Collins Pipeline Company v. New Orleans East, Inc.

250 So. 2d 29, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5846
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 7, 1971
Docket4372
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 250 So. 2d 29 (Collins Pipeline Company v. New Orleans East, Inc.) 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
Collins Pipeline Company v. New Orleans East, Inc., 250 So. 2d 29, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5846 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

250 So.2d 29 (1971)

COLLINS PIPELINE COMPANY
v.
NEW ORLEANS EAST, INC.

No. 4372.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

June 7, 1971.
Rehearings Denied July 15, 1971.

*30 Shotwell, Brown & Sperry, Burt W. Sperry, Monroe, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, Ernest A. Carrere, Jr., and Gerald N. Sims, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellee.

Clay, Coleman, Dutrey & Thomson, James J. Coleman, Jacob J. Meyer and Louis J. Dutrey, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.

Before CHASEZ, GULOTTA and BOUTALL, JJ.

CHASEZ, Judge.

This is a suit for expropriation of a pipeline servitude. Collins Pipeline Company, plaintiff-appellee, is seeking to expropriate a servitude from New Orleans East, Inc., defendant-appellant, for the purpose of constructing a 16 inch petroleum pipeline from a point near Meraux, Louisiana to a point near Collins, Mississippi. The pipeline travels for a distance of approximately six miles through property owned by New Orleans East, Inc.

Negotiations were conducted in an attempt to acquire the proposed pipeline without success and the matter went to trial.

The lower Court granted a judgment of expropriation to Collins which fixed just compensation at $135,000.00 and required Collins to lower the pipeline in four designated locations to a depth which would accommodate future drainage canals. Severance damages were denied, the trial judge holding that no severance damages had been proven. New Orleans East, Inc., has appealed from the judgment and has listed several assignments of error. Collins Pipeline Company answered the appeal asking that the just compensation be reduced from $135,000.00 to $77,067.95.

*31 New Orleans East, Inc. has assigned the following as errors made by the trial court:

"1—Permitting Collins to make an oral instanter amendment of its petition for expropriation without requiring service of process of a written amendment and granting legal delays to respond.
"2—Holding that Collins had the right to expropriate NOE's property after finding Collins did not have the right to expropriate under Title 19 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes of 1950.
"3—Concluding that Collins was a common Carrier of petroleum products under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 45:251 with the right to expropriate notwithstanding uncontradicted evidence that Collins is merely the alter ego of Tenneco and Murphy who are not common carriers of petroleum products and who are not authorized to expropriate property.
"4—Concluding that Collins proved a public purpose for the taking of NOE's property.
"5—Concluding that the value of the permanent easement was $120,000.00; the value of the temporary easement was $6,000.00; and the value of the extra work space was $9,000.00.
"6—Failing to award severance damages to NOE notwithstanding uncontradicted expert testimony which indicated that NOE's land sustained a substantial diminution in value immediately following the proposed taking, and notwithstanding the fact that neither of Collins' experts made any severance damage study whatsoever.
"7—Failing to condemn Collins to pay all costs of this proceeding, which should include the fees of NOE's expert witnesses."

Considering assignments of error numbers one and two together, we find that the permission to file an instanter oral amendment to the petition was within the discretion of the trial judge. Granting the amendment was, however, not necessary and was most likely done through an excess of caution.

Various exceptions were filed by New Orleans East and were disposed of with the following exception:

"(f) Alternatively, plaintiff is not authorized to expropriate defendant's property under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 19:1, et. seq., for the reason that plaintiff does not qualify under any of the categories particularized under LSA-R. S. 19:2; * * *"

LSA-R.S. 19:2 supplies a list of corporations who may expropriate and Collins Pipeline Company, a Corporation which will transmit petroleum products through its line is concededly not included in the exclusive list. However, a reading of plaintiff's petition indicates that Collins was not attempting to be included in the list of corporations in R.S. 19:2.

Allegations four and five of its petition read as follows:

"4. That Plaintiff, among other things, is authorized under its charter to construct, operate and maintain pipelines, with fittings and appliances, for the transportation of petroleum, and all by-products thereof, which can be transported through a pipeline and is a common carrier pipeline created for the purpose of piping and transporting petroleum for hire, all within the meaning of L.R.S. 45:251.
"5. That in accordance with the provisions of L.R.S. 45:254 Plaintiff has the right to acquire rights of way to accommodate its pipelines by expropriation in situations where a price cannot be agreed upon with the owner of the property which Plaintiff seeks to cross and that the procedure to be followed is set forth in L.R.S. 19:1, et seq."

*32 Plaintiff argues, and it seems clear, that it is authorized to expropriate, not under title 19 of the Revised Statutes but under R.S. 45:251, 254, and that only the method of expropriation to be used is found under title 19.

The jurisprudence will support plaintiff's contention that R.S. 19:1 et seq. is the general expropriation law of our state. In Humble Pipe Line Co. v. Wm. T. Burton Industries, Inc., 253 La. 166, 217 So.2d 188 (1968) the Supreme Court stated:

"The record discloses that Humble Pipe Line Company, a common carrier pipe line company (LSA-R.S. 45:251), filed this expropriation suit under the general expropriation laws of Louisiana (LSA-R.S. 19:1 et seq.) to obtain second-line rights (8.01 acres) across defendant's lands.1"

"(Footnote omitted—emphasis added)

* * * * * *
"The right of expropriation demanded by plaintiff is a compulsory right. As early as 1870, the Civil Code in Book III provided for the compulsory transfer of property. Article 2630, relating to proceedings in expropriation, provides what the petition for expropriation shall recite and that it shall conclude, `with a prayer that the land be adjudged to such corporation upon the payment to the owner of all such damages as he may sustain in consequence of the expropriation of his land for such public work. All claims for land, or damages to the owner caused by its expropriation * * * shall be barred by two years' prescription. * * *' Article 2632 provides in part, `* * * a jury7 * * * shall * * * determine, after hearing the parties and their evidence, what is the value of the land described in the petition with its improvements, and what damages, if any, the owner would sustain, in addition to the loss of the land, by its expropriation. * * *' These provisions are virtually the same as those set forth in Footnote 1, supra, (LSA-R.S. 19:2.1, subds. A(3) B) which were adopted many years later. Plaintiff, a pipe line company, exercised its rights under LSA-R.S. 45:254, supra, which provides that the expropriator shall proceed under the present state expropriation laws for use in its common carrier pipe line business. See, LSA-R. S. 19:1 et seq."
(Footnote omitted but is to the effect that R.S. 19:4 abolished trial by jury in expropriation cases.)

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Bluebook (online)
250 So. 2d 29, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-pipeline-company-v-new-orleans-east-inc-lactapp-1971.