Brooks v. New Orleans Public Service
This text of 370 So. 2d 686 (Brooks v. New Orleans Public Service) 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
Joan BROOKS
v.
NEW ORLEANS PUBLIC SERVICE, INC.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*687 W. Monroe Stephenson, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, Raymond J. Salassi, Jr., G. Bruce Kuehne, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.
Before SAMUEL, BEER and GARRISON, JJ.
GARRISON, Judge.
Joan Brooks owns property on which, at some time prior to her purchase of the land in 1972, New Orleans Public Service, Inc. (NOPSI) placed a guy pole to support a powerline structure located on adjacent property. In 1977, Brooks filed suit against NOPSI to recover compensation for a continuous taking or servitude and to recover damages for mental anguish and harassment and for fear of potential harm to her children, occupants, and invitees. Defendant NOPSI filed exceptions on four separate grounds: prescription, no right of action, acquisitive prescription, and no cause of action. The trial judge divided plaintiff's claim into two causes of action: one for compensation under expropriation law and one in tort for trespassing. He ruled that she had no cause of action under expropriation law and that her tort action had prescribed, and dismissed her suit. Plaintiff appeals from this ruling. We affirm, for the reasons set forth below.
This case is another skirmish in the continuing battle over expropriation powers of quasi-public corporations. For many years, such entities were allowed to acquire servitudes on private property through appropriation by unopposed use and occupancy. *688 This theory, known as the St. Julien doctrine and set forth in the case of St. Julien v. Morgan La. and Tex. Ry. Co., 35 La.Ann. 942 (1883), provided that a public or quasi-public corporation having expropriatory powers could acquire a servitude where the landowner consented or acquiesced in its appropriation. The landowner had only a right to compensation for use of the servitude and for damages to his property if any. The St. Julien doctrine was reaffirmed in many later cases and remained the rule until 1976, when it was partly overruled by Lake, Inc. v. Louisiana Power and Light Co., 330 So.2d 914 (La.1976). The Lake case abolished the St. Julien doctrine with respect to discontinuous servitudes, on the ground that the doctrine conflicted with the specific mandate of La.Civ.Code Art. 766. (Art. 766 provides that discontinuous servitudes may be established only by title.) However, the Lake court made its ruling prospective only, "affecting conduct occurring after the finality of this judgment." 330 So.2d at 918.
The state legislature reacted promptly to the Lake decision by enacting R.S. 19:14 (Act 504 of 1976), which provides in pertinent part as follows:
"In the case where any corporation referred to in Section 2 of this Title has actually, in good faith believing it had the authority to do so, taken possession of privately owned immovable property of another and constructed facilities upon, under or over such property with the consent or acquiescence of the owner of the property, it will be presumed that the owner of the property has waived his right to receive just compensation prior to the taking, and he shall be entitled only to bring an action for judicial determination of whether the taking was for a public and necessary purpose and for just compensation to be determined in accordance with Section 9 hereof, as of the time of the taking of the property, or right or interest therein, and such action shall proceed as nearly as may be as if the corporation had filed a petition for expropriation as provided for in Section 2.1 of this Title."
In essence, this statute reinstated the St. Julien doctrine, with some limitations.
The Lake case also held that an electric transmission line is a discontinuous apparent servitude because it needs the act of man to be exercised. 330 So.2d at 917. The court followed the reasoning of Nash v. Whitten, 326 So.2d 856 (La.1976), which held a natural gas pipeline to be a discontinuous servitude because the act of man was required for its exercise and the term "act of man" included the operation of machinery necessary for the servitude's exercise. The reasoning leading to such a designation has been questioned by several writers.[1] Although the ruling in Lake regarding appropriation by use and occupancy was prospective as to conduct occurring after the judgment, logically its holding as to designation of the servitude must be considered to apply to any servitude existing at the time the Lake case was decided, and thus would be applicable to the electric powerline here. The servitude involved here, however, is not for the powerline itself, but simply for the placement of a pole on plaintiff's land. As NOPSI states in its brief,
"The only thing which is located partially on petitioner's land is a single guy pole. This guy pole is not energized, nor is it connected to an energized wire. Its only function is to maintain tension against structures on the adjacent land, which in turn support electrical transmission wires. It requires no `act of man' to use the guy pole. It fulfilled its entire function (holding up the utility pole) before the electrical transmission lines were set in place and it would continue to fulfill its entire function regardless whether electrical energy flowed through the lines or not." *689 Certainly, under the reasoning of either Nash v. Whitten or the Lake case, the guy pole of itself should not be considered a discontinuous servitude. Still, the guy pole is unquestionably an integral part of the transmission line structure and fulfills an indispensable function. As such, it must be considered an indivisible part of the powerline and so must be classified in the same way as the powerlinethat is, as a discontinuous servitude. Thus, we must consider the substance of the St. Julien-Lake-R.S. 19:14 conflict, although the entire discussion could be avoided if we were to consider the guy pole as a continuous servitude and thus not subject to the Lake decision.
One of the effects of R.S. 19:14 is to make the St. Julien doctrine applicable to discontinuous servitudes, since R.S. 19:1 defines "property" for purposes of general expropriation law as including "servitudes and other rights in or to immovable property." As noted in a recent decision by this court,
"The court in Lake did not overrule the St. Julien doctrine on constitutional grounds, but on the basis of its inconsistency with codal provisions. La.Acts 1976, No. 504, as a legislative enactment, now has equal status with the codal provisions."Trustee Corp. v. Allen, 359 So.2d 715 at 718 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1978).
Another effect of R.S. 19:14 is to set a prescriptive period for an owner's claim for compensation. Cases interpreting the St. Julien doctrine had set no specific time limitations; a brief period of unopposed occupancy was enough to give the taker the benefit of the doctrine. See Gumbel v. New Orleans Terminal Co., 173 So. 518 (La.1937). R.S. 19:2.1, to which R.S. 19:14 refers, provides as follows:
"A. The rights of expropriation granted in R.S. 19:2 shall be exercised in the following manner:
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370 So. 2d 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-new-orleans-public-service-lactapp-1979.