Burke v. Louisiana Public Service Commission

40 So. 2d 916
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 1949
DocketNo. 39178
StatusPublished

This text of 40 So. 2d 916 (Burke v. Louisiana Public Service Commission) 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
Burke v. Louisiana Public Service Commission, 40 So. 2d 916 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

This is an appeal to this court from a judgment of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, affirming Order No. 4721 rendered by the Louisiana Public Service Commission under date of December 10, 1947, which denied to appellant, Perry J. Burke, his application to the Louisiana Public Service Commission for an order directing Guy A. Thompson, trustee for the New Iberia Northern Railroad Company and the Iberia, St. Mary Eastern Railroad Company, common carriers subject to the rules and regulations of the Public Service Commission and the statutes and laws of this state (to which we shall hereafter refer as "the railroad"), to furnish to appellant facilities for the transportation of commodities over a certain spur track situated in the City of New Iberia, and to construct, maintain, and operate a switch connection on and across appellant's land to connect with such spur track, and for such other orders as the Commission might deem necessary in the premises. *Page 917

On March 4, 1946, Perry J. Burke, appellant herein, filed a complaint with the Louisiana Public Service Commission, alleging that the defendant railroad was refusing to extend to him freight service on the spur in question, and praying for the order as set forth above. Edgar P. Folse, Inc., an industry owning property abutting the spur and being served thereby, intervened in the proceedings, praying for the rejection of complainant's demands.

On November 6, 1946, the Commission issued its Order No. 4426 dismissing Burke's complaint and application for the reason that the spur over which complainant sought service was a private industrial spur over which the general public had no right to demand service, and that complainant had no right or cause of action. Burke appealed to the district court from this order, and on July 31, 1947, that court overruled the exception of no cause and no right of action; avoided, vacated, and set aside the order of the Commission, and remanded the case to the Commission for further proceedings. The court in its reasons for judgment concluded that the ruling of the Commission holding the spur in question to be a private industrial spur over which the general public had not the right to demand service was erroneous.

Pursuant to this decree, the Commission then heard the case on its merits, and on December 10, 1947, issued its Order No. 4721 rejecting the demands of the complainant Burke and dismissing the proceedings. From this order of the Commission Burke again appealed to the district court, and that court on September 10, 1948, affirmed the order of the Commission and dismissed plaintiff's suit. From this judgment Burke has appealed to this court.

The railroad spur over which appellant Burke seeks freight service traverses two blocks of land situated in New Iberia, Louisiana, being designated as Blocks 193 and 198, and the street or highway which lies between them. Block 193 lies somewhat northeast of Block 198, and these two blocks are bounded on the southeast, respectively, by Block 194 and Block 197. But, for the purpose of clarity and simplification, we shall discuss and consider these blocks as if Blocks 198 and 197 were directly south of Blocks 193 and 194. Accordingly, Blocks 193 and 194 are bounded on the north by Bayou Teche, and Blocks 198 and 197 are bounded on the south by the main tracks of the defendant railroad, and Blocks 193 and 194 are separated from Blocks 198 and 197 by Main Street, or U.S. Highway 90.

The spur, after leaving the main tracks on the south side of Block 198, proceeds in an approximately northerly direction near the east boundary of Block 198, crosses Main Street, and continues near the east boundary of Block 193 to a point near Bayou Teche.

The history and background surrounding the building and construction of the spur track are as follows:

On March 18, 1918, Julius Scharff, the owner at that time of Blocks 193 and 198, conveyed to William H. Carver a tract of land out of the northern portion of Block 193 fronting 340 feet more or less on Bayou Teche. (This property is hereafter referred to as "the rice mill property".) This act of sale provides that the property conveyed is bounded on one side by a strip of land 44 feet in width, running from Bayou Teche back to the right-of-way of the Iberia, St. Mary Eastern Railroad, "which vendor hereby dedicates for the benefit of the property herein conveyed as well as for the use and benefit of vendor's other property for the construction of railroad spur or spurs".

This dedication, 44 feet in width, running from Bayou Teche to the main line of the defendant railroad, comprises what we have designated as the eastern 44 feet of Blocks 193 and 198.

On May 2, 1918, a little over two months after the deed containing this dedication was executed, Julius Scharff conveyed directly to the Iberia, St. Mary Eastern Railroad Company a strip of land 17 feet wide, eight and one-half feet on each side of the center line of a proposed spur track across Lots 198 and 193 in the City of New Iberia, which center line was particularly located and described in this deed. In this instrument we find the following language: "It is understood and agreed that the strip of land herein conveyed is to be used upon *Page 918 which to construct a switch or spur-track to connect the main line of said railroad company with the rice mill; and should the said strip of land cease to be used in the future for the purposes herein conveyed, then in that event, the said strip of land shall revert to the vendor herein or to his heirs or assigns."

Although the vendor in the act of sale of March 18, 1918, designated the 44-foot strip as a dedication for the construction of railroad spur or spurs, counsel for the railroad in brief before the Commission stated that there was serious doubt whether this grant was effective, since it did not refer to any named grantee, that they knew of no way in which such a dedication could be made to the public for a railroad spur, and that there was no method by which a spur could be built into this strip as it met the railroad at almost a right angle, and apparently it was for these reasons that the grant of May 2, 1918, to the railroad was executed. To us this explanation seems to be reasonable.

After the execution of this right-of-way deed, the railroad, the grantee named therein, constructed a spur track from its main lines to the rice mill along and over the 17-foot right of way acquired by the railroad from Scharff on May 2, 1918, and this strip on which the railroad spur is situated constitutes the western 17 feet of the 44-foot strip mentioned in the dedication of March 18, except for a curved portion where the spur joins the main track in the southern part of Block 198.

By mesne conveyances, intervenor, Edgar P. Folse, Inc., acquired all of Block 193 west of the 17-foot right of way granted to the railroad, which included the rice mill property on which a rice mill had been operated for a good many years, and by mesne conveyances also acquired practically all of Block 198 lying west of the 17-foot right of way conveyed to the railroad, and, subject to the railroad's right of way, also acquired the 44-foot strip in that block as well as a triangular plot of ground formed by the angle of the spur track as it leaves the main track and joins the 44-foot strip.

Intervenor, Edgar P. Folse, Inc. (or its authors in title), has been engaged in the conduct of a mill work, lumber, and building supplies business on the property owned by it in Block 198 since 1922, and on the property acquired by it in Block 193 (the rice mill property) since December, 1941.

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Bluebook (online)
40 So. 2d 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-louisiana-public-service-commission-lactapp-1949.