City of New Orleans v. Christ Church Corporation

81 So. 2d 855, 228 La. 184, 1955 La. LEXIS 1355
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1955
Docket42304
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 So. 2d 855 (City of New Orleans v. Christ Church Corporation) 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
City of New Orleans v. Christ Church Corporation, 81 So. 2d 855, 228 La. 184, 1955 La. LEXIS 1355 (La. 1955).

Opinion

MOISE, Justice.

The curator-ad-hoc, in the exercise of his duties, resisted this suit and appeals from a judgment of expropriation, which adjudicated to the City of New Orleans for its uses and street purposes two certain pieces or portions of ground of the Girod Street Cemetery, situated in the First Municipal District of the City, for a consideration of $1.50 per square foot, or a total sum of $30,745.41 to be paid to Christ Church Corporation (Episcopal). This judgment contained the following condition:

Title should pass to the City of New Orleans only after:

1. The payment to Christ Church Corporation (Episcopal) of the sum of $30,-745.41.

2. The registration of the judgment in the Conveyance Records of Orleans Parish.

3. Disinterment and reinterment elsewhere of all the human remains presently interred therein, subject to the supervision and further orders of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans.

Giving a loyal allegiance and faithful service to the call of duty, the curator-adhoc also appeals from a declaratory judgment which:

1. Condemned the Girod Street Cemetery and ordered its abandonment as a burial ground and prohibited its further use for burial purposes.

2. Decreed that upon the disinterment and reinterment elsewhere of all human remains located within the Girod Street Cemetery, Christ Church Corporation (Episcopal) be decreed the owner in fee simple against the world, including the City of New Orleans, and all prior owners, their heirs, transferees or assignees, of the Girod Street Cemetery, together with all improvements, etc., thereon.

3. Ordered that all human remains presently interred in the Girod Street Cemetery be disinterred and reinterred elsewhere, with perpetual care, withoüt any cost or obligation to the interested parties and relatives, except such 'as may be voluntarily incurred, at the cost and expense of Christ Church Corporation, all subject to the supervision and further orders of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans.

4. Reserved to each burial certificate owner the right to claim as. a personal rather than a real right any consequential loss or damage occasioned thereto, but limited to the cost of disinterment and reinterment elsewhere under like or similar conditions, depending upon the present state' of decay or depreciation of each such tomb,’ vault, or other burial place.

The above judgments were in conformity with the petition of the City of New Orleans.

*189 Defendant, Christ Church Corporation, did not resist the expropriation, the request for a declaratory judgment, nor the order of removal. It acquiesces in the judgments.

No appeal has been prosecuted by interested parties who filed interventions, and it is presumed that they have acquiesced in the judgments.

The trial judge appointed a curator-adhoc to represent all unknown, absent and interested parties, other than the intervenors, who might be possible heirs, legatees, devisees, administrators, executors, or assigns of those who may hold or possess possible outstanding claims or interests in portions of the Girod Street Cemetery in compliance with Article 56 of the LSA-Civil Code which reads:

“If a suit be instituted against an absentee who has no known agent in the State, or for the administration of whose property no curator has been appointed, the judge, before whom the suit is pending, shall appoint a curator ad hoc to defend the absentee in the suit.”

The curatorTad-hoc assigns the following errors to the trial court’s judgments:

1. In holding that the City of New Orleans had the right to expropriate cemetery property for street widening purposes.

2. In fixing the value for expropriation purposes at $1.50 per square foot.

3. In holding that the City could demand removal of the cemetery to another location by virtue of its title reservation and/or by virtue of the cemetery’s constituting a public health menace.

4.In holding that title to the cemetery property became vested in the Christ Church Corporation rather than in the holders of the plot certificates, the City of New Orleans, or in the vendors of the property to the City of New Orleans.

A discussion of the history of the cemetery is proper before discussing the curator’s allegations of error.

The City of New Orleans acquired the land, which has been used as the Girod Street Cemetery, on March 22, 1821 from Marie Ursule Moquin, wife of Francois Marie Perilliat, Jr. On September 7, 1822, the City transferred the cemetery plot to the Congregation of Christ Church Corporation (Episcopal), a religious corporation created by Acts, approved July 3, 1805 and May 2, 1806, of the Legislative Acts of the Territory of Orleans. The sale contained the following provision:

“Unto the members of the said Congregation. and their successors, to use .and enjoy the tract of land presently sold as a Protestant Cemetery, until the Council of the City of New Orleans sees fit to change the location of this cemetery by virtue of its proximity to the city, pursuant to which the said Congregation can enjoy, use and dispose of the same as it sees fit in full ownership by virtue' of these presents.”

*191 The cemetery, located in New Orleans, Louisiana, in the Square bounded by South Liberty, Magnolia, Cypress and Perilliat Streets, is a large rectangular tract measuring approximately 593 by 200 feet.

The City of New Orleans alleged that the cemetery was in an unsanitary condition and in a state of ruin- and decay. The record conclusively shows this to be true. The trial judge, after personally visiting the cemetery, aptly described the condition as follows:

.“As early as 1840 and up to the present time vandals and theives have invaded and desecrated the Cemetery. Hundreds of photographs, historic writings, and the testimony of Dr. Gardner, presently Head of the City Public Health Service, vividly describe the Cemetery as a nesting place for rats and vermin, the proving ground of ghouls who broke into vaults and tombs in search of dental gold and jewelry; graves stripped of copings and stones and iron metal work; inscriptions on marble tablets long since worn away by time and weather; crumbling tombs and vaults; vines and honeysuckle and other Louisiana wild vegetation completely covering the tombs; fig trees grown in thickets so dense as to block passage; oleander shrubs rooting in the most unlikely places; brick vaults five and seven tiers high, with the lower row sunk out of sight and covered with tangled carpets of vines; hundreds of the marble tablets covering the entrance to the vaults removed or their engravings completely obliterated; and in some instances the bones of the dead lying in their open graves exposed to the gnawing rodents and hungry vermin.”

The following description of the cemetery as contained in the book, “Gumbo Ya-Ya,” compiled by Lyle Saxon, Edward Dreyer, and Robert Tallant, published in 1945, is quoted from defendant’s brief:

“The oldest Protestant cemetery in New Orleans‘is the Girod Cemetery.

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Bluebook (online)
81 So. 2d 855, 228 La. 184, 1955 La. LEXIS 1355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-orleans-v-christ-church-corporation-la-1955.