City of New Orleans v. Giraud

346 So. 2d 1113
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 1977
Docket8027
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 346 So. 2d 1113 (City of New Orleans v. Giraud) 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
City of New Orleans v. Giraud, 346 So. 2d 1113 (La. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

346 So.2d 1113 (1977)

CITY OF NEW ORLEANS
v.
Elvira Louise Wiener, wife of/and Lewis A. GIRAUD.

No. 8027.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

May 17, 1977.

*1114 Phillip S. Brooks, Henry W. Kinney, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Salvador M. Cusimano, Thomas L. Giraud, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee-cross appellant, Elvira Louise Wiener.

Before SAMUEL, GULOTTA and BOUTALL, JJ.

*1115 GULOTTA, Judge.

In March, 1975, the City of New Orleans brought this expropriation suit for property required in the Crowder Road and Chef Menteur Highway grade separation project.[1] Both parties appeal the trial court's award for property taken and for severance damages. Defendant further seeks an increase in the $3,500.00 award for attorney's fees.

The property in question used or otherwise affected by the proposed construction project is an area of vacant land situated at the intersection of Crowder Road and Chef Menteur Highway in the City of New Orleans. The area of land actually to be used by the expropriating authority measures 84,450.6 square feet.[2]

In addition to the property actually taken, contiguous property owned by defendant is adversely affected by the construction project. A "control of access" (a chain link fence or some other form of restraint) will be permanently constructed along the border of the property actually used and for an additional distance of 247.08 feet along the eastern side of Crowder Road. (See the segment P-Q on Appendix 1.) This control of access severely curtails the ingress and egress to 53,842 square feet of property owned by defendant directly adjacent to the property taken. (See areas designated D and E on Appendix 1.) Following completion of the project, this portion of ground will no longer front on Crowder Road, and ingress and egress to it can only be accomplished from other property fronting on the thoroughfare. Accordingly, severance damages were awarded by the trial judge with regard to this portion of land adversely affected by the control of access.

Though the parties do not dispute the total area of property actually taken and the total area adversely affected by the project, they disagree on three major issues: 1) the location of the zoning line dividing the property taken (or adversely affected) into commercial and residential portions; 2) the unit value to be placed on the land taken (or adversely affected) based on a market data approach using comparable sales; and, 3) the propriety of an award for severance damages in excess of the value of the property adversely affected.

LOCATION OF ZONING LINE

The property in question is traversed by a zoning line running from East to West and dividing the land into residential and commercial portions. Land to the south of the zoning line is zoned C-1 (commercial), whereas the land to the north of the line is zoned RS-2 (residential). (See Appendix 1.) Defendant contends that a line running from point A to point Y in Appendix 1 accurately reflects the zoning line as pictured on the official zoning map of the City of New Orleans. Plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that line AZ, as pictured on Appendix 1, is a true representation of the official line. The location of the zoning line determines the proportion of RS-2 and C-1 property taken and property subject to severance damages.[3]

*1116 The City, in support of its claim on the location of the zoning line, offered the testimony of John Luecke, surveyor, who stated that in drawing the line he first referred to the official zoning map of the City of New Orleans, from which he located two points on the zoning line on either side of the subject property. The official zoning map line, according to Luecke, runs from the mid-point of Tulsa Street on the eastern side of the subject tract to a point at the intersection of Lot F and Lot 1 (marked on Appendix 1) on the western side of Crowder Road. He established the zoning line by connecting these two points. (See line AZ on Appendix 1.) This line would run 500 feet north of Chef Menteur Highway.

Defendant's expert, John E. Walker, a civil engineer, used a different method to establish the zoning line. Employing the scale as shown on the official zoning map, he determined that the zoning line intersects with the easternmost portion of the lots fronting on Flake Avenue at a distance of 600 feet north of Chef Menteur Highway. Following the "dimensional control" or scale method rather than the "point-to-point" method employed by the expropriating body, Walker located the zoning line by connecting the mid-point of Tulsa Street to the point (Y) 600 feet north of Chef Menteur Highway. (See line AY in Appendix 1.)

In his reasons for judgment, the trial judge stated, "The Court is convinced that the survey of Mr. Walker correctly locates the line which separates the C-1 zoned area from the RS-2 zoned area." Though it is true, as pointed out by the City, that the line established by Luecke is consistent with the official zoning map insofar as it connects the points as shown therein (the mid-point of Tulsa Street on the East and the lot line of Lot F on the West), the line established by Walker is consistent with the scale of the official zoning map.

Furthermore, Harold R. Katner, Director and Secretary of the City Planning Commission of the City of New Orleans, produced the official zoning map on which the distance from Chef Menteur Highway to the property line of Lot 1 is designated as 598 feet. Point Y of Walker's line, located 600 feet north of Chef Menteur Highway, more closely approximates this distance than does point Z of Luecke's line, located 500 feet north of the highway. Katner's testimony is consistent with the location of the zoning line as determined by Walker. This witness further testified that zoning lines generally follow street rights-of-way and that Walker's line follows the Tulsa right-of-way. Apparently the trial judge felt that Walker's line was more consistent with the official zoning map than Luecke's line despite the fact that the former does not intersect the physical points shown on the map.[4] The evidence considered, we cannot say he erred. We conclude, therefore, as did the trial judge, that the line established by Walker (line AY in Appendix 1) correctly reflects the zoning line dividing the property into commercial and residential areas.

VALUE OF PROPERTY EXPROPRIATED

Several appraisers testified during trial and submitted appraisal reports relative to the value of the commercial and residential areas expropriated.

Eugene Aschaffenburg, an appraiser who testified on behalf of the City, was of the opinion that the commercial portion of the property taken was worth $3.30 per square foot to a depth of 250 feet north of Chef Menteur Highway. He evaluated the remainder of the commercial portion beyond that depth at $2.10 per square foot. He *1117 appraised the residential portion at $1.28 per square foot. In evaluating the commercial portion, Aschaffenburg testified that the square footage values of long, narrow commercial tracts decrease in proportion to the distance from the street upon which the property fronts. He considered the subject property to be such a tract and employed a "depth chart" of values. In preparing the chart, he examined comparable sales of commercial tracts along Chef Menteur Highway.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
346 So. 2d 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-orleans-v-giraud-lactapp-1977.