before and receding more slowly. At trial, Mr. Novak, who owned a lot on the Tangipahoa River, testified that in 1973, his neighbor, Mr. Silverstein, had incurred damage to his buildings due to a flood that they attributed to the recently constructed Interstate 12. Mr. Novak stated that his own land was inundated with water that "came close to the top of what we owned." He ultimately constructed his home two feet higher than the flood water level in 1973 in order to prevent the intrusion of water into his home. Nevertheless, he received twenty-seven inches of water in his house and four feet in the den as a result of the flood of 1983.
Prior to 1987, La. R.S. 9:5624 provided:
When private property is damaged for public purposes any and all actions for such damages are prescribed by the prescription of two years, which shall begin to run when the damages are sustained. (Underlining supplied.)[2]
In Carbo v. Hart, 459 So.2d 1228 (La. App. 1st Cir.1984), writ denied, 462 So.2d 654 (La.1985), this court employed the statutory precepts of La.R.S. 9:5624 in stating that the prescriptive period for torts commences on the day the plaintiff knew or should have known that he has sustained some damage. Thus, the commencement of the tolling of the prescriptive period for an action based on La. R.S. 9:5624 began when the flooding problems about which the plaintiffs in Carbo complained became apparent to the plaintiffs. Carbo, 459 So.2d at 1230.[3]
DOTD's assertions of prescription in this instance are imbued with legal flaws. The flooding of Mr. Silverstein's property affected an isolated amount of land within the boundaries of the property owned by Mr. Novak and Mr. Silverstein. It was stipulated at trial that Interstate 12 was accepted by DOTD as having been completed on September 26, 1975; therefore, any flooding that occurred in 1973 would have been prior to the final physical configuration of the interstate highway as it existed in 1983. Moreover, the existence of a letter of complaint to DOTD by Mr. Silverstein that associated the construction of Interstate 12 with increased watershed generally affecting his property cannot be equated with the extensive volume of *1166 flooding that occurred in 1983.[4] The impact was significantly increased. Even Mr. Novak's testimony reveals that the 1973 water buildup did not reach the proportions of the 1983 flood.
An individual complaint, or awareness of a problem by two people, does not impute knowledge to the class, unless the other members should have known of the cause of their damage. The issue is not whether any particular individual's claim might have prescribed; we are asked to determine whether prescription applies to the members of the class. At the class certification hearing, the overwhelming testimony by the seven class representatives, and other individuals, recited that their homes or buildings on their properties had never flooded prior to 1983. There has been no evidence presented that the general members of the class knew, or should have known, that their lands were vulnerable to the flooding and damage that occurred as a result of the final physical configuration of the infrastructure for Interstate 12.
The trial court's denial of the exception of prescription is affirmed.[5]
DISALLOWANCE OF EVIDENCE OF RETURN FREQUENCY
The issue of liability of DOTD was limited at trial to violations of the predial servitude owed by DOTD, as the servient estate, in favor of the dominant estates represented by the certified class. See La. C.C. arts. 655-658 and 667. The class asserted that the natural servitude of drain was violated when Interstate 12 and its embankments caused backwater to invade and flood the surrounding lands in excess of the natural flood plain absorption. On appeal, DOTD claims that the trial court improperly prohibited evidence relating to the return frequency of rainfall as it related to the issue of causation and DOTD's "Act of God" defense. It is argued that the court should not have precluded DOTD's evidence on this issue, when it allowed the class to elicit evidence given by David Barnes and Dr. James Cruise on the frequency of rainfall. Mr. Barnes, a meteorologist, referred to the frequency of the magnitude of the rainfall of 1983 as occurring approximately every ten to twenty-five years. Dr. Cruise, an expert in the areas of hydraulics and hydrology, stated that the 1983 flood recurrence interval was probably less than fifty years.
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780 So. 2d 1163, 2000 La.App. 1 Cir. 0050, 2001 La. App. LEXIS 351, 2001 WL 128853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boudreaux-v-state-dept-of-transp-development-lactapp-2001.